Lake v. Harris

243 P. 417, 198 Cal. 85, 1926 Cal. LEXIS 338
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 1, 1926
DocketDocket No. S.F. 11642.
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 243 P. 417 (Lake v. Harris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lake v. Harris, 243 P. 417, 198 Cal. 85, 1926 Cal. LEXIS 338 (Cal. 1926).

Opinion

SHENK, J.

Application for a writ of mandate to compel the respondent to authenticate a transcript on appeal. *87 Upon the filing of the petition an order was issued requiring the respondent to show cause, if any he had, why an alternative writ of mandate should not issue. No alternative writ has been issued. The matter is submitted on a general demurrer to the petition.

It appears that in an action in ejectment in the superior court in and for the county of Alameda, wherein the Central Savings Bank of Oakland was plaintiff and the petitioners herein were defendants, a judgment was rendered and entered against said defendants and their appeal therefrom is pending in this court. In due time the defendants filed with the clerk of the superior court a notice to prepare the record on appeal. The notice requested the preparation of a transcript “of the testimony offered or taken, evidence offered of received, and all rulings, instructions, acts or statements of the court, also objections and exceptions of counsel and all matters to which the same relate,” as provided for in section 953a of the Code of Civil Procedure. In attempted compliance with the requirements of subdivision 2 of section VII of the rules of this court the record was prepared in two parts. One was designated the reporter’s transcript, in which was incorporated only the phonographic report of the trial. The respondent judge, on the seventeenth day of September, 1924, certified to the truth and correctness of that transcript. Prior to the trial certain proceedings were had and taken and certain nonappealable orders of the court were made, the records of which proceedings and motions, consisting of some twenty-one items, were specially designated by said defendants in their notice to the clerk for inclusion in the record to be prepared. These twenty-one items were not included in the reporter’s transcript, but were set forth in the second part of said record, called the clerk’s transcript, in which was also embodied the judgment-roll and notices of appeal. This so-called clerk’s transcript was also certified by the respondent judge as being true and correct. Both of said transcripts were filed in this court on October 28, 1924, as the record on appeal. Thereafter, on the thirtieth day of March, 1925, counsel for the respondent bank filed in the superior court a notice of suggestion of diminution of record and of a motion to strike from the said clerk’s transcript the twenty-one items referred to and to cancel the eertifi *88 cote of the respondent judge appended to said clerk’s transcript on the grounds, among others, “that if any occasion existed for the inclusion of such matters or things in thé record on appeal, such matters and things should have been included in the reporter’s transcript on appeal; that although said clerk’s transcript on appeal was presented to the court for authentication and certification, the clerk gave no notice to counsel for plaintiff of the fact of such presentation”; that they had no notice that the same were included in the clerk’s transcript until March 3, 1925, and that the court erred in executing its certificate in that the said clerk’s transcript was duly certified by the clerk and that there was and is no authority in law for the certification of the clerk’s transcript by the trial judge. Thereafter, on May 2, 1925, the respondent judge granted said motion in part, in this, that he made an order canceling his said certificate, setting forth in said order as the reason for such cancellation “that there is no provision of law requiring or authorizing the trial judge to certify the clerk’s transcript on appeal, and that the certificate to said clerk’s transcript on appeal was executed by the undersigned judge of the superior court [respondent here] through inadvertence . . . ” Thereafter, on the same day, to wit, May 2, 1925, the defendants in the said action, petitioners herein, filed their notice of appeal from the order last above mentioned, referring to the same as an “order after final judgment,” and concurrently therewith filed a notice with said clerk requesting that a transcript of the proceedings on said motion for diminution be prepared pursuant to said section 953a. The respondent judge refuses to certify said transcript, first, on the ground that said order is not an appeal-able order, and, secondly, on the ground that no record can be made up, allowed, or certified in any case or upon any appeal under said section 953a unless a reporter was present at the hearing of the motion or other matter passed upon.

Considering the grounds of refusal in their reverse order it must be taken as settled that where there is no office for the reporter to perform at the hearing of a motion or other proceeding, and consequently there is no reporter present, nevertheless the appellant may proceed under the alternative method and it is the duty of the trial judge to *89 authenticate all papers, records, and files which are not subject to certification solely by the clerk, and which are essential to a proper determination of the appeal. (Pierce v. Works, 171 Cal. 684 [154 Pac. 852].) The case of Allen v. Conrey, 22 Cal. App. 409 [134 Pac. 730], relied on by the respondent, was decided before the amendment to section 953a in 1915. By that amendment the scope of the section was enlarged so as to permit an appellant to have the record prepared thereunder, also “for the purpose of presenting a record on appeal from any appealable judgment or order, or for the purpose of having reviewed any matter or order reviewable on appeal from final judgment” (Stats. 1915, p. 206).

The effect.of the amendment was to authorize the preparation of a record under that section even when the appeal is on the judgment-roll alone (see opinion of supreme court appended to McKinncll v. Hansen, 34 Cal. App. 81 [167 Pac. 887], in denying petition for rehearing; also Beckett v. Stuart, 35 Cal. App. 796 [171 Pac. 107]; Locke Paddon v. Locke Paddon, 194 Cal. 73 [227 Pac. 715]). It is competent for the clerk to certify only the judgment-roll and the notice of appeal (Jeffords v. Young, 197 Cal. 224 [239 Pac. 1054]; 2 Cal. Jur. 666); and the judge may refuse to certify the clerk’s transcript when it comprises only those documents (Christenson Lumber Co. v. Seawell, 157 Cal. 405 [108 Pac. 276]).

As to the first ground of refusal we think the contention of the respondent that the order striking his certificate from the said clerk’s transcript was not an appealable order must be sustained. In order that a special order made after final judgment, as contemplated by subdivision 2 of section 963 of the Code of Civil Procedure, be appealable, such order must affect the judgment in some manner or bear some relation to it either by way of enforcing it or staying its execution (Griess v. State Investment etc. Co., 93 Cal. 411 [28 Pac. 1041]; Kaltschmidt v. Weber, 136 Cal. 675 [69 Pac. 497]; Watson v. Pryor, 49 Cal. App. 554 [193 Pac. 797]; 2 Cal. Jur. 153).

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Bluebook (online)
243 P. 417, 198 Cal. 85, 1926 Cal. LEXIS 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-v-harris-cal-1926.