Somers v. Somers

22 P. 967, 81 Cal. 608, 1889 Cal. LEXIS 1062
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 1889
DocketNo. 13169
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 22 P. 967 (Somers v. Somers) 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
Somers v. Somers, 22 P. 967, 81 Cal. 608, 1889 Cal. LEXIS 1062 (Cal. 1889).

Opinions

Works, J.

This is an appeal from an order made after judgment allowing the appellant an attorney fee for services to be rendered in defense of a motion for a new trial and an appeal to this court. The respondent moves to dismiss the appeal on the ground that there is no bill of exceptions, and that none of the proceedings and papers used on the hearing are properly authenticated. There is a certificate of the judge of the court below, which will be noticed hereafter, that certain papers named were used on the hearing.

In the case of Herrlich v. McDonald, 80 Cal. 472, it was said: “It is also a matter of serious question whether any of the papers claimed to have been used on the [609]*609alleged motion are properly authenticated. As we have said, there is no bill of exceptions. The only authentication is by the certificate of the judge of the court below, at the close of the transcript.....Formerly it was expressly provided that on motion for a new trial affidavits used might be identified by indorsement by the judge or clerk at the time as having been read or referred to on the hearing. (Stats. 1861, p. 599; Hayne on New Trial and Appeal, 790.) The present code has no such provision. It is simply provided that ‘ on appeal from a judgment rendered on appeal or from an order, except an order granting or refusing a new trial, the appellant must furnish the court with a copy of the notice of appeal, of the judgment or order appealed from, and of papers used on the hearing in the court below.’ (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 951.) We are of the opinion that without a statutory provision authorizing the authentication of copies of papers in some other way, the only proper way that they can he brought into the record and identified is by bill of exceptions. There are decisions of this court, however, in which it has been rather taken for granted that a certificate of the judge is sufficient. (Walsh v. Hutchings, 60 Cal. 228; Nash v. Harris, 57 Cal. 243; Larkin v. Larkin, 76 Cal. 323.) And in one case it was held in Department that as the statute prescribed no mode in which such papers should be authenticated, ‘this court had power to prescribe by rule how such papers should be brought before it on appeal; and if it had power to make such a rule in advance, it had the power to ratify the mode adopted by the court below,’ and upon this proposition was founded the decision in that case that the certificate of the judge of the court below was sufficient. (Pieper v. Centinela Land Co., 56 Cal. 173.) But the code does provide, in express terms, how all papers, proceedings, and exceptions, not otherwise a part of the record, may be made such, viz., by a bill of exceptions or statement. (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 646, [610]*610649-651.) Id case of an appeal from any decision made after judgment, a bill of exceptions is the proper, and in our opinion the only proper, mode of authentication. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 651.) But the respondent has not asked us to affirm the order on the ground that the question is not properly presented, and in view of this fact, and considering the state of uncertainty in which the question is left by the decided cases, we prefer to decide this case on its merits. We must say, however, that if this court has >the power to determine that papers to be used on appeal may be authenticated in a way not provided for by statute, when a different way is provided for, which we very much doubt, it should be done by a rule adopted in advance, and made applicable to all cases, and not be left for the court to say in each case whether or not the mode adopted in that case is sufficient.”

In the early hist'ory of code practice it was the tendency and inclination of the judges, who had been educated under the common-law practice, to construe the codes strictly. The reaction has come, and the courts of the present day have, in many instances, gone to the other extreme. The judge who, at the present time, disregards the plainest provisions of the codes relating to the practice, with a view of reaching and deciding a case on its merits, is regarded as a man and a judge of broad views.” The one who is in favor of administering the law as it is written is “ narrow-minded.” Judicial legislation is, as a rule, the worst of legislation. It is almost invariably the offspring of some real or supposed hardship which may result from the decision of the particular case in hand in accordance with existing laws or well-established rules of procedure. An attorney who has a plain statute before him has not followed it, but has resorted to some other means of presenting his case. The court, rather than deny him a hearing on the merits, approves his. course, and thereby establishes a rule of practice unknown to the code and hitherto unheard of, [611]*611and brings uncertainty and confusion into the practice. Such infractions of the rules of practice make bad laws, poor lawyers, and unreliable courts. Lawyers come to believe that all they have to do is to satisfy the liberal mind of the court, not to comply with the law. We believe it to be a wrong to competent attorneys, an injustice to the court, and an injury to litigants.

The decided cases on the question we are now considering present a strong example of this good-natured but. mistaken policy of extreme liberality.

If the plain provisions of the code had been followed, this case would have been presented to the court as follows: —

In the Superior Court of the city and county of San Francisco.
Isabel M. Somers, Plaintiff, v. Calvin F. Somers, Defendant. Divorce.

Be it remembered, that on the twenty-third day of November, 1888, at ten o’clock, A. m., the plaintiff in this cause, pursuant to notice previously given, moved the court for an order allowing the plaintiff the sum of one hundred dollars attorney’s fee in said cause, and requiring the defendant to pay the same into court for said purpose, and, in support of said motion, introduced the following evidence:—

Affidavit of R. B. Mitchell, as follows, etc.
The defendant offered no evidence in his behalf. And the court, having heard the evidence, and being advised in the premises, sustained said motions, and made the order prayed for, to which the defendant at the time excepted, and now presents this, his bill of exceptions, and asks that the same be allowed and settled.
The foregoing bill of exceptions is settled and allowed as correct, this-day of-•, 1888.
James G. Maguire,
Ex-judge of the Superior Court.

What more simple or convenient means of presenting [612]*612the case could be devised. Instead of this we have the following:—

“I, James G. Maguire, judge of the superior court of the city- and county of San Francisco, on the twenty-eighth day of November, 1888, and on the twenty-third day of November, 1888, hereby certify that upon the hearing of plaintiff’s motion on said twenty-third day of November, 1888, for order requiring defendant to pay to plaintiff, or her attorney, the sum of one hundred dollars as counsel fee and costs on defendant’s motion for new trial, the following papers were used and considered by the court, to wit: Affidavit of R. B.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 P. 967, 81 Cal. 608, 1889 Cal. LEXIS 1062, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/somers-v-somers-cal-1889.