Spitchley v. Covington

177 So. 31, 181 Miss. 678, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 133
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1937
DocketNo. 32902.
StatusPublished

This text of 177 So. 31 (Spitchley v. Covington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spitchley v. Covington, 177 So. 31, 181 Miss. 678, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 133 (Mich. 1937).

Opinion

*685 McG-owen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court on motion.

In this case appellees, Covington et al., moved to strike the stenographer’s notes of the evidence taken before a master in chancery, also to strike certain original exhibits sent np to this court by the clerk by virtue of an order of the chancellor, and to require an additional appeal bond.

The motion to strike the stenographer’s notes is based upon the facts, as shown by the record, that no notice was given to the stenographer to transcribe her notes of the *686 evidence taken in the cause, and that the notes taken by the stenographer were not filed as required by section 726, Code 1930, in fact, that section was ignored; that the transcript is incompetent because of the omission of certain exhibits therefrom, and that the said transcript was never made a part of the record as a part of the report of the master as originally filed, and that the attempt to amend the report by the master, by making^ the transcript a part thereof subsequent to the original report, was null and void, and' that the master never signed the amended report so as to incorporate the transcript of the evidence therein and make it a part of said report.

1. The record reveals that the chancery court appointed W. H. Cox as the master to determine the issues and state an account between the parties, and by the decree appointing the master the latter was authorized to take evidence and use a stenographer for that purpose. The master heard the evidence which was taken by a stenographer and later transcribed, and the stenographer certified that she had correctly transcribed her notes. On August 27, 1936', the master made his report to the court, and on September 3, 1936, overruled the appellant’s exceptions to his report. There appears in the record an order filed September 10’, 1936, styled “Amendment to Master’s Report,” in which it is recited that the master “amends his report filed on September 10, 1936, in the following particulars, to-wit: That said report of said Master stated that Mrs. Bessie Nelson was employed as court reporter to take the evidence at the trial, but said report did not have attached to it said evidence as transcribed by said stenographer, the same not having been fully transcribed at that time. Your Special Master desires to file the transcript of the evidence taken and certified to by Mrs. Bessie Nelson as a part of this report.

“Respectfully submitted.

1C'_

“ Special Master. ”

*687 As to the transcript of the stenographer’s notes, it is apparent that the appellant did not comply with sections 724, 725, 726, and 727, Code 1930, with respect to making the transcript a part of the record. It is the precise contention of appellant that,, the notes having been taken and transcribed by a stenographer, they automatically and necessarily became a part of the master’s report, and that, if this is not true, then the unsigned paper, set forth above, amending the report, made the transcript of the evidence a part of said report and therefore a part of the record in the chancery court, that court having heard, considered, and approved the master’s finding and entered a final decree in accordance therewith.

We are of the opinion that where a master is appointed, as in this case, with power to hear evidence and employ a stenographer to take the evidence heard before him orally, he may incorporate the transcript of the evidence as a part of his report to the court, and when this is done by the master the transcript of the evidence becomes a part of the record, and further notice or action on the part of an appellant is unnecessary. If the master should refuse to incorporate the transcript of the evidence in and as a part of his report, the parties to the litigation would not be remediless — it could be made to appear to the court, on exceptions to the report, that such transcript was necessary to a proper presentation of the case, and the master would be required to so amend his report as to incorporate the transcribed evidence therein. We are of the further opinion that the transcript of the evidence taken before a master becomes a part of the record only when the master incorporates it ás a part of his report to the court — part of his findings and conclusions of law in the premises; that s.uch transcript is not necessarily a part of his report, but he may make it a part thereof as readily as if he wrote out the evidence'in his own handwriting. It appears from the record here that the master did not sign the amendment to the report,' *688 the line for his signature is blank. Therefore, the transcript of the .evidence never, in fact, became a part of the, master’s report because the transcript is here without the requisite identification and authentication. The master must identify his report or amendment thereto by his signature, or signed certificate thereof.

There is no merit in the contention that this transcript is properly here as determined by this court in Cooper v. Martin, 102 So. 851, because in that case the notes were expressly approved- and their correctness certified by the chancellor. The correspondence and evidence here does not establish an agreement, either express, or implied, with reference to the transcribed notes becoming a part of the record in this cause. It simply discloses that appellant paid for and attempted to have the transcribed notes certified as a part of the master’s report, and failed therein because of the lack of identification thereof by the master.

Appellant argues that the transcribed notes in this cause should be treated as depositions. This is wholly impracticable for depositions are certified to and filed in the court in a formal manner, and when offered in evidence the stenographer notes that a particular deposition is offered in evidence, and thereupon the clerk is authorized to copy it as a part of the record. The trouble here is that this transcript is in.no manner identified as being the evidence before the chancellor on the hearing. If the master had signed the amended report, it would have been certified as a part thereof and thereupon necessarily have been a part of the record. We simply hold that the transcribed notes may be made a part of the master’s report either at the time of filing his original report, or. that the report, may be amended by filing the ■’transcribed -notes within .a reasonable time before the hearing,- on exceptions to the report before the court in term time or the chancellor in vacation. In the case at bar, the master having failed to sign the amended report, there is no identification of the proposed transcribed *689 notes as a part of the report and a part of the record in the cause. The transcribed notes of the evidence in this, cause will be stricken from the record for the reason that they are not certified by the master, because of his failure to sign the amendment to the report.

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Bluebook (online)
177 So. 31, 181 Miss. 678, 1937 Miss. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spitchley-v-covington-miss-1937.