Hurford v. Rosie

151 Ill. App. 605, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 787
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 22, 1909
DocketGen. No. 14,718
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 151 Ill. App. 605 (Hurford v. Rosie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hurford v. Rosie, 151 Ill. App. 605, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 787 (Ill. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baker

delivered the opinion of the court.

In an action of forcible detainer by defendant in error against plaintiff in error a verdict for the plaintiff was directed and returned by the jury. May 9, 1908, judgment was entered on the verdict. June 8 an order was entered extending the time for filing “the bill of exceptions” to June 13. June 13 an instrument entitled “Statement of Facts” was presented to the trial judge, and the fact of such presentation on said date noted thereon by him over his signature. June 15, 1908, the same was signed by the trial judge, and on the same day was filed. A motion by defendant in error to strike said instrument from the transcript of the record filed in this court was reserved to the hearing.

• November 12, 1908', there was filed in this court a certified transcript of an “order together with a certain original additional report” in said cause. The order set forth in said transcript was entered November 5,1908, and denies each of plaintiff’s motions then made, one of which was to amend the said statement signed and filed June 15. Said transcript also contains a certificate signed by the trial judge November 5,1908, of the proceedings on the hearing of said motion, and the evidence introduced in support thereof, which states that the court held that he “had no jurisdiction or power at this time to set aside or vary, alter or change said orders or to strike from record, or correct errors in said statement of facts filed June 15, 1908, on the ground that while the court had a distinct recollection of said trial and of said contract, and the evidence offered in the trial, and while said statement evidently was erroneous, he had no memoranda by which he could correct said statement, and thereupon denied each of said motions.”

On the same day the trial judge signed another instrument entitled, “Additional report requested by the plaintiff,” certified to contain, “all the testimony offered or received on the trial,” etc., which instrument was filed on said day and is the instrument contained in the additional transcript filed in this court November 12. Plaintiff in error moved in this court to strike from the record said additional report, and December 14 his motion was denied. No order was entered at any time extending the time within which the plaintiff might file an additional report.

Clause 6 of section ,23 of the Municipal Court Act contains the following provision:

“Upon application made at any time within thirty (30) days after the entry of any final order or judgment, or within such further time as may, upon application therefor within said thirty days, lie allowed by the court, it shall be the duty of the judge by whom such final order or judgment was entered, to sign and place on file in the case in which the same was entered, if so requested by either of the parties to the suit, either a correct statement, to be prepared by the party requesting the signing of the same, of the facts appearing upon the trial thereof, and of all questions of law involved in such case, and the decisions of the court upon such questions of law, or, if such party shall so elect, a correct stenographic report of the proceedings at the trial, and a correct statement of such other proceedings in the case as such party may desire to have reviewed by the Supreme Court or the Appellate Court, omitting therefrom, with the approval of the judge, so much of the arguments of counsel and of the other proceedings, other than the evidence and rulings of the court with respect thereto, and the charge of the court, as the judge may deem unnecessary for the presentation to the Supreme Court or the Appellate Court of the merits of the case: Provided, however, that the opposite party may, if he so elect, cause the parts so omitted to be signed by the judge as an additional report, and cause the same to be certified by the clerk and filed in the Supreme Court or Appellate Court, as the case may be, as a part of the record to be considered upon such writ of error.”

■ This clause only authorizes an “additional report” in a case where a “stenographic report of the proceedings on the trial” has been prepared1 by one party and signed by the trial judge, from which, “with the approval of the judge,” certain proceedings “other than the evidence and rulings of the court in respect thereto,” etc., have been omitted. In such case the adverse party may cause “the parts so omitted to be signed by the judge as an additional report.” The instrument signed and filed June 15> entitled “Statement of Facts,” does not purport to be a “stenographic report.” It contains only four pages. The “Additional Report” contains fifty-seven pages of testimony and several pages of exhibits. The “Statement of Facts” is certified to contain all the “evidence offered on the hearing of the cause,” and the “Additional Report” is certified to contain “all the testimony offered or received on the trial.” It does not appear from said “Statement of Facts” or from any order made in the cause that anything was omitted therefrom, “with the approval of the judge, ’ ’ nor does the ‘ ‘ Additional Report” purport to contain anything that was omitted from the “Statement of Facts,” “with the approval of the judge.”

The instrument designated an “Additional Report,” signed November 5, cannot be held an “Additional Report” within the meaning of the statute, first, because the “Statement of Facts” signed and filed June 15 does not purport to be “a correct stenographic report of the proceedings on the trial,” etc., and it is only where such a report is signed by the judge that an “Additional Report” may be signed by him; second, because it does not appear either from said “Statement of Facts” or from the common law record that anything whs omitted from such “Statement of Facts,” “with the approval of the judge,” and the “Additional Report” does not purport to set out anything which was omitted from such “Statement of Facts,” “with the approval of the judge,” and it is only where some part of the proceedings on the trial are omitted “with the approval of the judge” that he is authorized to sign an additional report; third, the statute only authorizes the omission from a “stenographic report,” “with the approval of the judge” of “proceedings other than the evidence and the rulings of the court with respect thereto and the charge of the court,” and the “Additional Report” only purports to set out the evidence and the rulings of the court in respect thereto; fourth, because the time for filing a “Bill of Exceptions” expired, at the latest, June 15, there was no order giving the plaintiff time to file an additional report after that time, the “Additional Report” was not signed until November 5, and the “Additional Report” must be signed within the time allowed for the signing the original report, or within such time as the court may, by order entered before the time for signing the original report has expired, grant for the signing the additional report. ■

Independent of the provisions of the Municipal Court Act the trial judge had no authority on November 5 to sign the “Additional Beport” of a cause tried May 9. It appears affirmatively from his certificate “that he had no memoranda by which he could correct said statement,” (the statement of facts). He properly held that without such memoranda he could not correct the statement. But without such memoranda he was without authority to sign a new report of the proceedings and evidence on the trial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
151 Ill. App. 605, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 787, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurford-v-rosie-illappct-1909.