Territory v. Christensen

31 N.W. 847, 4 Dakota 410, 1887 Dakota LEXIS 6
CourtSupreme Court Of The Territory Of Dakota
DecidedFebruary 16, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 31 N.W. 847 (Territory v. Christensen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court Of The Territory Of Dakota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Territory v. Christensen, 31 N.W. 847, 4 Dakota 410, 1887 Dakota LEXIS 6 (dakotasup 1887).

Opinion

Tripp, C. J.

The defendant was tried at the October term, 1884, of the district court in and for Moody county, upon an indictment for murder, was convicted of the crime of manslaughter in the first decree, and was sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary at Sioux Falls for the-term of 24 years and 4 months. No motion was made for a new trial, or for arrest of judgment, nor was any bill of exceptions tendered or settled in the case; but some time after judgment was pronounced, and the defendant- had been conveyed to the penitenitary, defendant sued out a writ of error, and assigned as errors of record as follows: ‘‘(1) Error in that the plea of defendant does not substantially conform to the statutory form required by Section 276, Code Crim. Proc. (2) Error in that it does not appear by the record that the clerk or district attorney on the trial read the indictment, or stated the plea of the defendant, to the jury. (3) Error in that it does not appear by the record that when the verdict was given and recorded, or at any time, the clerk or any officer of the court read it to the jury, or inquired of them whether it was their verdict, or that the jury declared the same. (4) Error in that it does not appear that a time was appointed by the court, after the return of the verdict, for pronouncing judgment, or any time allowed after verdict before judgment. (5) Error in that the record does not show that before judgment the defendant was informed of the nature of indictment, or of his plea, or of the verdict, or was asked whether he had any legal cause to show why judgment should not be pronounced against him. (6) Error in that no charge of the court is contained or appears in the record of the action, as provided by Section 446.of said Code. (7) Error in rendering said judgment without stating offense. (8) Other errors and omissions in said record, wherein it is insufficient to sustain said judgment.

[413]*413This writ of error came on for argument at the October term of this court, 1885, at which time the attorney for the territory made an application to the court for a writ of certiorari to the district court of Moody county, requiring it to further, certify the record of the proceedings had at this trial, alleging that the record sent up was not a full and complete transcript of the record and proceedings had in the lower court; and such writ having issued, returnable at the February term of this court, 1886, and, at said February term, such return not' having been made and filed, the order was extended, and made returnable at the May term of this court, 1886. At the May term, 1886, the clerk having made return to said writ of certiorari, it appears from inspection thereof, and of the;£ecord returned, that on the twenty-seventh day of March, 1886, after allowance of the writ of erior, and issuance of the writ of certiorari, and after expiration of the term at which judgment was rendered, the district court to which such writ of certiorari was directed made an order correcting and supplying the omissions, irregularities, and errors complained of in the first five assignments of error, as well as that complained of in the seventh assignment. This amendment of the record was made by the lower court upon written notice, supported by affidavits of the clerk and of the district attorney, served upon the attorneys of record of the defendant, and by personal service upon the defendant himself 12 days before the hearing, stating the grounds of the motion,- and the substance of the proposed amendment, and the time and place of hearing. The amendments were made from the recollections of the clerk of the district attorney, and of the judge presiding at the trial, who was still the presiding judge of that court, and from the inspection of the records and papers filed in the action. No objection was made to this amendment by the defendant in the court below, and no exception was taken to such action of the court in the lower or appellate court. And no question is raised in any manner in this court but that the record, as now presented, is a true and correct transcript of the proceedings as they occurred in the court below.

[414]*414The record, as returned by the writ of certiorari, shows the entire proceedings had: (1) The original record in the court below; (2) the proceedings taken to procure the amendment of the record; and (3) the record as amended.

And the defendant now alleges that there exists in the present record two errors: (1) That the action of the court below, in amending the record, is without authority and void; (2) that the sixth original assignment of error has not been cured, and is fatal.

The attorney general admits that the errors contained in the original first five assignments of error are fatal, if they have not been cured by the amendment of the record, so that the discufsion of this case is limited to the two propositions: (1) Did the court err in amending the record? (2) Is the failure to incorporate the charge of the court in the judgment roll a fatal omission?

If the court had no power to amend its record after the term at which judgment was rendered, that would end this case, and it will be unnecessary to consider the second proposition. The question of amending the record is not a new one. Courts have been in the habit of amending their records ever since the courts of record have had an existence. No two of the cases cited are exactly alike in the facts presented, and very few of them are parallel with the one at bar. All the cases agree that the courts have absolute control over their records during the entire term, at which the judgment was rendered, and in which action or proceeding the amendment is sought to be made. We have examined, with some care, the cases cited and relied upon by the defendant, denying the right of amendment after the term at which the action or proceeding is determined, and it may be said of them, in general, that they are not in point, upon the facts of this case. All, or nearly all, of them are cases in which, after expiration of the term, some amendment or modification of the judgment itself is sought to be made, affecting the substantial rights of the parties, upon disputed parol testimony, and the recollections os persons and parties. Many of them seek, by ingrafting something upon or in taking some[415]*415thing from the record of the judgment itself, to reverse, in effect, the whole determination of the action; others seek, by similar methods, to merely enlarge or diminish the effect of the decision at first rendered.

There must always be a time when litigation is at an end, and when the successful litigant can pause and feel that his judgment is final: and no better time, it is believed could have been named by the able jurists of the past, than the term at which such final judgment is rendered. By a strict adherence to such a rule, courts and suitors are not affected by changing circumstances and shifting events, which, otherwise might often bring about the reconsideration of final judgments in actions honestly and correctly determined. Our own supreme court has laid down the correct rule in Roberts v. Haggert, 29 N. W. Rep. 656, (determined at the February term, 1886) in which case the supreme court denied a reargument upon motion made after lapse of a term at which the action was finally determined. But that class of cases is to be distinguished from the one at bar. Here no attempt is made to amend, modify, or in any manner change, the judgment rendered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 N.W. 847, 4 Dakota 410, 1887 Dakota LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/territory-v-christensen-dakotasup-1887.