State Ex Rel. Pappas v. Baker, Judge

197 N.E. 912, 209 Ind. 25, 1935 Ind. LEXIS 267
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 30, 1935
DocketNo. 26,448.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 197 N.E. 912 (State Ex Rel. Pappas v. Baker, Judge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Pappas v. Baker, Judge, 197 N.E. 912, 209 Ind. 25, 1935 Ind. LEXIS 267 (Ind. 1935).

Opinion

Treanor, C. J.

Relator filed his petition for a writ of mandamus in this court showing that he had been found guilty of second degree murder in cause No. 68,930 in the criminal court of Marion county and sentenced by that court; that his motion for new trial was overruled by the Hon. Frank P. Baker, judge of that court, respondent herein, and that relator had excepted to that ruling. He further shows that time was granted *27 in which to file his bill of exception and that his petition to be permitted to appeal as a poor person was granted by the court. He further shows that he requested the Marion Criminal Court to make an order directing the reporter of that court to make and furnish him with a complete manuscript and transcript of the entire evidence taken in this cause and to direct in said order that the services of said reporter “shall be paid by the court or judge thereof out of the proper county treasury as provided by §1855, Burns’ Annotated Statutes 1926, page 862.” 1 The order so requested of the criminal court is attached to relator’s petition in this court and marked exhibit A. Relator further alleges that the criminal court and the judge thereof refused to make and sign the order as requested, but instead made the following order:

“Order to Wm. Mahan to prepare transcript in above cause No. 68930, when and if County Council appropriates money to pay for same.”

Upon the basis of the foregoing showing, and at petitioner’s request, this court issued its alternative writ directing the respondent, as judge of the criminal court of Marion county, to order and direct the official court reporter of that court “to transcribe his shorthand *28 notes of the evidence taken in the above entitled cause into longhand, as soon as practicable, and deliver the same to the relator herein, the same to be used by said relator upon appeal, and further order that the expense of making said transcript be ordered paid out of the county treasury of Marion county,” and further directing the respondent to show cause why such order of this court should not be made permanent. By his response filed in this court, the Hon. Frank P. Baker, as judge of the criminal court of Marion county, showed that he heard evidence upon relator’s petition to be permitted to appeal as a poor person and that the court stenographer be ordered to prepare a transcript to be paid for out of the county treasury; further, that he made the finding and order as alleged in relator’s petition. He also showed that the county council of Marion county has made no appropriation and that there is no fund out of which the court may order the cost of preparing the transcript to be paid. Respondent also averred that he heard the evidence, rulings made and instructions given by the court and is convinced beyond a reasonable doubt of petitioner’s guilt and of the correctness of the rulings and instructions, and that there is no error in the cause. Respondent asks that the alternative writ of mandate be dissolved. No reply or further pleading was filed by the relator.

This court has held that the trial court’s refusal to furnish a poor person with a longhand manuscript of the evidence is not ground for new trial and may not be the subject of a separate assignment of error upon appeal, but that the remedy in such a case is by “an application to this court for an order requiring the circuit court to furnish the transcript at the expense of the county on a proper showing.” *29 2 Consequently relator is seeking the proper remedy in coming to this court for a writ of mandamus.

The General Assembly has enacted that the services which the reporter may be required to perform under §4-3511, supra, “shall be paid by the court or judge thereof out of the proper county treasury.” We do not think that the legislative purpose, as expressed in the statute, to enable a poor person, convicted in a criminal case, to present the merits of his appeal to the highest courts of this state, can be nullified by the failure of the county council to make an appropriation for the payments contemplated by this statute. We think it clear that if, upon the order of a trial court made pursuant to its finding, of facts as set out in the act, a court reporter performs the services therein referred to, he can, by appropriate proceedings, compel appropriation of the sum allowed by law for his services.

The General Assembly has provided that before furnishing a transcript upon request of a party, as authorized by §4-3505, Burns, etc., 1933, §1292, Baldwin’s 1934 (Acts 1899, ch. 169, §5, p. 584), the reporter “may require payment for such transcript, or that the same be satisfactorily secured, before he proceeds to do the work required of him.” But this section has no application to the situation wherein the reporter is directed by the trial court to furnish the transcript to a poor person as provided in §4-3511, supra. In the former case payment for the transcript is the liability only of the party requesting it; in the latter case it is a liability of the county.

*30 *29 The remaining question presented by relator’s petition and the response thereto is whether a proper show *30 ing was made to the trial court so that that court was required to direct the transcript to be furnished as requested. Under the statute (§4-3511, supra), it is clear that before a court can be required to direct the reporter to furnish a transcript of the evidence, a poor person desiring to appeal to the Supreme Court will have to show that he does not have “sufficient means to procure the longhand manuscript or transcript of the evidence taken in shorthand, by the order or permission 3 of the court or the judge thereof.” But this court will not require a trial court to order the court reporter to prepare a transcript of the evidence upon a showing merely that the person seeking the transcript is without means. The purpose of the statute is to guarantee that no defendant’s right of appeal shall be nullified by lack of means to procure a transcript of the evidence. But the trial court is not under an absolute duty to order the reporter to prepare a transcript of the evidence regardless of whether an appeal can be taken, or whether the evidence is material to a decision of the questions available upon appeal. While the statute provides that “an appeal to the Supreme Court or to the Appellate Court may be taken by the defendant as a matter of right, from any judgment in a criminal action against him” 4 it is well settled that an appeal can be taken only in the manner, upon the conditions and for the reasons named in the statute. 5 Under the statutes and the decisions of this *31 court a transcript of the evidence heard upon the trial is not necessary to present every question of alleged error which may be urged upon an appeal from the judgment of a trial court in a proceeding.

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Bluebook (online)
197 N.E. 912, 209 Ind. 25, 1935 Ind. LEXIS 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-pappas-v-baker-judge-ind-1935.