State Ex Rel. Carter v. Phillinger

120 A. 878, 142 Md. 365, 1923 Md. LEXIS 34
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 11, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 120 A. 878 (State Ex Rel. Carter v. Phillinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Carter v. Phillinger, 120 A. 878, 142 Md. 365, 1923 Md. LEXIS 34 (Md. 1923).

Opinion

Offutt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

George W. Mowen, a resident of Baltimore City, on .December 21st, 1915, owned an automobile and employed J. Roy Phillinger, a, chauffeur, to operate it. On that day Phil-linger, with his employer’s, permission, took the car1 for the purpose of getting" a Christmas tree. On his way he¡ called at the house of his mother, where he met Mrs. Retta S. Carter, his sister, and her son, Harry O. Carter, then nineteen years of age. Mrs. Carter lived at Sykesville and had earlier in the day come to her mother’s home in an automobile driven by her son, Harry. While Phillinger’ was at his mother’s, home it was arranged that Harry C. Carter, his nephew, should join him on the trip for the Christmas tree, after he had driven some members of his family in their car “down town.” Carter accordingly drove his car to the corner of Howard and Saratoga streets, where he left it and got in the automobile driven by Phillinger, who had followed him. They then went to1 the home of Air. William M. Gill, Phillinger’s father-in-law, with whom he boarded, and h© too joined Phil-linger on his expedition. The three then got in the Mowen ear and proceeded out the Frederick Road by way of Ellieott City. They stopped in Ellieott City for a short time and, when they left, Phillinger was on the front seat, driving, and Carter and Gill on the rear seat, Carter being directly behind *368 Phillinger. When they reached a point on the Frederick Road near the Seventen Mile House, about seven miles west of Ellicott City, the left rear wheel of the automobile collapsed, the car overturned and its three occupants were thrown out. Phillinger and Gill apparently were not seriously hurt, but Garter was almost instantly killed.

On the 19th of the following August Robert W. Garter, the equitable plaintiff, filed his declaration in the Baltimore City Court against Phillinger and his employer, George W. Mowen, in which he charged that the accident was caused by the reckless, dangerous and unlawful speed at which it was driven by Phillinger, who was at the time the employee and chauffeur of the defendant Mowen, and that Harry O. Carter, the son of the equitable plaintiff, entered the automobile at Phillinger’s request. The case came on in due course for trial and the verdict and judgment being against the plaintiff, the.present appeal was taken.

The record contains twenty-four exceptions, all of which, with the exception of the twenty-fourth, relate to rulings upon questions of evidence.

The case was tried in the Baltimore City Court before the Honorable Walter I. Dawkins, the judge of that court, but these exceptions were signed by the Honorable Carroll T. Bond, under the circumstances set forth in the following statement, which is certified in connection with the exceptions :

“The following exceptions are signed by the Honorable Carroll T. Bond, Judge of the Baltimore City Court, at the request of the appellant (leaving to the decision of the Court of Aj>peals the question of the propriety of his doing so under the Act of 1922, chapter 418), the Honorable Walter I. Dawkins, the judge of said court before whom such case was tried being beyond the seas and unable by reason thereof to sign the exceptions allowed by him in the trial of said case, within the time limited by law, the evidence at said trial being taken down by the court stenographer in *369 notes and by him transcribed, the Honorable Carroll T. Bond being satisfied, by agreement of counsel, that the hills of exceptions hereinafter allowed are true hills of exceptions as allowed by the Honorable Walter I. Dawkins during the trial of said cause, as follows

When fche case readied this Court, .1. Roy Phillinger, one of the appellees, moved. to dismiss the appeal on the following grounds:

“(1) Because the bill of exceptions contained in the record was not signed by the Honorable Walter I. Dawkins, Judge of the Baltimore City Court, before whom said ease was tried and by whom said exceptions were allowed.
“(2) Because the Honorable Carroll T. Bond, an Associate Judge of the Supreme Bench of Baltimore City, who signed the plaintiff’s bill of exceptions, contained in the record, took no part in the trial of said caso, and had no right, warrant or authority under the laws of the State of Maryland to sign said bill of exceptions.
“(3) Because the provisions of chapter 418 of the Acts of .1922 are not applicable to the facts of this case.
“(4) Because it does not appear that Judge Dawkins, before whom, said case was tried, was by reason of death, sickness or other disability or the expiration of his term of office unable to sign said hill of exceptions.”

This in (it ion must be overruled. That part of chapter 4-1.8, Wets of 1922, which is relevant to the question before us., reads as follows:

“In case the judge before whom the cause has heretofore been or may hereafter he tried is, by reason of death, sickness or other'disability, or by reason of the expiration of his term of office, unable to hear and pass upon the motion for a new trial and allow and sign said' hill of exceptions, then the judge who succeeds such trial judge, or any other judge of the court in *370 which the cause was tried, holding such court thereafter, if the evidence in such cause has been or is taken iu stenographic notes, or if the said judge is satisfied by any other means that he can pass upon such motion and allow a true bill of exceptions, shall pass upon said motion and allow and sign such hill of exceptions; and Ms ruling upon such motion and allowance and signing of such hill of exceptions shall he as valid as if such ruling and allowance and signing of such hills of exceptions had been made by the judge before whom such cause was tried.”

The plain and obvious purpose of this statute was to meet just such exigencies as the one with which the appellant in this case was confronted when he undertook to. perfect his appeal.

As the law stood prior to the passage of that act, only the judge or judges who- presided at the trial could sign a bill embodying an exception reserved to any ruling made in. the course of the trial. State, use of Samuel, v. Weiskittel, 61 Md. 48; Gross v. Wood, 117 Md. 362; Preston v. McCann, 77 Md. 30; 2 Poe, Pl. & Pr., sec. 323; and if for any reason, the judge or judges who presided were unable to sign the exceptions, the appellant, although he may have been without fault, lost his right of appeal and was without remedy, except such as was afforded by a new trial with the attendant delays and expenses. Notwithstanding the. occasional hardship- incident to its operation, that rule was a wise and reasonable precaution to insure an accurate record under the conditions prevailing at the time it was adopted. Statute 13, Edward I, upon which it rested, was adopted at a time when often the only record of the evidence taken at the trial of causes lay in the memories of the judge and the counsel and in the notes taken by them.

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Bluebook (online)
120 A. 878, 142 Md. 365, 1923 Md. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-carter-v-phillinger-md-1923.