State v. Clifford

16 N.W. 25, 58 Wis. 113, 1883 Wisc. LEXIS 202
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 16 N.W. 25 (State v. Clifford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Clifford, 16 N.W. 25, 58 Wis. 113, 1883 Wisc. LEXIS 202 (Wis. 1883).

Opinion

ORton, J.

This case is found in this court by no authority or proceeding except the certified record proper, accompanied by a bill of exceptions settled, signed, and certified in the usual manner of bills of exceptions in civil cases. The bill contains a very great number of exceptions in respect to the evidence, the instructions of the court, and other matters, and all of the evidence, and is very voluminous, and of about four hundred pages of manuscript. It pur[114]*114ports to have been settled and signed during the term of the trial and before judgment. The attorney general moved to dismiss the case from this court and strike the bill of exceptions from the files on the ground that the case has not been properly brought to this court by exceptions reduced tO' writing m a summary mode, and allowed and signed by the judge, as required by sec. 4720, VR. S. The motion has been allowed, but inasmuch as an important question of practice,, if not of jurisdiction, is involved in this motion, it is thought, proper that an opinion be given containing the reasons for this action of the court.

The above section of the statute, in accordance with which it is claimed by the learned counsel of the defendant the case was properly brought to this court, is as follows: Any person Avho shall be convicted of an 'offense before the circuit court, being aggrieved by any opinion, direction, or judgment of the court in any matter of law, may allege exceptions to such opinion, direction, or judgment, which exceptions being reduced to writing in a summary mode, and presented to the court at any time before the end of the term, and if found conformable to the truth of the case, shall be allowed and signed by the judge, and thereupon all further proceedings in that court shall be stayed, unless it shall clearly appear to the judge that such exceptions are frivolous, immaterial, or intended only for delay; and in that, case judgment may be entered and sentence awarded in such manner as the judge may deem reasonable, notwithstanding-the allowance of such exceptions.” The next section provides that the judge, if the defendant desire it, may report the case to this court so far as necessary to present any questions of law which- have arisen on the trial, which in his opinion shall be so important or so doubtful as to require the decision of this court, and that thereupon all proceedings in that court shall be stayed. The next two sections provide that the defendant may enter into a recognizance for [115]*115his appearance in this court, or in default thereof that he shall be kept in prison, and that the clerk of the court below shall certify to this court a copy, of the record and proceedings, and that this court shall decide the questions of law, and render judgment and award sentence, and make such order thereon as law and justice shall require, and that the proceeding shall not deprive the defendant of a writ of error for any error or defect appearing of record. The la,st section provides for settling and signing bills of exceptions in criminal as in civil cases, and was first enacted as ch. 108, Laws of 1869. These provisions, except the last section, were borrowed by the territorial revision of 1839 almost literally from the Revised Statutes of Massachusetts of 1836 as ch. 138, but which appears to have been first enacted as ch. 195, Laws of 181Y, and again copied as ch. J9, Laws of 1820, and as ch. 130, Laws of 1832.

There was no law in this state which authorized the settling and signing of a bill of exceptions in criminal cases (and there was none in Massachusetts, at least before that time) until 1869, and there was no bill of exceptions in such cases at common law, and there is no English statute, so far as I know, which allows a bill of exceptions in criminal cases, except it may be in misdemeanors. In England there was no means of making exceptions taken on the trial of such cases a part of the record to be reviewed by a court of errors, and the only method of reviewing questions.of law arising at the trial was on a case reserved by the judges, submitting such' questions as were deemed, important and doubtful to the decision of the court of errors, and that practice has been recently regulated by statute of 11 & 12 Yict. From that practice unquestionably arose the statute in Massachusetts above referred to, for reporting questions to the supreme court by the judge. The reason given for not allowing a bill of exceptions in such cases is that such a practice would cause too great a delay in criminal proceedings. 1 Ohitty on Grim. Law, 622.

[116]*116It was, no doubt, for that reason that the above provision for alleging exceptions and reducing them to writing in a summary mode during the term, and requiring them to be allowed and signed by the judge if according to the truth, was made, instead of a formal bill of exceptions, for a review of errors of law. This reason is by no means obviated, but rather rendered more apparent, by allowing a bill of exceptions to be perfected so as to make the exceptions a part of the record, after judgment or sentence; for in the mean time the defendant may be suffering imprisonment, and, if on a judgment which ought not to have been rendered by reason of error, unjust imprisonment, by the delay. The uncertainty and delay of such a practice ought, if possible, to be obviated, and alleging exceptions before judgment and during the term of the court in which the trial is had, in this informal and summary manner, is a most reasonable practice. The material difference between this manner of alleging exceptions, and the settling and signing of a bill of exceptions, will clearly appear by a brief consideration of the nature and history of the latter mode.

It was first adopted in England in civil cases only, by the statute Westminster 2, or ch. 31 of 13 Edw.-1, to cure the great evil which before existed of the unlimited power of the judges to cause just such record to be made of the proceedings in a cause ore tenus as they saw fit, and of the very natural disposition of the judges, and the frequency of its apparent exercise, to suppress such rulings and opinions of the law as they preferred to be final with themselves, rather than submit them to the revision and reversal of a higher court. “ The party whose pleading was overruled or exception disallowed was himself'to write a statement of the facts, and to require the court to put their seals to it, which, if the statement was correct, they were bound and compellable to do. This statement so sealed was ultimately to form a part of the record, and as such was liable to revision by the court of errors. This written statement is called a bill of [117]*117exceptions.” Great formality and certainty were necessary. It must set forth just so much and no more of the evidence and proceedings necessary to show the precise nature of the exceptions. It must be engrossed (formerly on parchment), and then tendered to the judge. Then the seal must be acknowledged or proved, and the bill then must be tacked to> the record. See Baymond on Bill-of Exceptions.

In this country the bill of exceptions is regulated by statute and rules, equal in particularity with the English statute in all matters of substance, and requires as much, if not more, time and care in its preparation, by notice, amendment, settling, and signing, and its office is the same as being made a part of the record, which may go to the court of errors by writ of error after judgment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 N.W. 25, 58 Wis. 113, 1883 Wisc. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-clifford-wis-1883.