State v. Sneed

105 Tenn. 711
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 105 Tenn. 711 (State v. Sneed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee 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. Sneed, 105 Tenn. 711 (Tenn. 1900).

Opinion

Wilkes, J.

Upon a former day of tlie present term of this Court an application for mandamus was disposed of, and a written memorandum was handed down showing the grounds of the ■ Court’s action. This memorandum is in the words and figures following:

[713]*713“State, ex rd. John Richards, I Law Docket Knox J os. V Sneed. J 0omly-
“This is an application for mandamus against the Hon. Jos. W. Sneed, Judge of the Circuit Court in and for Knox County.
“Its prayer is to require him to expunge from the minutes of the Court over which he presides an entry of judgment for $65 and costs in the cause of Horn v. Richards, and if the whole of it cannot properly he expunged, that certain parts of it he expunged so as to show that a new trial was asked for and refused; that an appeal was prayed and granted, to the end that the judgment complained of may he reviewed hy this Court.
“The trial Judge answered the alternative writ and set out fully the facts in regard to the judgment as he understood them. While there are some variances between the statements in the petition and the answer to this writ, we think they are not material to the merits of the controversy. We state the facts of the case mainly as given hy the learned trial Judge. It appears that he heard the case of Horn v. Richards without a jury, and announced an opinion that the defendant, Richards, was indebted to Horn $65. Ho judgment was entered on the minutes. Counsel for Richards thereupon brought the matter before the Court, as he says, upon a motion for a new [714]*714trial, and read a statute bearing upon the ease. The learned trial J udge states that he did not understand that the application made, or matter presented, was a formal motion for a new trial, but was an effort upon the part of counsel to have the Court change his ruling and render a different judgment. However this may be, and we do not think it is material which is correct, the trial Judge directed the Clerk not to enter the judgment. This was not done publicly, but privately. Counsel for defendant ascertained that the entry was held up by order of the Judge, and made no other effort after applying to the clerk and getting this information. No further action was taken until Monday, September 3, when an appeal was prayed and granted and time given to prepare the bill of exceptions until the 8th of September, and an entry to that effect was made. The bill of exceptions was prepared and agreed to by counsel, and after being changed and interlined was filed by the trial Judge on September 7.
“It appears, however, that the term of the Court in Knox County closed on the 1st of September, and on. the 3d, when the entries were made of the judgment and other facts, the Court was by law open in Sevierville, and could not be open in Knoxville. The learned trial Judge thereupon, believing that he could not do any legal and valid business after the time for the adjournment [715]*715of the Court, caused an entry to be made giving a judgment nunc pro hone for the $65 and cost, as of date September 1, when the cause was heard by him, but reciting that the prayer for an appeal was not made and granted until September 3, and the extension of time to file a bill of exceptions to the 8th was then' made. This left the record in shape, showing that a judgment was entered September 1, when Court was in session, but no appeal was granted or time given to file the bill of exceptions until September 3, when the Court was not and could not be in session.
“Row, the motion for a new trial was not material, as the case was heard by the trial Judge without a jury, and in such cases motion for new trial is not indispensable. Ror was the defendant seriously prejudiced by failing to have his appeal granted, as he could bring up the case, as he has done, by writ of error. But the trouble is that in the present shape of the record defendant has no bill of exceptions which the Court can regard on the hearing of his writ of error. Without intimating where the fault for this state of affairs lies, or, indeed, that any one is to blame, it is evident that the defendant has been deprived of his right to have the decision of the lower Court reviewed in such manner as to present the merits of his controversy. The action of the trial Court, whether we - consider the effort [716]*716as a consideration of a motion for a new trial or simply as a withholding of the final decision, or taking the case under advisement, led the defendant’s counsel to delay his appeal until he could not legally make it, and we are of opinion that all the action of the Oourt on the 3d of September was void and of no effect, and the entry ordered on that day to be made as of date September 1 was unauthorized and of no effect, and should be stricken out. This being done, the ease stands as though no judgment had ever been rendered in the cause.
“It is immaterial whether the tidal Judge authorized an entry showing the Court opened on the 3d of September, or that this entry was made by the clerk of his own motion. The fact appears from the record and the answer of the Judge that the entry w.as ordered to be made after the Oourt adjourned and to be dated back to a date when it was in session, and this, we think, was a void action on the part of the trial Judge, and could not be permitted to prejudice the defendant in his effort to have his case reviewed.
“The Oourt directs, therefore, that the judgment, with its recitals which were ordered to be made on the 3d of' September and dated as of the 1st of September, be set aside and for nothing held in the Oourt below, and proper order to that effect will be entered while that Oourt is in [717]*717session. The case will then be reinstated and stand upon the docket of that Court as though no such judgment had ever been entered, and for such further disposition as is proper.
“The writ of error in the case of Bicharás v. Horn will be dismissed at the cost of Richards and his surety, inasmuch as there has been no valid final judgment in the case to be reviewed, because of the confused state of the record.
“The cost of the mandamus proceeding will be paid by the defendant to that proceeding. Wilkes, J.”

The defendant, Jos. W. Sneed, has now filed a petition to rehear, which has been answered by the counsel for the relator, and the case is before us for reconsideration on this petition and answer.

The defendant states that he filed no brief on the original hearing, because he did not deem one necessary, and he did not realize that he could have any interest, personal or pecuniary, in the decree to be rendered in the cause; that he was busily engaged in holding his Court, and had no time to investigate any authorities bearing on the •questions at issue. Tie continues:

“Since this honorable Court has rendered a de-cree against your petitioner for costs, not only affecting your petitioner as a judicial officer of the State, but all Judges alike, petitioner feels constrained to present the views that he does why said decree should bo reviewed by this honorable [718]*718Court.

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Bluebook (online)
105 Tenn. 711, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sneed-tenn-1900.