Hake v. Strubel

12 N.E. 676, 121 Ill. 321
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 12 N.E. 676 (Hake v. Strubel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hake v. Strubel, 12 N.E. 676, 121 Ill. 321 (Ill. 1887).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shops

delivered the opinion of the Court:

Final judgment in this case was rendered on April 21,1886,. in the St. Clair circuit court, and appellant prayed and was allowed an appeal, the bond and bill of exceptions “to be filed” within sixty days. The bill of exceptions appearing in the record was not presented to the trial judge, nor signed and sealed by him, within the time named in this order. Upon the-record being taken into the Appellate Court for the Fourth District, on motion of the appellee, the bill of exceptions was-there stricken from the record, and the judgment of the circuit court affirmed. On petition of appellant, the cause was. by the Appellate Court certified into this court, as presenting-questions of law of importance, that should bp passed upon by this court, “and the practice in this State in such cases, be thereby settled. ” The question submitted is thus stated :. “Whether a circuit judge, in vacation, under the facts stated in the bill of exceptions contained in this record, and the affidavits submitted to the Appellate Court on this motion to strike the said bill of exceptions from the record, has the power to extend the time for presenting and filing such bill of exceptions beyond the time fixed by the court when granting the appeal, and still make it a part of the record. ”

It appears from the bill of exceptions and the affidavits certified to us by the Appellate Court, that the evidence adduced at the trial W'as reported stenographieally; that about J une 2 or 3, the stenographer informed counsel for both parties that he was so engaged in reporting important criminal cases, and had so many transcripts to prepare, he could not possibly prepare the transcript in this case within the time fixed; that appellant’s counsel applied to the judge who tried the case, to extend the time, and on June 4, 1886, such judge wrote appellant’s counsel, that “the time to present bill 0f exceptions in the Hake v. Strubel case, will be extended fourteen days, as you desire, and you can have Judge......... to enter the extension on the Judge’s docket for me, and for so doing, this shall be his authority; ” that after the bill of exceptions had been prepared, and before its presentation to the trial judge, it was presented to counsel for appellee, who indorsed thereon, “0. K.—M. Millard;” that the bill was then, and within the extended time, presented to the trial judge; that before the bill was signed and sealed by the judge, the following words were therein inserted: “It having been presented to counsel for defendant, and the said attorneys agreeing that said bill of exceptions be considered as presented, signed^ and filed as of this 2d day of July, 1886;” and that the sixty days mentioned in the order for appeal expired on June 21, 1886.

The question we are asked to determine has relation to the-power of a circuit judge, out of term, to open and change the record of a court held by him, and- also to the character of the act of a judge in approving, signing and sealing a bill of ■exceptions in vacation, and whether the allowing and signing ■of a bill at such time thereby makes the matters contained therein part of the record. It' seems to us, the question of power is not an open one, or the rule of practice doubtful. When the February term, 18S6, of the St. Clair circuit court ended by final adjournment, the record was closed, and the presiding judge lost control over it. Up to that time the record had remained under his control, and might be changed by him according to his judicial will; but when once the term of the court ended, the record of the court, as made in term time, became fixed and unalterable, except as it might be changed in the modes and mariner known to the law. This principle is fundamental, requiring no citation of authority in its support, and any departure therefrom would inevitably entail consequences dangerous to the administration of justice and injurious to all litigants. In this ease, the term having been adjourned and the record closed prior to June 4, 1886, it seems needless to say that a mere private letter of a judge who had held the adjourned term of a court, addressed to an attorney, requesting another judge to change, in vacation, the judges minutes upon the docket of the court, whereby the time in which a bill of exceptions in a cause in that court might be filed should be extended beyond the time fixed in the order for appeal entered in term, could not effect the purpose intended. True, this letter of the judge was written, and the order of extension made, before the sixty days named in the order allowing appeal, and fixing its terms and conditions, had expired; but this could in no way affect the question under consideration. The question is not as to the power of the judge during the time named in the original order, and when he should be assuming to act under and in accordance therewith, but to his power, outside the order, to change the order itself. The statute (Practice act, sec. 67,) requires that appeals shall be prayed and allowed “at the term at which the judgment, order or decree was rendered, ” (National Insurance Co. v. Chamber of Commerce, 69 Ill. 22,) and that the bond shall be given for the amount and within the time fixed “by the court. ” The making of the order allowing appeal, and fixing the amount of the bond, and the time in which the bond and bill of exceptions in the cause shall be presented and filed, is a judicial act,.which can only be performed by the judge in term time, and when sitting as a court. The making of the order is an exercise of the judicial power vested in the presiding judge, but the order, when made, is the order of the court. If, then, the original order'of appeal, providing, inter alia, within what time the bill of exceptions in the cause might be presented and filed, was a judicial act, which could only be performed by the judge in term time, and when sitting as a court, as we have seen is the case, it follows, that the act of changing such an order by entering another order extending the time in which the bill of exceptions in the cause might be presented and filed, fourteen days, would be of the same judicial character,—an exercise of judicial power; and such an act could be performed by a judge only in term time.

But the question submitted involves, also, the consideration of the character of the act performed by a circuit judge in settling and allowing, signing and sealing, a bill of exceptions in vacation, and not within the time fixed by an order of court entered in term time, with a view to determining whether a bill so allowed and settled, signed and sealed, thereby becomes a part of the record of a cause. While the conclusion reached by us can be stated in few words, the legal principles upon which such conclusion rests, can not be so briefly given.

Bills of exceptions were first introduced into the English practice by the Statute of Westminister, (13 Edw. I, chap. 3,) whereby the judge signing the bill was required to come into the appellate court, and there confess or deny his seal to the bill. Exceptions, at common law, were required to be taken at the time the alleged erroneous ruling or decision was made, and the bill must have been presented, settled, signed and sealed before verdict, or before the jury were discharged,—and such was the early practice in this State. Clemson v. Kruper, Breese, 162; Swafford v. Dovenor, 1 Scam. 165; Gilmore v. Ballard, id. 252; Leigh v. Hodges, 3 id. 15 ; Gibbons v. Johnson, id. 61. By the statute of January 29, 1827, (Rev. Stat. 1827, p. 315, sec.

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12 N.E. 676, 121 Ill. 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hake-v-strubel-ill-1887.