Osborn v. Graves

11 Or. 526
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 11 Or. 526 (Osborn v. Graves) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Osborn v. Graves, 11 Or. 526 (Or. 1884).

Opinion

By the Court,

Thayer, J.:

This appeal is from a judgment of the circuit court for the county of Marion, rendered in an action at law. The appellant sued the respondent in said circuit court to recover an alleged balance of $196.85, of money belonging to her, received by respondent from Mr. W. J. TIerren; also an alleged balance of $20.65 for money loaned and for the use of a harvester. • The respondent Idled an answer denying the indebtedness, and set up as a further answer that one Lakin S. Osborn, husband of appellant, died at said county of Marion on the 17th day of December, 1881, leaving a will in and by which he bequeathed to her all liis personal estate, devised to .her all his real estate for. life, and appointed her executrix of the Said will; that subsequently thereto, and in December, 1881, she employed the respondent as her agent for the transaction of all her business, including such business as she would have to perform as executrix of the said will, and at the time of the employment agreed to pay [527]*527respondent a sum of money equal to the per centum which she would be entitled to receive under the law for the services as such executrix of said estate; that the estate as accounted for in appellant’s final account, amounted to the sum of $9,518.57; that the per centum therein allowed hy law, compensation to appellant as such executrix, amounted to the sum of $380.39; that' in pursuance of said employment, respondent, as the agent of appellant, transacted all of her business, including her business as executrix, and continued to perform said services for her from December, 1881, until about the 8th day of August, 1882, when she was removed at her own request. That during that time nearly all the business of said estate was settled up; that for said services the appellant was indebted to him in the sum of $380.37. It was further alleged in said answer that between December, 1881, and August 8th, 1882, the respondent received from appellant, as her said agent, the sum of $890.00, and disbursed the sum of $771.20, leaving a balance of $118.80 receipts over and above expenditures. The respondent also set up as a further counter-claim, several items for work and labor performed by him for appellant, amounting to $21.25, and claimed a balance due him of $282.82. The appellant filed a reply to the new matter of defense and counter-claim set out in respondent’s answer, in which she denied, in substance, that she was removed from her trust as executrix at her own request; denied the employment of respondent to transact the business referred to in said counter-claim, and any promise to pay him anything therefor; denied that the per centum allowed hy law as compensation to said executrix amounted to any sum whatever, or that she was allowed any sum therefor, or that he transacted any business, except gratuitously, relating thereto; [528]*528denied any indebtedness on account thereof, and denied directly or qualifiedly all the allegations set forth in said new matter except that the allegation, “that said estate as accounted for in appellant’s final account amounted to the sum of $9,518.51,” is not denied specifically, or at all, unless it can be claimed to be denied in the general denial of the alleged per centum allowed by law. And the allegation, “that during that time nearly all the business of said estate was settled up,” is only denied in the language of the allegation, and without any affirmative averment as to what part of said business was unsettled.

The appellant also set forth in her reply some new matter, but which it is not necessary to particularly refer to for the purposes of this decision. ■

The case was referred to J. T. Gregg, Esq., an attorney at law, to take the testimony, and report his findings of fact and law, to the court. The said referee thereafter made his report thereon in favor of the respondent for the sum of $148.57, which, having been confirmed by the circuit court, the judgment appealed from herein was entered in his favor and against the appellant. The case comes here upon the record, without any bill of exceptions, and we have no means of ascertaining whether the errors assigned in the notice of appeal are well founded or not, except from an inspection of the transcript of the pleadings and judgment. A copy of the referee’s report has found it sway into the transcript, but it is quite doubtful in my mind whether we have any right to consider it for any purpose. It is certainly no part of the judgment roll, as that only includes, at most, “ the summons and proof of service, the pleadings, bill of exceptions, all orders relating to change of parties, together with a copy of the entry of judgment, and all other journal [529]*529entries or orders in any way involving the merits and necessarily affecting the judgment.” (See see. 269, Civil Code.)

“The transcript is a copy certified by the clerk, of the roll or final record of the pleadings, orders, papers and journal entries that constitute such roll or record, together with a copy of the notice of appeal, and any order enlarging the time to file the transcript, and a certificate of the filing of the undertaking, whether by the appellant or respondent, the names of the sureties therein, the amount thereof, if the same is specified, and, if given by the appellant, whether the undertaking is given for an appeal only, or a stay of proceedings also.” (See sec. 531, Sub. 1, Civil Code.)

It is not a journal entry, as it is only required to be filed. (Sec. 225, Civil Code.) It is not in that respect like the decision of the court where a jury trial has been waived, as that is required to be entered in the journal. (Sec. 216, Civil Code.) So, also, is the verdict of a jury under the direction of the court. (Sec. 210, Civil Code.) The fact that the report is found in the judgment roll, and a copy has been certified to this court as a part of the transcript, does not authorize us to consider it, any more than it would any other paper not properly a part of the transcript. A habit has grown up with the clerks of the circuit courts to include papers in the judgment roll, and to transmit copies thereof to this court that do Dot belong to judgment rolls, and are no legitimate part of the transcript; copies of subposnas to witnesses have frequently been sent here as a part of the transcript on appeal. The transcript in this case includes the copy of an affidavit and undertaking for an attachment, and of the attachment writ, together with the sheriff’s certificate of the service of the attachment, also a bill of costs and disbursements in the circuit court. These papers can [530]*530certainly serve no purpose except to encumber the records and burden litigation with unnecessary fees. The statute declares what papers shall constitute the transcript, and provides that upon appeal from a judgment the same shall only be reviewed as to questions of law appearing upon the transcript. (Sec. 533, Civil Code.)

The court has no right to examine any paper in the transcript except those which legally constitute it. (Freeman on Judgments, secs. 78, 79.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 Or. 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/osborn-v-graves-or-1884.