State v. Gomez

96 A. 190, 89 Vt. 490, 1915 Vt. LEXIS 235
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 29, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 96 A. 190 (State v. Gomez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Gomez, 96 A. 190, 89 Vt. 490, 1915 Vt. LEXIS 235 (Vt. 1915).

Opinion

Healy, J.

At the June Term, 1914, of Orange County Court the respondent was convicted of assault with intent to kill.

(1) On the last day of the term, June 30, 1914, and before the adjournment thereof, there was filed in the office of the clerk of the court the respondent’s exceptions in the form often called a “skeleton bill.” This bill recited in general terms that the respondent had been allowed exceptions to the refusal of the court to assign counsel and to order the production of witnesses for the respondent at the expense of the State, to the admission of certain evidence offered by the State, to the exclusion of certain evidence offered by the respondent, to certain parts of the charge of the court, and to the failure of the court to comply with certain of the respondent’s requests to charge. The evidence thus admitted or excluded, the parts of the charge and the requests thus referred to were not otherwise recited or specified. The exceptions were ‘ ‘ allowed subject to amendment. ’ ’ The respondent’s amended exceptions in the form in which they now appear were allowed and signed October 31, 1914 and were filed November 4, 1914. The State’s Attorney has filed in this Court a motion,

(1) To dismiss certain specified sections of the bill added by the amendments and not contained in the skeleton bill;

(2) To strike from the record, “the alleged exceptions.” The State claims that its motion should be complied with, because of the requirements of P. S. 2322, which provides that questions of law decided by the county court in criminal causes shall upon motion of the respondent be allowed and placed upon the record and that the same shall thereupon pass to the Supreme Court for final decision and that judgment, sentence and execution shall be respited and stayed in capital causes and in other causes only at the discretion of the court, and because (the State says) the court records are closed with the adjournment of the term and the court upon final adjournment of the term ceases to have any power over its records, except for the correction of clerical errors. The State’s motion makes no distinction between amendments related to or enlarging exceptions shown by the skeleton bill and amendments reciting exceptions [494]*494not shown at all by the skeleton bill. Under this motion the respondent’s course as to his exceptions is held to have been sufficiently in accord with the construction given the statute cited in practice by bench and bar for many years and the motion is overruled.

(2) The State contends that the respondent’s exceptions to certain comments made by the State’s Attorney in his argument to the jury should not be considered for the reason (it says) that in the original or skeleton bill “there was no exception saved as to argument of counsel and even though the Court should hold that the trial court has the right to allow the amendment of exceptions after the rising of court, yet the right of amendment cannot be extended so as to include a subject-matter, which does not appear in the original bill of exceptions.”

The power of the court as to its records after the rising of the term can be no greater in civil suits than in criminal cases, except as in the former it may be extended by P. S. 1981. This section provides for the filing of exceptions in civil suits within thirty days from the rising of court, and this is but a limited extension of the time for signing and filing. Under this statute the practice has been to file a skeleton bill within the thirty days and to revise and amend it at a later time convenient for the trial judge and counsel. The rules of court countenance this practice.

County court rule 28 and section 4 of rule 44. This Court has noticed it. McKinstry v. Collins et al., 76 Vt. 221, 56 Atl. 985; Phelps Dodge & Co. v. Conant & Co., 30 Vt. 277; Hall & Chase v. Simpson, 63 Vt. 601, 22 Atl. 664; Nixon v. Phelps, 29 Vt. 198. The statutes imply that it exists. P. S. 1371; P. S. 1373; P. S. 1984.

In the opinion in Phelps Dodge & Co. v. Conant & Co., supra, Chief Judge Redfield says: “The statute vests the presiding judge with the power of the court in allowing and placing exceptions upon the record and from this he has been allowed an incidental power to amend the exceptions according to the facts up to the time of trial in this Court. This procedure is a loose one and attended often with embarrassments. But it seems the only practical one with us. We do not make the judge’s minutes the basis of the trial in banc as is done in the English courts in revising trials nisi prius. But here a formal bill of exceptions is placed upon the record, the same as when [495]*495a writ of error is expected to be brought. Before this is done the exceptions should be finally settled on hearing. But the haste with which business is transacted with us often precludes this and the exceptions have to be revised after they are filed very often. ’ ’

“The course of practice at common law,” says the Court in Higbee v. Sutton, 14 Vt. 555, “required the bill of exceptions to be reduced to writing and presented to the judge during the term, otherwise it could not be allowed. * * * "When bills of exceptions, as the foundation of writs of error came into general use in this State, the convenience of the court and bar induced the practice of settling them during vacation and such, to some extent, was the practice at common law, although confessedly irregular."

Since the skeleton bill in a civil suit filed within thirty days of the rising of court may be amended after the expiration of said thirty days, why may not the skeleton bill in a criminal case filed before.the rising of the term be amended thereafter?

The statute cited by the State provides a means whereby a respondent may take his case to the Supreme Court; in a technical view it also provides the court with the light in which to decide how it shall exercise its discretion in the matter of staying judgment, sentence and execution — yet in a practical view this decision is based upon the court’s recollection of the points raised or upon its own or the reporter’s minutes of objections and exceptions and must be exercised before the adjournment of the term. (See State v. Webb, 89 Vt. 326, 95 Atl. 892). No light is given to the trial court as to this discretion by the statement in the skeleton bill that the respondent had been allowed exceptions to the “admission of certain evidence offered by the State, to the exclusion of certain evidence offered by the respondent” and none is lost by the omission to state “the respondent excepted to certain comments of counsel.”

The statute, in its original form (No. 2, Acts of 1828) provides that the question of law referred to “may, after, verdict of guilty is returned, if, upon consideration of the difficulty and importance of such question, such court shall so direct and not otherwise, be allowed and placed upon the record, and the same shall thereupon pass to the Supreme Court.” Now the statute provides that the question shall upon motion of the respondent be allowed and placed upon the record, etc.

[496]*496The contention of the State takes insufficient notice of the limitations of reporting eases and preparing transcripts and of the demands upon court, counsel and reporters in term time, is contrary to a long settled practice and is not 'sustained.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 A. 190, 89 Vt. 490, 1915 Vt. LEXIS 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gomez-vt-1915.