George Beaule v. Acme Finishing Co.

89 A. 73, 36 R.I. 74, 1913 R.I. LEXIS 76
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 19, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 89 A. 73 (George Beaule v. Acme Finishing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George Beaule v. Acme Finishing Co., 89 A. 73, 36 R.I. 74, 1913 R.I. LEXIS 76 (R.I. 1913).

Opinion

Baker, J.

This is an action of trespass on the case to' recover damages for injuries alleged to have been received through the negligence of the defendant. It is now heard on plaintiff’s petition to establish the truth of his bill of exceptions as filed and to have the transcript of evidence, etc., as filed, together with the depositions of George Beaule and Cyprien Edgar Blais declared sufficient for the determination of said exceptions. On the trial there was a verdict for the defendant. Plaintiff took several exceptions during the trial and thereafter filed a bill containing eight exceptions, together with the transcript of certain proceedings m the chambers of the justice presiding at the trial before any jurors were called in the case, when said justice made a ruling as to the right of the petitioner to interrogate the jurors on their being called as to their having any prejudicial interest in a certain liability insurance company, and of the proceedings at the close of the trial with reference to the charge of said justice and to certain requests to charge made by the parties.

The first exception in the bill relates to the ruling of the justice in chambers. The next six exceptions relate to rulings of the justice in refusing to charge the jury as re *76 quested by the plaintiff. ■ The eighth exception refers to a ruling of said justice in .charging the jury in terms of the seventh request of the defendant.

The parties were duly notified of the hearing for the allowance of the bill of exceptions and the transcript at which they appeared and were heard. Upon the objection of the defendant thereto said justice struck out the following sentence on the first page of the bill of exceptions, namely, “on the trial of said cause plaintiff offered evidence tending to prove all the material allegations of the second count of plaintiff’s declaration and the defendant offered evidence tending to disprove all the material allegations of said count, ” and allowed the bill as thus altered.

.(1) Plaintiff claims to be aggrieved by such alteration. By this sentence he attempts to bring into the case a summary statement of the meaning and effect of certain evidence alleged by him to have been introduced at the trial, to be accepted by the court as true, in place of the transcript of the evidence actually given as officially reported by the court stenographer. We do not think this is permissible. However, even if the statement could be considered as a substitute for the transcript of the evidence it has no place in the bill of exceptions. The statute requires of the party bringing a bill of exceptions that in it “he shall state separately and clearly the exceptions relied upon.” Section 17, Chapter 298 of the General Laws. The sentence stricken out is no part of the statement of an exception and may properly be treated as surplusage and therefore as not affecting in any way the rights of either party; but inasmuch as a bill of exceptions, to meet the requirement of being clearly stated, should not be incumbered by extraneous and immaterial matter, it was not improper on the part of the justice to strike out the sentence in question, nor does any good ground exist for its restoration. As to the bill of exceptions the plaintiff obtains all that he is entitled to in the allowance of all of his exceptions.

*77 (2) Upon the transcript filed the justice made this endorsement: “I allow this transcript as being sufficient for the consideration of plaintiff's first, third and sixth exceptions. I find it not to be sufficient for the consideration of plaintiff's second, fourth, fifth, seventh and eighth exceptions.” Plaintiff claims to be aggrieved thereby and asks that “said transcript as originally filed, together with the said depositions be declared sufficient for the determination of said exceptions.” There is no express provision in the statute requiring a justice of the Superior Court to pass on the sufficiency of a transcript for the determination of a bill of exceptions. But in Smith v. Hurley, 29 R. I. 489, 492, this court held it to be the duty of the Superior Court, under Sec. 17 of Chap. 298 of the Gen. Laws (formerly Section 494 C. P. A.), “to determine whether the entire transcript of the evidence shall be filed, or how much thereof may be necessary for the determination of the exceptions.” In this case the justice has decided that the transcript filed is sufficient for the determination of certain exceptions and insufficient for others, as above stated. While said Chapter 298 does not expressly provide for proceedings before this court for the establishment of the truth of a transcript, Rule 13 of this court does make provision for a “petition to determine the correctness of a transcript of testimony,” and points out the procedure to be followed. If this petition for declaring the sufficiency of the transcript is properly before us it must be by a somewhat liberal interpretation of that part of Rule 13 relative to a petition to establish the correctness of a transcript. The transcript in this case contains the record of none of the evidence introduced before the jury at the trial. The plaintiff did not ask the stenographer for any, the terms of his request to the stenographer being for “all the evidence offered and rulings of court as to the right of plaintiff to interrogate jurors called to serve as to their financial interest in said liability insurance company and all the requests of the plaintiff to charge refused by the court to which exceptions were taken by the *78 plaintiff and to requests to charge by the defendant granted by the court to which exceptions were taken by the plaintiff and all the charge of the court as given. ”

(3) Two depositions are in the papers of the case. The envelope containing one of them has never been opened. The envelope containing the deposition of Blais has been opened. It is obvious that the unopened deposition was not used at the trial. There is no reference in the transcript showing the use of the deposition of Blais at that time. The mere fact of its being opened affords no presumption that it was thus used. It may have been offered in evidence at the trial and have been excluded for some reason, or it may have been admitted only in part. The record discloses nothing as to what did occur at the trial as to this matter. But the counsel of record of the plaintiff have filed their affidavits in this court stating that the two depositions were offered and received in evidence at the trial. There is no affidavit asserting the contrary. Admitting these affidavits to be true as to .the deposition of Blais, is such deposition properly before the court for its consideration? We think not. The statute provides an orderly method for the production before this court, in its consideration of a bill of exceptions of a correct record of so much of the proceedings at the trial below as may be necessary therefor. Sec.-3 of Chap. 298 of the Gen. Laws requires that a court stenographer "shall report steno-graphically the proceedings in the trial of every action or proceeding, civil or criminal, in the Superior Court” . . .

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Bluebook (online)
89 A. 73, 36 R.I. 74, 1913 R.I. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-beaule-v-acme-finishing-co-ri-1913.