Indianapolis Life Insurance v. Lundquist

53 N.E.2d 338, 222 Ind. 359, 1944 Ind. LEXIS 135
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1944
DocketNo. 27,964.
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 53 N.E.2d 338 (Indianapolis Life Insurance v. Lundquist) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Indianapolis Life Insurance v. Lundquist, 53 N.E.2d 338, 222 Ind. 359, 1944 Ind. LEXIS 135 (Ind. 1944).

Opinion

Fansler, C. J.

The appellee brought suit against the appellant on a life insurance policy. Issues were joined, there was a trial, and, more than a year after the trial, a judgment for appellee. The defendant filed a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and thirty days were given to file a bill of exceptions containing the evidence. An appeal was prayed and bond approved. When the appellant sought to procure a bill of exceptions, it was learned that the reporter’s notes and all exhibits had disappeared and could not be located. The trial judge was advised of the situation, and informed counsel that he would set aside his ruling on the motion for a new trial in' order that further opportunity might be had to locate the stenographer’s notes and exhibits, or a bill of exceptions otherwise prepared. On the last day of the term, the judge, in open court, in the presence of counsel for both parties, announced that the ruling on the motion for a new trial was vacated and set aside, an<j directed the clerk to prepare an order to that effect. Afterward, in the presence of counsel for appellee, but in the absence of *363 counsel for appellant, the judge told the clerk not to enter the order previously announced setting aside the ruling on the motion for a new trial. Counsel for the appellant was never informed of this latter action. Afterward, and when the time for filing a bill of exceptions had expired in the then state of the record, counsel for appellant discovered that the order setting aside the ruling on the motion for a new trial had not been entered. He conferred with the trial judge, whose term of office had expired, and was advised to get in touch with the deputy clerk regarding the entry. He got in touch with the clerk, who wrote up and entered the order announced by the court from the bench in the order book. When counsel for appellee discovered that the entry had been made he immediately filed a motion on behalf of appellee to expunge the entry. In response to this motion the appellant filed a petition seeking, firkt, that the motion to expunge the order book entry be denied, or, second, in the alternative, “that a new trial of this cause be awarded defendant under such circumstances that its right of appeal will be protected and safeguarded.” Issues were made on the,' respective petitions of the parties. There was, a' trial, the entry of the order made by the clerk above referred to was ordered expunged from the record, and there was a finding against the appellant on its petition for equitable relief. The appellant filed a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and the error assigned here is upon the overruling of appellant’s motion for a new trial on its petition for equitable relief.

The petition alleges that the plaintiff’s action was based upon a contract of insurance; that at the trial the evidence disclosed that the policy of insurance was never delivered to the insured and the first premium never paid, and that by the terms of the agreement *364 between the parties the contract was not to be effective unless and until the policy of insurance was delivered and the first premium actually paid. The petition also alleges that the defendant relied upon the order of the court setting aside its ruling upon the motion for a new trial, and awaited further disposition of the cause, and that if the court had not ordered its ruling set aside “the defendant could and would have tendered a bill of exceptions containing the evidence in this cause, regardless of the loss of said Exhibits and said notebooks.”

There is very little conflict in the evidence. The facts disclosed are in the main those above recited. The court reporter, who was not the regular reporter, but one called from another court, testified that she had made search for her shorthand notes and the exhibits and that they were nowhere to be found. One of appellant’s attorneys testified that he called upon the judge and advised him that the shorthand notes of the evidence and the exhibits were lost, and asked him to set aside the ruling on the motion for a new trial so as to give, additional time, which the judge agreed to do. The attorney for the plaintiff was called in, and, in the presence of both attorneys, the judge announced his decision to set aside his ruling, and called the clerk and directed him to enter such an order. The judge and the attorney for the plaintiff testified that the judge told the clerk that on the following Monday, which was the first day of the next term of court, he was to “reinstate the same ruling.” But it is agreed by all that the judge announced his decision to set aside his order, and directed the clerk to make the record accordingly. The appellant’s attorney testified that the clerk made an entry on his minute pad at the time. The appellant’s attorney then left, and the attorney for the *365 appellee testified that he told the judge that he had no jurisdiction to set aside his order, and that the judge thereupon told the clerk not to make the entry. The following week the plaintiff’s attorney told the judge' that he had examined the record, and that no record of the court’s order setting aside his ruling on the motion for a new trial had been made, and the judge replied, “Well, then you won’t have to worry about what I did then, because nothing' has been done.” .

The appellant’s attorney did not discover that no order had been entered until the 2nd of January, 1943. This was within the time in which the bill of exceptions might have been filed if the order overruling the motion for a new trial had been reinstated upon the following Monday. Appellant’s attorney immediately called the judge, who said that it was the clerk’s responsibility, and that he had to have a record some place. The appellant’s attorney then communicated with the deputy clerk, who was no longer employed in the clerk’s office. The deputy clerk came to the courthouse and made up the order from a memorandum which appellant’s attorney had written out and used in dictating the order to the deputy clerk at the time the ruling on the motion for a new trial was set aside. There is a memorandum on the clerk’s minutes, dated December 5, 1942, the date upon which the court set aside the ruling on the motion for a new trial, in the deputy clerk’s handwriting. The clerk testified that he had no recollection as to when this notation was made. The appellee’s attorney said that he examined the record frequently and saw no such notation during the month of December. The appellant’s attorney testified that at the time the ruling was announced he . dictated the memorandum; that he saw the clerk write the number of the case on the clerk’s minutes, but did not *366 see what the clerk wrote, but that he wrote something at the time.

It was agreed by the judge and the attorneys for both parties that the judge made and announced his ' decision and order vacating the order overruling the motion for a new trial. Concerning this fact there is no controversy. Mr. Freeman says: “. . . if any .judgment or decree of any court, whether of record or not of record, whether subordinate or appellate, fails to be entered upon its records, the failure is attributable to the negligence or inadvertence of its officers, and not to the countenance and support of the law, and does not defeat the judgment.” Freeman on Judgments~(5th Ed.), Vol. 1, § 49, p. 83. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
53 N.E.2d 338, 222 Ind. 359, 1944 Ind. LEXIS 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indianapolis-life-insurance-v-lundquist-ind-1944.