Sheppard v. Wilson

47 U.S. 260, 12 L. Ed. 430, 6 How. 260, 1848 U.S. LEXIS 314
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 18, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 47 U.S. 260 (Sheppard v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheppard v. Wilson, 47 U.S. 260, 12 L. Ed. 430, 6 How. 260, 1848 U.S. LEXIS 314 (1848).

Opinion

. Mr. Justice GRIER

delivered the opinion of the court.

When this case was before this court at the last term, on a motion to dismiss the writ of error (see 5 Howard, 211), one of the reasons urged was, — “ That, Iowa having been admitted into the Unión as a State since the writ of error was brought, the act of 1838, regulating its judicial proceedings as a Terri- . tory, is necessarily abrogated and repealed ; and consequently there is no law in force authorizing this court to reexamine and affirm or reverse a judgment rendered by the Supreme Court of the Territory, or giving this court any jurisdiction over it.” And. the court there say, — “ This difficulty has been removed by an act of Congress, passed during the present session, which authorizes the court to proceed to hear and determine .cases of this description.” It afterwards appeared that this court had been misinformed on this subject, and that by mistake - the State of Iowa had- been omitted in the act'of 22d February, 1847. Since that time (at the present session of Congress), an act has been passed to remedy this omission (see act of 22d of February, 1848), and the court have proceeded to hear and determine. the case on the errors assigned.

Of the numerous errors assigned in this case, but three can be noticed as coming properly under the cognizance of -this court. The cause was originally tried before the District Court of Scott county, and removed, by writ of error,.-to the Supreme Court of the Territory of Iowa. That court struck from the record the bills of exceptions alleged to have , been taken on the *274 trial in the court below. Consequently, the - matters said to be contained in those bills are not before this court.

But bills of exceptions were taken by the plaintiffs in error to the ruling of the Supreme Court of Iowa, in rejecting the bills sealed by the District Court, and in refusing to grant a mandamus to the judge of the District Court to sign a bill of exceptions nunc pro tunc; and this rejection and refusal are now assigned for error in this court. It has been questioned whether the action of the Supreme Court of Iowa on these points is the proper subject of a bill of exceptions,- or can be reviewed in this court. But as we- perceive ho error in the course pursued by the court, it will be unnecessary to notice these objections.

^The case was tried in the District Court of Scott county at October term, 1841, and the bill of exceptions which was struck from the record was dated on the 21st of December, 1843. It did not purport to have been taken on the trial, nor was there any evidence on the record that any exceptions were taken or noted by the judge. And, assuming the fact as stated by the counsel for the defendant below, that he had taken ,the exceptions during the trial, and had reduced them ' to. form afterwards, yet the /bill was not settled during the term in consequence of objection made to certain matters therein by the opposite counsel; and the judge, though/ he signed a bill two years after the trial, refused to sign it nunc pro tunc, as if takeii on the trial.

The act of Assembly of Iowa regulating the practice of their courts provides, .that “if, during the progress of any trial in any civil cause, eithe party shall allege an exception to the opinion of the court, and reduce the same .to writing, it shall be the duty of the judge to allow said exceptions, and to sign and seal the same; and the said bill of exceptions shall thereupon become' a part of the record of- such cause; and if any judge of the District Court shall refuse to allow or sign such bill of exceptions tendered, and the same ■ is signed by three or more disinterested by-standers or attorneys of said court, the judge shall then permit the said bill to be filed and become a part of the record ; if the judge refuse, the Supreme Court of the Territory may, when such, cause is brought before them by writ of error or appeal^ upon proper affidavit of such refusal, admit such bill of exceptions as part,of the record.”

This act requires that' the exceptions must be taken during the progress , oi the trial,-reduced to writing, and tendered to the judge, and gives ample renied- to the-party, injured, in case of-a refusal to sign them or permit them to be made á part of the record. If the party does not avail himself of therein *275 edy given him by the act, he has no one to blame but himself. It is true, judges may, and often do, sign bills of exception .after the trial, nunc pro tunc, the bills being dated as if taken on the .trial; but the propriety of their refusal to do so pn particular occasions depends on so many circumstances which'cannot ap- ' pear on the récord, and are known only -to themselves, that we ought not to presume they have acted improperly in the exercise of their discretion. Certainly a judge ought not to be called on tó make up a bill of exceptions, two or more' years after a trial, where the counsel have disagreed as to the facts, and faded to -settle the exceptions at the term in which .the causé was tried. It is too plain for argument, also, that a bill purporting to be taken more than two years after the trial cannot properly be made a part of the record, by any possible construction of this act. It is much more stringent in its requirements as to the ¿time and mode in which a bill of exceptions shall be obtained and placed on record, than the Statute, of Westminster 2, which first gave the bill of exceptions. Yet under that statute, the courts have always held that the exception should be taken and reduced to writing at the trial. Not that they need be drawn up in formbut the substance must be reduced to writing whilst the thing is transacting. 1 Bacon’s Abr., tit. Bill of Exceptions.

The practice is well settled, also, by the decisions of this court. See. Ex parte Martha Bradstreet (4 Peters, 106); and the case of Walton v. The United States (9 Wheaton, 657), which is precisely parallel with the present. There the objection was made, that the bill o,f exceptions was not taken at the trial, but purported on its face, as in this case, tó have been taken and signed after judgment rendered in the cause. It is true,” say the court, that the bill of exceptions states that the evidence was objected to at. the trial; but it is not said that any exception was then taken to the decision of the court. So that, in fact, it might be true that the objection was made, and yet not insisted upon by way of exception. • But the more material consideration is, that the bill of exceptions itself appears, on the record, not to have been taken at all until after the judgment. It is a settléd principle, that no bill of exceptions is valid which is not for matter excepted to at the trial. We do not mean to say that it is necessary (and in point of practice we know it to be otherwise) that the bill óf exceptions should be formally drawn and signed before the trial is at an end. It will be sufficient if the exception be taken at the trial; and noted by the court with the requisite certainty; and it may afterwards, during'the term, according to the rules of the court, be reduced to form, and signed by the judge. And so,.in fact, is the gen *276 eral practice. But in all such cases, the bill of exceptions i° signed nunc pro tunc, and it purports on.

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Bluebook (online)
47 U.S. 260, 12 L. Ed. 430, 6 How. 260, 1848 U.S. LEXIS 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheppard-v-wilson-scotus-1848.