Hawley v. LeClair

102 P. 850, 18 Wyo. 1, 1909 Wyo. LEXIS 21
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 8, 1909
DocketNo. 593
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 102 P. 850 (Hawley v. LeClair) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hawley v. LeClair, 102 P. 850, 18 Wyo. 1, 1909 Wyo. LEXIS 21 (Wyo. 1909).

Opinion

PoTTER, Citiee Justice.

- This is a proceeding in error for the review of an order of the District Court in Fremont County overruling a motion of the plaintiffs in error to strike from the files the bill-of exceptions of the defendant in error. The plaintiffs [5]*5in error were defendants below and upon .a trial of the cause recovered judgment against defendant, in error, the plaintiff below. In further referring to thé parties the plaintiffs in error will be referred to as defendants, and the defendant in error as the plaintiff. ■ Upon the overruling of the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial an order was entered granting him until and including April 15, 1908, within which to reduce to writing, prepare, present and file his bill of exceptions. Thereafter the plaintiff prepared and procured the allowance of a bill of exceptions upon which is endorsed over the signature of the trial judge the following: “Presented to the court this 15th day of April A. D. 1908 and taken under consideration.” The bill is also endorsed by the clerk of said District Court as filed April 15, 1908. Near the close of the bill and immediately preceding the certificate of the judge allowing it appears a statement that within the time provided by law and fixed by the order of the court the plaintiff presents and tenders to the judge “this his bill of exceptions.” Following that statement is a prayer that said bill be settled, allowed and signed by the judge before whom the cause was tried and made a part of the record of said cause. Immediately following such prayer is a statement signed by the judge in these words: “Presented to me this 15th day of April A. D. 1908.” The certificate of the judge showing the settlement and allowance of the bill is dated April 15, 1908, and recites that the. biil was reduced to writing within the time provided by law and allowed by the court for that purpose, and that it was then before the said judge on motion of the attorneys for the plaintiff that the same be settled, allowed and signed and made a part of the record in said cause.

In the bill of exceptions taken by the defendants upon the order overruling their motion to strike the plaintiff’s bill the following facts are stated: That the plaintiff, having prepared his bill of exceptions, filed the same in the office of the clerk of said court on April 15, 1908, and that the clerk endorsed the same as filed on said day; that the [6]*6judge was absent from Fremont County from and after April i, 1908, until June 10, 1908, when the regulár June term of said court convened, and the judge at that time being present, “the judge of said court allowed, signed and settled said bill of exceptions as of the date of April 15, A. D. 1908, the day when the same was filed in the office of the clerk of this court, said judge holding that, in his absence from said county, the filing of said bill of exceptions in the office of- the clerk of said court was a presentation to him for allowance within the proper time." It thus appears that plaintiff’s bill was actually settled, allowed and signed on June 10, 1908, although the date of such allowance is stated on the face of the bill as April 15, 1908, the date when it had been left with the clerk and' marked filed by him, and that the judge regarded and accepted the filing or deposit of the bill with the clerk as a due and proper presentation to him for allowance. It is not shown that the defendants interposed an objection to the bill or its consideration at or prior to the time of its allowance, or that they excepted to the-ruling then made that the bill had been duly and properly presented for allowance. The only exception to be considered, -therefore, is that taken to the overruling of -the motion to strike the bill from the files.

The motion was filed on June 13, 1908, and was based upon the following grounds : (1) That prior to the date when the bill was filed in the office of the clerk the plaintiff had filed his petition in error in the Supreme Court and procured the issuance of a summons in error. (2) That at the time the bill was filed it had not been presented to the court or judge and had not been allowed or signed or ordered to be made a paid of the record. The summons in error served upon defendants, which had been issued in the proceeding in error instituted by the plaintiff, was attached to the motion, but there does not appear to have been any evidence, by affidavit or otherwise, introduced upon the hearing of the motion. The facts as to the allowance and signing of the bill on June 10, 1908, the absence [7]*7of the judge after April 1, and his holding, with reference to the due presentation of plaintiff’s bill, are not stated in the bill of defendants as evidence produced on' the hearing of the motion, but the recital of such facts precedes the statement of the filing and ruling upon the motion, and was intended apparently to show what had occurred previous to the filing of the motion with reference to the allowed bill. The motion seems, therefore, to have been heard and determined upon the record, and the facts supposedly within the knowledge of the court and the parties.

The only objections to the bill here insisted on are that it was improperly filed before its allowance, and that the deposit or filing of the bill with the clerk did not constitute a presentation to the judge or court, and that the bill was therefore not presented until June 10, 1908, which was after the time allowed. 11 is clear that the first ground of the motion was not well taken, for under our practice the fact that the bill had not been reduced to writing, or presented or allowed, prior to the commencement of the plaintiff’s proceeding in error in this court to review the final judgment in the cause would not invalidate the bill, if it was in fact prepared and presented within the time that had been allowed for that purpose. (3 Cyc. 38; 3 Ency. Pl. & Pr. 482.)

The point that the bill was improperly filed when first left with the clerk on April 15, 1908, had become purely technical at the time the motion to strike was filed, since the bill had in the meantime been allowed and signed, and if it had been reduced to writing and presented for allowance within the time granted it could have been refiled with or without an order therefor. When a bill has been prepared and presented within the time granted, it may be taken under consideration by the court or judge and allowed and signed afterwards, for it is not necessary that the act of allowance and signing occur within the time granted and limited for reducing the exceptions to writing and presenting the same for allowance. The judge therefore could properly have stated the true date of the [8]*8allowance upon the face of the bill without invalidating it, but it was equally proper to date the allowance as of the time when the bill had been presented. Technically, the bill ought to have been refiled after its allowance, but the old filing mark seems to have been retained, probably under the supposition that the fact of dating the allowance as of April 15, 1908, rendered another filing endorsement unnecessary. Upon the facts here, we would not be inclined to reverse the order of the court overruling the motion on the ground that the bill-was not refiled after allowance, since the only result would be to remand the proceeding with instructions to refile the bill as of June 10, 1908.

The question of the due presentation of the bill to the judge for allowance is a more serious one. In the first place, it is doubtful whether the motion challenged the bill upon -the ground that it had not been duly presented.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 P. 850, 18 Wyo. 1, 1909 Wyo. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawley-v-leclair-wyo-1909.