Grisinger v. Hubbard

122 P. 853, 21 Idaho 469, 1912 Ida. LEXIS 130
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 122 P. 853 (Grisinger v. Hubbard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grisinger v. Hubbard, 122 P. 853, 21 Idaho 469, 1912 Ida. LEXIS 130 (Idaho 1912).

Opinion

STEWART, C. J.

This action was brought by the respondent to recover from the appellant the sum of $136, alleged to be due as the purchase price of certain fruit trees alleged to have been sold and delivered by respondent to appellant. Answer was filed and the cause was tried to a jury and a verdict rendered in favor of the respondent for the sum of $156, and judgment was rendered thereon for said sum. A motion for a new trial was made and overruled, and this appeal is from the judgment and the order overruling the motion for a new trial.

A motion was made in this court to dismiss the appeal from the judgment because it was not perfected within sixty days after the entry of said judgment. This motion was confessed by counsel for appellant and the appeal from the judgment is therefore dismissed. A motion was also made to 'strike the reporter’s transcript from the record, for the reason that the same was not settled by the court. It was admitted upon oral argument that there was no certificate of the trial court attached to the reporter’s transcript settling such transcript, and application was made to this court upon such hearing for permission to file a certificate of the district judge in which the trial judge certified that he had examined the reporter’s transcript of the evidence as certified by George F. Nicklaus, official court reporter, and by the clerk of the district court, and that said reporter’s transcript contains all of the evidence considered by the trial court upon the hearing of the motion for a new trial, and that the judge settled and allowed the same as a true and complete copy of said evidence, and that upon the hearing of said motion for a new trial he considered each, every and all of the papers and files mentioned in the clerk’s certificate to the transcript and contained in the clerk’s transcript, and that the reporter’s transcript and the said [473]*473clerk’s transcript contained copies of all the evidence and all the papers and files in the action considered on the hearing of the motion for a new trial.

Rev. Codes, see. 4434, as amended by chap. 119, Laws of 1911, p. 379, provides: “Any party desiring to procure a review on appeal to the supreme court of any ruling of the district court made during the trial, or the sufficiency of evidence to sustain the verdict or decision, in an action or special proceeding, may, in lieu of preparing, serving, and procuring the settlement of a bill of exceptions as in this chapter provided, procure a transcript of the testimony and proceedings, including the instructions given or refused, and exceptions thereto, on the trial, or such part thereof as may be necessary, in the following manner.” Then follow provisions for procuring the reporter’s transcript, and subd. 3 of such section provides: “At the expiration of the time limited for designating errors, the transcript, with any notice designating errors shall be transmitted to the judge who tried the cause, by the clerk, on application of either party, and such judge shall forthwith settle the same, notifying the parties by such notice as he deems adequate of the time and place of settlement in the event of any error designated by notice and not agreed to, and when so settled, said transcript shall have the force and effect of a bill of exceptions duly settled and allowed, and shall be deemed adequate to present for review any ruling appearing therein to have been excepted to, or by statute deemed excepted to, or any question of insufficiency of evidence which may afterward be properly presented by specification of insufficiency in the brief on appeal, and the original transcript and copies thereof lodged with the clerk shall be by him marked and filed and retained by him for transmission to the clerk of the supreme court in the event an appeal is afterward perfected.”

Argument was made by counsel for appellant upon the hearing of this motion to the effect that in case errors were not designated by either party, as to the correctness of the reporter’s transcript, then in such ease there was nothing to be settled, and no settlement was required to be made by the [474]*474judge, as the failure to designate errors presumes that the transcript of the reporter was correct, and would not require a settlement by the judge. We cannot agree to .this contention, for the reason that not only counsel of the respective parties may designate errors, but the settlement of a transcript is left entirely with the judge, and it is within his power also to make alterations and corrections of the transcript to correspond to the truth, and the statute has left it to the judge alone to settle the transcript, and the mere failure to designate errors does not limit the power of the judge or excuse the necessary statutory requirement of a settlement of such transcript. This section requires that in order to review the matters contained in such transcript on appeal in the supreme court, the same must be settled by the judge, and when so settled has the force and effect of a bill of exceptions duly settled and allowed, and shall be deemed adequate to present for review any ruling appearing therein to have been excepted to, etc.; that is, this section clearly requires that the trial judge shall settle the reporter’s transcript, and that such settlement is a requisite to give to the transcript the effect of a bill of exceptions. While the certificate presented upon the hearing of said motion, made by the trial judge, was not strictly made in accordance with the statute by reason of not having been made prior to the appeal, yet in view of the fact that the practice has not been thoroughly established under this section, we have permitted it to be filed and to take the place of the settlement required by the statute. The motion to strike is overruled.

Before taking up the questions urged upon this appeal, we deem it proper to call attention to the course pursued upon the trial. After the jury were selected, counsel for respondent called the court’s attention to what he contended to be the issues made by the pleadings, inasmuch as the defense had plead a warranty, and claimed that the burden was upon the defense to prove such warranty, and because of such burden it was incumbent upon the defendant to open and close the case. Some argument upon this question was indulged in between counsel and the court, and it was finally concluded [475]*475that the defendant was required to open the case and prove the matters set up in his cross-complaint, and after which the plaintiff should prove his case. This procedure was entirely erroneous. The action was brought by the plaintiff for the purchase price of apple trees alleged to have been sold and delivered by respondent to the appellant. The defendant in his answer specifically denied the allegations of the complaint, and alleged in his cross-complaint that the defendant ordered from one C. P.

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Bluebook (online)
122 P. 853, 21 Idaho 469, 1912 Ida. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grisinger-v-hubbard-idaho-1912.