Hogan v. Peterson

59 P. 162, 8 Wyo. 549, 1899 Wyo. LEXIS 26
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 59 P. 162 (Hogan v. Peterson) 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
Hogan v. Peterson, 59 P. 162, 8 Wyo. 549, 1899 Wyo. LEXIS 26 (Wyo. 1899).

Opinion

Pottee, Chief Justice.

The first question for our determination relates to the bill of exceptions. Counsel for defendant in error contend that the bill is not entitled to consideration for the reason that it is not shown by the record proper, that it was reduced to writing and presented for allowance within the time allowed by the order of the court.

By an order regularly entered in the'journal at the term when the exceptions were taken, and at the time of overruling the motion for new trial, the plaintiffs in error were given time until and including the first day of the next term of the court within which to present their bill of exceptions. It is recited in the bill ás follows : “ Whereupon the court ordered that defendants have time until and including the first day of the next succeeding term of said court, in said Fremont County, to reduce their exceptions to writing, and in which to present their bill of exceptions to the court or to the judge thereof in vacation for allowance. And thereupon, the defendants within the said time allowed them, now tender this their, bill of exceptions, which is allowed, signed, sealed, and ordered to be filed and made a part of the record in this said cause.”

This court has held that the granting of time beyond the term to complete and tender a bill must be evidenced by the entryi of an order during the term; and that a recital in the bill that time was SO given is insufficient, [554]*554Smith Drug Co. v. Casper Drug Co., 5 Wyo., 510; Schlessinger v. Cook (recently decided). The reasons which ind'uced that conclusion do not prevail as to the time of tendering the bill.

Time having been granted beyond the term and until and including the first day of the next succeeding term to present the bill, the court has, by authority of the statute, retained control of the record of the cause, and if the bill is tendered within the time allowed, is competent upon its allowance to make an order that the bill be constituted part of the record as much so as if the bill had been reduced to writing and presented for allowance during the term at which the exceptions were taken. In Mc Bride v. Union Pacific Ry. Co., 3 Wyo., 183, it was held that no journal entry was required to show the allowance and signing of a bill of exceptions; and it was said: “The allowance, signing, and perhaps filing are what constitute it a part of the record, and no journal entry is necessary for that purpose. ’ ’ The statute provides that when the bill has been allowed and signed, it shall be filed with the pleadings as a part of the record, but not spread at large upon the journal. The bill being a part of the record, as a result of the allowance, signing and filing thereof, there occurs to us no valid reason why the time of its presentation, and the fact that such presentation was within the time allowed, may not be set forth in the bill itself over the signature of the judge. If no journal entry is essential to preserve a record of the allowance, but the bill itself, disclosing such allowance and signing, operates as a sufficient record thereof, it would seem reasonably to follow that, as to the matter of presentation, it is only required that it appear upon the face of the bill that the presentation was within the time allowed. It was said in Smith Drug Co. v. Casper Drug Co., supra, “ but the bill must show on its face that it was presented within the time allowed.” In that case it was held that the absence from the order of allowance appearing in the bill of a statement that it was tendered within the time allowecj was fatal to the bill.

[555]*555While it is probably better practice for the bill to show the date when it was tendered, we think a statement that it was presented within the time allowed is sufficient. In this case the time allowed by previous order is recited in the bill, and immediately following that recital it is stated that the bill was presented within the said time allowed.

The certificate of the clerk appended to the transcript states that it contains a true and complete copy of the bill of exceptions on file and of record in his office. This sufficiently authenticates the bill, and shows also the fact that it had been filed.

Counsel for plaintiff in. error, in their brief, contend that there was error in the proceedings in the court below in this; that after both parties had waived a jury, the court ordered and impaneled one to try the cause. The bill of exceptions recites that the jury was called upon the demand therefor by the plaintiff, after a previous waiver, and without the advancement of the required jury fee; while the journal entry does not show that such a demand was made. The matter was orally argued by counsel, and it was earnestly insisted that the statute is mandatory in its provision that after a waiver upon the formal call of the docket, and a failure to pay the fee exacted from a party demanding a jury, “ a jury shall not thereafter be allowed or called in such case during that term. ’ ’

It will be unnecessary to refer to all the statutory provisions covering this question, or to determine whether error was committed in that regard, for the reason that the question is not properly before the court. The conduct of the court in calling a jury is not assigned as a ground of error in the petition in error; and although the denial of the motion for new trial is assigned as error, that motion did not specify that matter as one of the grounds for a new trial. The question was not brought to the attention of the court at all, after verdict, so far as the record discloses. Our Hule 11 requires that the petition in error shall distinctly set forth each of the errors complained of; and Rule 13 provides that the ruling of the court below [556]*556upon each matter presented by a motion for new trial shall he sufficiently questioned by an assignment that the court erred in overruling such motion. The assignment of the matter as error, for the first time in counsel’s brief, is not sufficient, and does not comply with the rule.

Again, we are of the opinion that it should have been embraced in the motion for a new trial, to entitle it to consideration here on error. It was held in Syndicate Improvement Co. v. Bradley, 43 Pac., 79 (6 Wyo., 171), that an alleged error in denying a demand for a jury trial would not he considered where the question had not been raised in the court below on a motion for a new trial.

In the motion for new trial certain alleged instructions to the jury are complained of; but it is not made clear by the bill that they were given, nor is it apparent that all the instructions given are embraced in the bill. It is stated in the bill as follows: “And the plaintiff re-, quested the court to give the following instruction and charge.” Following the alleged instruction, appears the statement, ‘£ To which charge the defendants at the time duly excepted. ” We can only say by way of inference that the requested instruction was in fact given. In Bank of Chadron v. Anderson, 53 Pac., 280 (7 Wyo., 441), it was said, [ ‘ Where the bill is unintelligible, confused, or conflicting, it will be interpreted against the appellant, and in support of the judgment, as the exceptant is responsible for all deficiencies therein.” The absence of the other instructions if any which were given, or a statement that those recited in the bill were all which were given, renders the court unable to determine whether the instructions complained of, if erroneous in themselves and standing alone, were modified or cured by others.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 P. 162, 8 Wyo. 549, 1899 Wyo. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hogan-v-peterson-wyo-1899.