Lee v. Raiford

54 So. 543, 171 Ala. 124, 1911 Ala. LEXIS 62
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedFebruary 2, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 54 So. 543 (Lee v. Raiford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee v. Raiford, 54 So. 543, 171 Ala. 124, 1911 Ala. LEXIS 62 (Ala. 1911).

Opinion

MAYFIELD, J.

This appeal was submitted on motion to strike bill of exceptions, and on the merits.

On Motion.

It is insisted by appellee that the bill of exceptions must be stricken on the sole ground that there is now no authority in this state for reserving or taking a bill of exceptions on the trial of a civil action like the one appealed from in this case; and that such a bill, if attempted to be taken, would be without warrant of law, and could not become a part of the record on appeal to this court.

It is practically conceded by appellee that bills of exceptions are yet authorized in certain specific cases, such as those of nonsuit, motions for new trial, and criminal cases, and that rulings on requested charges therein may be reviewed by bill of exceptions as heretofore; but that the action or rulings of the trial court on the evidence and on matters other than those indicated, are not authorized to be reviewed as was the case prior to the adoption of the Code of 1907.

It is not denied that the right to a bill of exceptions existed in the trial of all civil cases in courts of law, prior to the adoption of the Code of 1907. In fact, it is insisted that it was the adoption of the Code of 1907 which denied the right to such bill, except in the particular cases above enumerated.

This radical change in the practice in this state is claimed to have been wrought by the omission of section 612 of the Code of 1896 from the Code of 1907. It is claimed that this was the sole authority for the right, to a bill of exceptions, in the trial of all civil [129]*129•cases, and that its omission from the Code of 1907 worked its repeal, and that there is now no law authorizing the bill of exceptions except in the specific cases •otherwise specially provided for; that is, that there is not now any general statutes authorizing the taking of bills of exceptions, or constituting them a part of the record on appeal to this court. It is true that this section of the Code of 1896 (612) which was omitted from the Code of 1907, Avas the particular section which expressly conferred the authority for a bill of exceptions in all civil cases; but it was not the whole of the general law upon the subject of bills of exceptions. It Avas only a small part of the whole law. It never did operate, at any period of its existence, as the whole of the general iaAV of this state regulating authority to take or reserve a bill of exceptions in the trial of civil cases, but was merely part of a statute passed by the Mississippi Territorial Legislature. It, and other parts of that original statute which applied to the trial of all civil actions in courts of law, remained the law, or parts of the law, of this state, from the time of the passage of the act dOAvn to the adoption of the Code of 1907, at AAdiich time it was omitted; but other parts of that original act of which it formed only a very small part, are still retained in the Code of 1907, and are yet parts of the law of this state as to bills of exceptions.

While, as before stated, it was a part- of the original act winch expressly authorized the bill in all civil cases, yet the other parts of the original act and of the Code of 1907 implied, if not expressly authorized, the bill in all civil cases. We cannot conclude that the Legislature, by merely omitting this section from the Code of 1907, intended to deny the right or authority to have a bill of exceptions in these cases as to which it existed during the entire history of the state, and to [130]*130limit it to the specified cases which had been specially provided for. There is not a word in the Code nor in the act adopting it, expressive of any such intention. Other sections of the Code, pertaining to bills of exceptions generally, are retained in the Code, which were in all former Codes and which were parts of the general law of this state as to bills of exceptions long before there was a Code, and long before any bill of exceptions was authorized in criminal cases, or in applications for new trial, or in cases of nonsuit. There is nothing to show that these sections thus retained in the Code of 1907, which were theretofore parts of the entire system of law as to bills of exceptions, now apply only to motions for new trial, to criminal cases, nonsuits, or probate proceedings. While parts of them may apply to these specific cases, it does not follow that they are iimited to such cases.

Section 3016 of the Code of 1907 provides that it is not necessary to except to the ruling of the court in giving or refusing requested charges; nor need the bill of exceptions state that exception was reserved thereto, This section certainly contemplates a bill of exceptions in all cases in which charges are requested. It certainly could not apply to motions for new trial, because they are before the court without a jury. There is nothing in this section to show that there can only be a bill of exceptions as to charges requested and nothing more. It merely says that as to such charges, the party need n'ot except on the trial, and the bill need not recite that exception was reserved.

Section 3017 is intended only to authorize bills of exceptions by a plaintiff who is forced to take a non-suit; without this specific statute a party could not complain of a judgment which was rendered at his instance, but with it the action of the court, necessi[131]*131tating the nonsuit, may be reviewed on appeal by a bill of exceptions. But even this statute says that the questions may be reserved by a bill of exceptions or by appeal on the record, as in other cases, thus showing clearly that it is not in cases of nonsuit only that bills of exceptions are authorized; and yet this is the only specific or special case for bills of exceptions that is mentioned in the entire chapter (59) of the Code pertaining to bills of exceptions.

The provisions as to bills of exceptions in the other specific cases are in different chapters, and some in different volumes of the Code. The provisions as to bills of exceptions as to new trials, and as to those in probate proceedings, are in the chapters of the Code relating to appeals. See sections 2846 and 2863, in the chapter of “Appeals.” The provision as to bills of exceptions in criminal cases is in the Criminal Code, under the chapter of “Appeals” (Code 1907, § 6243), and it, like the section as to nonsuit, expressly provides that the bill of exceptions “shall be taken and signed by the presiding judge as in civil cases,” clearly referring to the chapter of the Civil Code as to bills of exceptions, which is the only reference as to how or when the exceptions shall be taken or the bill signed. There is nothing in that section or chapter in the Criminal Code to show that the phrase there used — “as in civil cases” — refers to motions for new trial, to nonsuit, or to probate proceedings; but, on the contrary, it clearly does not refer' to those special provisions, because no appeal is authorized in criminal cases from motions for new trial, or from nonsuit, and criminal trials are not had in probate courts. So this section in the Criminal Code clearly refers to the chapter in the Civil Code as to bills of exceptions.

[132]*132Section 3019 of the Code of 1907 provides that “Bills of exceptions may be presented at any time within ninety days from the day on which the judgment is? entered.” There is nothing in this section to limit the “bills of exceptions” to motions for new trial, nonsuits, of criminal trials.

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Bluebook (online)
54 So. 543, 171 Ala. 124, 1911 Ala. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-v-raiford-ala-1911.