State v. Smith

38 Kan. 194
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 38 Kan. 194 (State v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Smith, 38 Kan. 194 (kan 1888).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Johnston, J.:

1. Bill of excepn™partUof record. The questions principally discussed upon this appeal cannot be considered here, for the reason that no valid bill of exceptions is found in the record. A paper purporting to be one is attached to the transcript, but it is conceded not to have been allowed and signed within the time prescribed by law. The case was tried and the verdict rendered at the March term, 1887, and motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were overruled and sentence pronounced on the 6th day of April, 1887. On April 7, 1887, the court adjourned sine die. It is conceded that the bill of exceptions was not prepared and presented to the judge for allowance and signing until the 23d day of May, 1887, forty-five days beyond the closing of the term at which the trial was had. The statute directs that exceptions to the ruling of the court must be reduced to writing, and allowed, signed and filed during the term when the decision is made. If the decision objected to is made by a judge at chambers, the exceptions must be prepared and allowed within ten days afterward. In either case, to be valid, a bill of exceptions must be signed and filed within the time prescribed by law; and as the exceptions in the present case were signed and filed far be-1 ° yond the term, they form no part of the record, au(j we are not at liberty to consider them. (Crim. Code, § 219; Civil Code, § 300; Brown v. Rhodes, 1 Kas. 359; Gallaher v. Southwood, 1 id. 143; Lownsberry v. Rakestraw, 14 id. 151; The State v. Bohan, 19 id. 28; The State v. Burrows, 33 id. 10.) On the motion to strike out, an affidavit was filed stating that as the trial was had at the close of the term, it was impracticable to obtain from the official stenogra[197]*197pher a transcript of the testimony and proceedings in the case before final adjournment. The trial closed on April 6, the court adjourned on the next day, and as the testimony was voluminous, it was impossible to make a transcript in so short a time. 2. Bin of excepprepare-^-0 iusa1' A party is entitled to and should be afforded a reasona^e time to prepare and present his exceptions, and this can ordinarily be done by extending the term; or, when the other business is disposed of, adjourning to some future day for the allowance and signing of exceptions. This is a proper, and is believed to be the prevailing, practice. In the showing here made there is a statement that the judge of the district court of Davis county declined to continue the March term to a future day prior to to the next regular term of that court. It is not stated, however, that the application was made on the ground that there was not sufficient time to prepare a bill of exceptions, nor does it appear that the judge was informed that counsel for defendant desired so to do. If a proper application and showing had been made, it would appear to have been the duty of the judge to continue the term over a sufficient length of time for the preparation of a bill of exceptions; and probably if this had been done, the application would have been granted. If he unreasonably refused to do so, he might by a proper proceeding have been compelled to grant sufficient time to reduce the exceptions to writing, and also to allow and sign the same before the final adjournment of the court. No such showing has been made here, and even if it had been, the remedy cannot be obtained on this appeal. It follows that we cannot consider the rulings upon the testimony.

The next question for decision is, whether the charge of the court is properly in the transcript. There is a certificate of the clerk that the transcript embraces a true copy of the charge; but can the instructions given be brought into the record unless they are embodied in a bill of exceptions? It has already been decided that instructions asked for and refused do not become a part of the record except by means of a bill of exceptions. (The State v. McClintock, 37 Kas. 40; [198]*198same case, 14 Pac. Kep. 511.) The question whether the instructions given can be preserved except by a bill of exceptions has been raised in several cases, but not being necessary to their disposition, it was not decided. 3. Charge, part of record, when. We are of opinion that only through a bill of exceptions can the charge given be brought into the record. It is true that the instructions of the court in a civil cause do become a part of the record without being preserved in a formal bill of exceptions. There is a marked distinction, however, in the provisions of the statute regarding the instructions in a criminal case and those given in civil cases. In criminal cases it is provided that “the judge must charge the jury, in writing, and the charge shall be filed among the papers of the cause.” (Crim. Code, § 236.) In civil cases it is provided that a formal bill of exceptions is not required, and that it is sufficient to write at the close of each instruction, “Eefused and excepted to,” or “Given and excepted to,” which shall be signed by the judge; and further, that “all instructions given by the court must be signed by the judge, and filed together with those asked for by the parties, as a part of the record.” (Civil Code, §§275, 276.) These provisions were considered and reenacted by the same legislature, and the great difference in the language used respecting the instructions in the two classes of cases, is significant. In the one case it is provided in plain terms that when the instructions are signed and filed, they become a part of the record, while in the other it simply declares that the charge shall be filed with the other papers of the cause. Affidavits on motions and depositions are likewise filed among the papers of the case, but they do not thereby become a part of the record. Formerly, the charge to the jury was not given in writing, and constituted no part of the record; nor is it a part of the record •now unless made so by statutory enactment. The explicit provision by the legislature, that the instructions in a civil cause shall be filed “as a part of the record,” leaves no doubt of the legislative purpose with respect to such instructions; but the absence of the same or similar language in the pro[199]*199vision relating to the instructions in a criminal cause indicates quite clearly an intention that they should not become a part of the record by merely filing them among the papers of the cause. In the Ohio code there is a provision that the written charges and instructions shall be taken by the jurors when they retire, and returned with their verdict into court, and shall remain on file with the papers of the case; and the supreme court of that state has held that the charge so returned and filed, and which is not embodied in a bill of exceptions, cannot be regarded as a part of the record. (Hallam v. Jacks, 11 Ohio St. 692; Lockhart v. Brown, 31 id. 431; Pettett v. Van Fleet, 31 id. 536.)

It only remains to consider the questions raised against the sufficiency of the information. The defendant claims that it does not charge an intention on his part to kill and murder the deceased.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 Kan. 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-smith-kan-1888.