Hawes v. People ex rel. Pulver

21 N.E. 777, 129 Ill. 123
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 21 N.E. 777 (Hawes v. People ex rel. Pulver) 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
Hawes v. People ex rel. Pulver, 21 N.E. 777, 129 Ill. 123 (Ill. 1889).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Shope

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a petition in the Appellate Court for the First District, praying for a mandamus against the respondent, Kirk Hawes, as judge of the Superior Court of Cook county, to compel him, as judge of said court, to sign and seal a bill of exceptions in a suit lately pending and determined in said court, before him, wherein Emilie Pulver, the relator, was plaintiff, and against the Rochester German Insurance Company. At a former term of this court a like petition was heard, upon appeal from the Appellate Court, and we then held, that the Appellate Court was without power to award the writ of mandamus, except in furtherance of its appellate jurisdiction, and that as no appeal had been taken, or writ of error prosecuted to the Superior Court, to reverse the original judgment, there was no authority to issue the writ, and the order of the Appellate Court awarding the writ was reversed.Subsequently, a writ of error was sued out of the Appellate Court by the relator to review said judgment of the Superior Court. A transcript of the record was filed therein, and a scire facias was issued, and served upon the defendant in error. Thereupon the present petition was filed, being in all essential particulars identical with the one first filed. Upon hearing, the Appellate Court awarded the writ, as, being in furtherance of its appellate jurisdiction and necessary to the hearing and determination of the cause in that court, it clearly had the power to do, if otherwise warranted. Hawes v. The People, 25 App. Court Rep. 326.

We have carefully examined the record, and considered the arguments of counsel, and are of opinion that the respondent, as judge of said Superior Court, was not only authorized, but required, by law, after having settled, as he did, the bill of exceptions tendered, to sign and seal the same. Ho good purpose can be subserved by a re-discussion of the .facts or principles involved, as we are entirely satisfied with the reasoning of the Appellate Court in its opinion filed upon consideration of the case made by the petition first presented, which is as follows:

Bailey, J.:

“This is an original proceeding in this court, by mandamus, to compel the respondent, one of the judges of the Superior Court, to sign and seal a bill of exceptions in a certain suit lately pending before him in said court.

“The facts, as shown by the petition, answer and affidavits, so far as we deem them material, are substantially as follows: On the 22d day of March, 1887, there was pending and undetermined in said court an action of assumpsit brought by Emilie Pulver, the relator, against the Rochester Herman Insurance Company, to recover her loss and damage by fire to certain personal property covered by a policy of insurance issued to her by said company. The trial of said cause was entered upon on the 22d day of March, 1887, and concluded on the 29th day of _the same month, the verdict of the jury being in favor of said company. On the 9th day of April, 1887, the relator’s motion for a new trial was overruled, and on the same day judgment was rendered by the court, the respondent presiding, against the relator, for costs. The relator thereupon prayed an appeal to this court, which was allowed on her filing her appeal bond in the sum of $300, to be approved by the court, together with her bill of exceptions, within sixty days from that date. On the first day of June, 1887, a stipulation in writing was entered into and signed by the attorneys of the insurance company and the relator, for and on behalf of their respective clients, by which it was agreed that the time for filing said bill of exceptions should be extended for the period of thirty days from and after the time originally limited by said court for the filing of the same, and on the same day, it being one of the days of the May term, 1887, of said court, an order was entered in said court, in said cause, in the following words: ‘On the stipulation of the parties hereto, it is ordered that the time for filing the appeal bond and bill of exceptions herein be and is hereby extended until the 9th day of July next.’ On the 22d day of June, 1887, the relator’s attorney, having completed his draft of the bill of exceptions, presented it to the respondent, and requested him to sign it, and the respondent thereupon took the bill and wrote thereon as follows: ‘Presented for signature June 22, ’87.—Hawes/ The respondent then directed that the bill be delivered to the attorney of the insurance company for examination, which was done. Various circumstances, which we do not deem it material to notice, prevented a meeting of said attorneys before the respondent to settle the bill of exceptions until some time in October, 1887, when all proposed amendments to said bill were passed upon and settled by the respondent, but, being in doubt as to his power to sign the bill at that time, he took that question under advisement until November 3, 1887, on which day he decided that he had no power to sign said bill, and refused so to do.

“If the respondent had power to sign the bill of exceptions, when it was presented to him on the 22d day of June, he should be required to sign it now. The rule is, that where a party presents his bill of exceptions to the judge who tried the cause, for his signature, within the time prescribed for-filing the same, he having thus done all he can, will not be prejudiced by thenegleet or refusal of the judge to sign the bill until after the time fixed for that purpose has expired. Underwood v. Hossack, 40 Ill. 98; Magill v. Brown, 98 id. 235; Village of Hyde Park v. Dunham, 85 id. 569; Hake v. Strubel, 121 id. 321.

“The time limited by the court for filing the bill of exceptions, at the time of entering judgment and granting the prayer for an appeal, expired on the 8th day of June; but before the expiration of that period, though at a subsequent term, by an order entered in term time, by express stipulation of the parties, the time was extended thirty days, and within the time as thus extended the bill of exceptions was presented to the respondent for his signature. The theory upon which his power to sign the bill on the 22d of June is denied, is, that at the adjournment of the term at which the final judgment was rendered, the record in the case was closed, and was no longer within the power of the court.

“It may be conceded, that in theory, at least, the record was closed at the expiration of the term; but that theory, so far as it relates to the bill of exceptions, is complied with by an enforcement of the rule of practice which requires that bills of exceptions, though in fact signed and sealed long after the term, should purport, on their face, to be signed and sealed at the term. While such is doubtless the theory, the actual fact, so far as it relates to the proceedings by which the bill is drafted, settled, signed and sealed, is, that those matters, which necessarily involve the exercise of both judicial and ministerial functions, are all to be performed after the term is closed. In this respect the record, though closed in theory at the end of the term, is not so in fact, and all the proceedings necessary to complete the record, so far, at least, as they involve the performance of judicial functions, are necessarily as completely ‘within the breast of the judge,’ until the bill is settled and signed, as are the records of the court during the term.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.E. 777, 129 Ill. 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawes-v-people-ex-rel-pulver-ill-1889.