Jacksonville Street Railroad v. Walton

42 Fla. 54
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJanuary 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 42 Fla. 54 (Jacksonville Street Railroad v. Walton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacksonville Street Railroad v. Walton, 42 Fla. 54 (Fla. 1900).

Opinion

Taylor, C. J.:

In the transcript of the record brought here by writ of error from the Circuit Court of Duval county in this cause there are two bills of exceptions, the bill of exceptions proper and an evidentiary bill of exceptions. The defendants in error now make two motions, both aimed at the bill of exceptions proper. The first of these motions asks that the entire bill of exceptions be stricken from the record, on the grounds:

1st. That it is not a true and correct copy of the bill of exceptions signed by the Circuit Judge.

[58]*582nd. Because it does-not conform tO' special rule 3 of the rules of the Supreme Court for the preparation of the bill of exceptions.

3rd. Bdcause the statement of testimony in said bill of exceptions upon which the 1 st, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 7th, 8th, 9th, 10th, 13th, 14th, 15th, 16th, 17th, 18th, 19th, 20th, 21st, 23rd, 24th and 25th charges were predicted is not confined to the substance of such portion of the proof only as were pertinent to the charges, as required by the rule, but contain statements of evidence not pertinent to the charge, and upon which said charges were not predicated, and in many instances omits entirely to state the evidence upon which said charges were predicated.

4th. Because the statement of testimony in said bill of exceptions upon which the 26th, 27th, 28th, 29th, 30th and 31st charges were predicated does not comply with the rules of the Supreme Court', in that said statements do not contain the evidence at all upon which said charges were predicated, but contain statements of evidence upon which other and different charges were predicated.

5th. -Because the statements of testimony, upon which the several charges were predicated are in conflict with rules of the Supreme Court, in that they attempt to give a summary of all the testimony applicable to all the charges, and are not confined only to' the proof upon which the particular charge was predicated as required by the rules.

6th. Because said bill of exceptions is in conflict with the rules of the Supreme Court, in that after setting forth the testimony upon which each charge was predicated, the bill of exceptions purports to give a summary of the testimony offered by the plaintiff in error tending [59]*59to disprove the testimony offered by defendant in error in the court below, and such statements being in conflict with the rules and not applicable to bills of exception.

7th. Because it does not appear from the record that the bill of exceptions has ever been filed.

The second of these motions asks, seriatim, that each of the charges given at the request of the plaintiffs below, and numbered 1, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 849, 10, u, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21 and 22, be stricken from the bill of exceptions, together with the statement of testimony on which said charges were, respectively, predicated, and the statement under each of said charges of what the testimony of the plaintiff in error tended to prove, because such statements of testimony, respectively, do not comply with the rules of the Supreme Court, and do not correctly state the testimony upon which the said charges were respectively predicated. And to strike from the bill of exceptions, seriatim, the charges numbered respectively 26th, 27th, 28th, 29th, 30th and 31st, together with the statements’of evidence upon which said charges purport, respectively, to have been predicated, and the statement in connection there-with of what the testimony on behalf of the plaintiff in error tended to prove, because said statements of evidence do not contain any part of the evidence upon which said last mentioned charges were, respectively, predicated.

The first ground of the first of these motions, asserting that the bill of exceptions as contained in the transcript of the record is not-a true and correct copy of the original as signed by the Circuit Judge, is sought to be sustained by an exhibition here, by special order of the Circuit Judge, of the original bill of exceptions. [60]*60Upon an inspection of the original bill so before us it appears that at the conclusion of the statement of what the evidence proved or tended to prove under charges excepted to the following appeared: “This is the substance of all the testimony tending to support this chargebut which entries were erased with pen and ink by the judge before signing the bill. The contention of the mover is that these statements or matters thus erased should have been included in the transcript in their erased condition so as to exhibit the fact of their erasure, and because of the fact that the transcript fails to- exhibit such erased matter the contention is made that it is not a true copy of the original. This contention cannot be sustained. ' Matters purposely erased from a bill of exceptions by the Circuit Judge before he gives it authenticity by affixing thereto his certificate over his hand and seal do not become any part of such authenticated bill. The bare fact that the judge strikes them out from the bill, before lending to- it the verity and authenticity that his certificate imparts to- the contents of such bill, is conclusive evidence that such stricken matter is not intended to be verified as true, or as forming any part of the matter contained in such bill that is verified by such certification. The clerk of the court in copying-such bill into the transcript of the record acted properly in omitting- such erased or stricken matter, as it formed no part of the record to be certified to this court for review, and this court can look alone to- the certified matter of the bill to ascertain its meaning.

Another ground of the first motion that we will have to dispose of as a preliminar)' question is, that it does not appear from the transcript of the record that the bill of exceptions has ever been filed with the clerk of the court below. It is true that the transcript does [61]*61not contain any recital or express statement of the fact that the bill of exceptions incorporated therein was filed -below, but it is regularly incorporated in its proper place in the transcript, and the written directions to the clerk for making such transcript expressly directs its inclusion therein, and the certificate of the clerk to such transcript states that it includes “a true and correct recital and copy of all such papers and proceedings in said cause as appears upon the record and dies of his ofdce.” While it would be better for the transcript expressly to show .the fact and date of the filing of the bill of exceptions, yet we think that when such a bill, as in this case, is actually incorporated into a transcript and such transcript is properly certified to contain true and correct copies of the papers and proceedings as appear upon the records and dies of the office of the clerk making such certificate, in the absence of any proper showing to the contrary, that it cannot be successfully said that there is no evidence that such bill has ever been filed.

The remaining grounds of the first motion, seeking to strike the entire bill of exceptions, are that said bill in stating the evidence upon which divers charges were predicated violates the rules in not confining such statements of evidence to such portions only of the proofs as were pertinent to said charges, respectively, and upon which alone they were, respectively, predicated, but goes further, and unnecessarily gives in connection therewith other evidence introduced to disprove or rebut the evidence upon which such charges were, respectively, predicated.

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Bluebook (online)
42 Fla. 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacksonville-street-railroad-v-walton-fla-1900.