State v. Marasco

17 P.2d 919, 81 Utah 325, 1933 Utah LEXIS 28
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1933
DocketNo. 5310.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 17 P.2d 919 (State v. Marasco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah 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. Marasco, 17 P.2d 919, 81 Utah 325, 1933 Utah LEXIS 28 (Utah 1933).

Opinions

STRAUP, C. J.

The defendant by the information was charged with arson, setting fire to a building which contained personal property owned by the defendant and which was insured against loss by fire by the Royal Insurance Company. He was convicted, and appeals. The state moves to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the transcript of the record on appeal was not filed with the clerk of this court within the time prescribed by rule 2 of the Supreme Court. The rule provides that, “in all cases where an appeal shall be perfected, a transcript of the record shall be filed in this Court within thirty days after such appeal shall have been perfected, unless further time is granted by the Court, or a justice thereof.”' The verdict was rendered and filed September 26, 1931. October 9,1931, the defendant was sentenced to imprisonment in the state prison for an indeterminate period. A motion for a new trial duly filed was overruled (October 17, 1931). Notice of appeal was filed November 16, 1931. The transcript of the record on appeal was filed in this court April 25,1932. November 7, 1931, the trial court ordered that the court reporter transcribe the testimony in the cause at the expense of the state and furnish the transcript to the defendant or his counsel. A bill of exceptions was settled and filed in the court below March 25, 1932. The time to settle the bill was by the district court, from time to time, extended to and including the time it was settled and filed. The time for filing the transcript of record on appeal was not extended *329 by this court or by a justice thereof. The transcript of the record on appeal, however, was filed in this court within thirty days after the bill of exceptions was settled and filed, but more than five months after the notice of appeal was served and filed.

With respect thereto we have presented two divergent views: By the state it is contended that the appeal “was perfected” when the notice of appeal was served and filed and under the rule of this court the defendant was required to file the transcript of the record on appeal within thirty days thereafter, unless that time was extended by this court or a justice thereof, and admittedly no such extension of time was had; by the defendant it is contended that the appeal was “not perfected” until the bill of exceptions was settled and filed within the time prescribed by the statute or enlarged by the trial court, which admittedly was done, and hence the filing of the record on appeal within thirty days thereafter was within time as by the rule provided. We have heretofore, on motion of the respondent in both civil and criminal eases, dismissed appeals where the transcript of the record on appeal was not filed in this court within thirty days, in criminal cases after notice of appeal was served and filed and the giving of an undertaking for costs on appeal as by the statute provided, unless for cause shown the appellant was relieved from his default in not filing the transcript of the record within the time prescribed by the rule. To that effect opinions have been rendered and filed in various causes in both civil and criminal actions.

The defendant, in support of his contention and in resisting the motion to dismiss, relies on the case of Thompson v . Reynolds, 59 Utah 416, 204 P. 516. It will be observed that was a civil and not a criminal action. Under the Code of Civil Procedure, Comp. Laws Utah, 1917, § 6992, providing that “the judgment roll and bill of exceptions, if there be one, shall constitute the record on appeal,” section 7009 that, “if the appellant shall fail to cause such papers to be transmitted and filed in the supreme court within thirty days *330 after the perfecting of the appeal, the appeal may be dismissed on motion of the respondent,” and under rule 2, it, in Thompson v. Reynolds, was held that “an appeal could not be perfected without a bill of exceptions, and will not be dismissed where the judgment roll and bill of exceptions were filed in the Supreme Court within the time allowed for preparing the bill of exceptions as extended by proper orders of the trial court.” The case being a civil action and ruled under the Code of Civil Procedure, we need not now inquire into the correctness of the holding that an appeal in a civil action is “not perfected” until the settlement of a bill of exceptions, if there be one, and is not perfected by the service and filing of a notice of appeal and the giving of an undertaking for costs on appeal as provided by Comp. Laws Utah, 1917, § 6996, and as provided by section 7005 that “whenever an appeal is perfected, as provided in the preceding sections of this chapter,” not as provided by section 7009 or sections subsequent to section 7005; and as theretofore held by this court in the case of Butter v. Lamson, 29 Utah 439, 82 P. 473, that extensions obtained and granted to settle a bill of exceptions did not extend the time for the filing of the record on appeal, unless such extensions were granted by this court or a justice thereof. Many courts have held that, in the absence of a statute to the contrary, an appeal in a civil action is perfected by serving and filing a notice of appeal and giving an undertaking for costs as by the statute provided. White v. Sanders, 99 Wash. 172, 168 P. 1140; Schmuck v. Missouri, K. & T. R. Co., 85 Kan. 447, 116 P. 818, 2 Cal. Jur. 349 and 359. To that effect, too, is the case of Butter v. Lamson, supra.

However, we need not further pursue this, for the reason that, as we think, the matter in hand is controlled by the Code of Criminal Procedure, Comp. Laws Utah 1917, § 9216, which provides:

“Upon the appeal being taken, the clerk with whom the notice of appeal shall have been filed must, within ten days thereafter in case the bill of exceptions has been settled before the giving of said notice, *331 but if not, then within ten days from the settlement of the bill of exceptions if there be a bill of exceptions, without charge transmit to the clerk of the supreme court the notice of appeal, the record, and all bills of exceptions, instructions, and indorsements thereon, which shall constitute the record on appeal, and upon the receipt thereof, the clerk of the supreme court must file the same and perform the same service as in civil cases, without charge.”

There being a bill of exceptions settled March 25, 1932, and within the time enlarged by the trial court, the clerk of that court under section 9216, without charge, was required to transmit the record on appeal, including the bill of exceptions, to the Supreme Court within ten days from the settlement of the bill; but, as is seen, the record was not so transmitted within the ten days, but within thirty days after the settlement of the bill. The appellant thus urges that in causing the record to be so transmitted he relied on rule 2, requiring the record to be transmitted within thirty days after the appeal “shall be perfected,” and on Thompson v. Reynolds, that an appeal is not perfected until the bill of exceptions is settled, if there be one, within the time prescribed by the statute or enlarged by the trial court.

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Bluebook (online)
17 P.2d 919, 81 Utah 325, 1933 Utah LEXIS 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-marasco-utah-1933.