Hart Wood & Lumber Co. v. Sea View Railroad

72 A. 1104, 29 R.I. 530, 1909 R.I. LEXIS 57
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 11, 1909
StatusPublished

This text of 72 A. 1104 (Hart Wood & Lumber Co. v. Sea View Railroad) 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
Hart Wood & Lumber Co. v. Sea View Railroad, 72 A. 1104, 29 R.I. 530, 1909 R.I. LEXIS 57 (R.I. 1909).

Opinion

Sweetland, J.

Heard on motion to dismiss defendant’s bill of exceptions.

Upon a trial before a jury, in the Superior Court in Washington county, a verdict was returned in favor of the plaintiff. The defendant duly filed a motion for a new trial. On December 30th, 1908, said motion for a new trial was denied by the justice of the Superior Court who presided at the trial. On January 6th, 1909, the defendant filed, in the clerk’s office of the Superior Court in Washington county, notice of its intention to prosecute a bill of exceptions to the Supreme Court, together with a written request to the court stenographer for a complete transcript of the testimony, and deposited with the clerk the estimated fee for transcribing the testimony. Thereupon the justice of the Superior Court who presided at the trial made and signed the following order: “Transcript of evidence, etc., to be made and delivered by stenographer to party ordering the same or his attorney of record and to be filed in clerk’s office on or before February 23rd A. D. 1909. Bill of exceptions to be filed in clerk’s office on or before March 4, A. D. 1909.”

The first ground of the motion to dismiss is that “The time limited by the court for filing the transcript in said case was later than forty days from the filing of the written request to the court stenographer therefor by said defendant.”

The third ground of the motion to dismiss is that “ The said defendant did not, not later than fifty days after filing a notice ■of intention to prosecute a bill of exceptions, file in the office of the clerk of the Superior Court the bill of exceptions.”

These two grounds of the motion attack the power of the justice of the Superior Court, in the first instance, to fix a period ■of forty-eight days within which the defendant might file a transcript of the evidence and to fix a period of fifty-seven days within which the defendant might file its bill of exceptions.

*532 (1) Section 71 of the Court and Practice Act, among other things, provides that the court stenographer shall make a transcript of the whole or any part of the stenographic -report of the proceedings in the trial of an action “upon the written request, filed with the clerk by either party to such action or proceeding, and when completed, and within the time limited by the court for filing the same, but not later than forty days from the date of such request, except as provided in section 72, shall immediately deliver the same to the party ordering it or to the attorney of record of said party.”

Section 72 of the Court and Practice Act is as follows: “Sec. 72. In case of sickness or other disability of the court stenographer who made the report of the evidence and rulings, or for other causes, the Superior Court may, on motion therefor, and with or without notice, grant an extension of time for • filing a transcript of the evidence and rulings beyond the period of forty days allowed by the preceding section.”

Section 490 of the Court and Practice Act, fixing the procedure to be taken by a person or party in prosecuting a bill of exceptions to the Supreme Court, among other things prescribes that “ within such time as the court shall fix, not later than fifty days after filing notice of intention to prosecute a bill of exceptions, or within ten days after the expiration of such extended time as is provided by section 72 for filing a transcript of the evidence, he shall file in the office of the clerk of the Superior Court his bill of exceptions.”

It is urged by the plaintiff that the power- given to the' Superior Court, under § 72, C. P. A., to grant an extension of time for filing a transcript is restricted to the extension of a. period of forty days or less, which has been previously limited by the court under the provisions of section 71. It is further urged that the proceedings for a review of the action of the' Superior Court by bill of exception is a privilege, and that the provisions of the statutes relating thereto should be most strictly construed. If by use of the word “privilege” it is-claimed that a review by bill of exceptions is something less than a right, such claim shows a misconception of the provisions of the constitution and of the purpose of the statute. This. *533 court, under the constitution, is given jurisdiction to review the proceedings of inferior tribunals; and the right of litigants, who observe the procedure fixed by statute, to come to this court upon a bill of exceptions is as indubitable as is their right to be heard in the Superior Court. The provisions of the statute with regard to the procedure upon bills of exceptions should not be considered as so many traps and obstacles, prescribed by the General Assembly, to prevent the litigant from obtaining a special privilege, but rather as reasonable rules to be observed in perfecting a right provided under the constitution. The construction contended for by the plaintiff is not a reasonable one, and whenever in this procedure two different constructions of a provision are possible, the harsher and less reasonable should not be the one to receive judicial sanction.

(2) The plaintiff appears to be of the opinion that the time within which the transcript of evidence must be filed, if there be no extension of time, is not later than forty days from the date of the written request to the stenographer, and there is a warrant for this conclusion from the consideration of sections 71 and 72 alone. But considered in connection with the provisions of § 490, C. P. A., as was pointed out by this court in Baker v. Tyler, 28 R. I., at p. 155, if there be no extension of time, the time for delivery of the transcript by the stenographer to the party or his attorney must be within the time fixed for the party to file it, in no case later than forty days from the filing of the written request; but the time for filing the transcript, together with the bill of exceptions, in the clerk’s office may be fixed by the court as late as fifty days after filing notice of intention to prosecute a bill of exceptions.

It will generally occur in practice that an extension of the time for filing the transcript of evidence will be sought after a period of fifty days or less has first been fixed by the court, and of necessity before the expiration of the period so fixed. But if at the time of filing the notice of intention to prosecute a bill of exceptions it appears to the Superior Court that, for any cause, the transcript can not be made and delivered within forty days from the date of the written request for the same, it would be an unreasonable provision to require the Superior *534 Court to first fix a time for filing the transcript and bill and then to require the court, immediately, by another order, to extend the time so fixed. A reasonable construction of sections 71 and 72 does not require such procedure. The expression “ grant an extension of time,” in section 72, may be construed to mean an extension or enlargement of a period previously fixed by the court, and with equal reason this expression may be held to mean an enlargement or extension of the time referred to in section 71, namely, the ordinary period contemplated by the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
72 A. 1104, 29 R.I. 530, 1909 R.I. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hart-wood-lumber-co-v-sea-view-railroad-ri-1909.