Tucker v. Thraves

1915 OK 1, 145 P. 784, 45 Okla. 209, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 260
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 5, 1915
Docket3936
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1915 OK 1 (Tucker v. Thraves) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tucker v. Thraves, 1915 OK 1, 145 P. 784, 45 Okla. 209, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 260 (Okla. 1915).

Opinion

RIDDLE, J.

A motion is made hr dismiss on the ground that the ease-made was never filed with the papers in the case in the trial court. The case-made does not contain the file mark or the stamp, of the clerk showing the same to' have been filed. There is also presented the affidavit of the clerk to the effect that the case-made was filed with the papers in said cause. In response to this motion is presented a certificate of the clerk of the trial court, showing that on civil docket No. 3, at page 46, appears the following entries relative to said cause:

“March 26th, 1912; ease-made entered, 25 cents; cert. 25 cents; filed 10 cents; orig. withdrawn to file in Supreme Court.”

There is also presented the (affidavit of the clerk to the effect that the case was filed with the papers in said cause. Judgment was rendered in the trial court November 27, 1911. Case-made was settled March 26, 1912. Petition in error and ease-made were filed in this court May 8, 1912.

The question arises upon the motion to dismiss: Can plaintiffs in error under the practice in this court, be permitted at this time to show that the case-made was actually filed in the trial court? In support of the motion herein to dismiss, defendant in error cites and relies on the cases of Banks et al. v. Watson, 40 Okla. 450, 139 Pac. 306 and Gibbs v. Tanner, 43 Okla. 477, 143 Pac. 189. In the first case cited, this court said:

. “A case-made filed in this court which does not show that it has been filed in the office of the clerk of the trial court is a *211 nullity, and, where such a case-made remains in this court after ■the expiration of the statutory period in which to* perfect an appeal, on motion the appeal will be dismissed.”

The same rule was announced in Banks et al. v. Watson, mpra. These cases, considered abstractly, might appear to be conclusive against plaintiffs in error and require a dismissal of this appeal. The language used in disposing of the motions in those cases must be considered and applied to the facts there before the court, and should not be construed as extending the rule beyond the points necessarily involved. Upon an examination of the facts in those cases, it is disclosed that the case-made has not, as a matter of fact, been filed in the office of the clerk of the -trial court with the papers in said causes as disclosed by the record, and the conclusions reached and announced in those cases were correct. The rule stated by Cyc. vol. 3, p. 73, is to the effect that:

“A case-made or statement of facts on appeal which is not filed within the required time after settlement cannot be considered by the appellate court.”

It will -be noticed that the text does not state that, where the case or statement of facts fails to have the file mark of the clerk attached or stamped thereon, it cannot be considered by the appellate court; but in clear language it is stated that, when the record is not filed with the clerk, it cannot be so considered. This is the rule followed by this court in the case of St. L., I. M. & So. Ry. Co. v. Burrow, 33 Okla. 701, 127 Pac. 478, which case is cited by the court in Banks et al. v. Watson, 40 Okla. 450, 139 Pac. 306. It was there said:

“It seems to be conceded that neither was the case-made attested by the clerk of the district court nor was the case-made . filed with the papers in the casé in -the lower court.”

After quoting from section 6074, Comp. Laws 1909, relating to amendments, approval, etc., the latter part of which section *212 provides, “it shall then be filed with the papers in the, case/’ the court further stated:

“Such not having been done, the purported copy attached to the proceeding in error is a nullity. * * *”

This undoubtedly states the correct rule and the rule announced by the court in the two- cases cited, when applied to the facts there before the court. The ease-mades in those cases had not ben filed with the clerk of the trial court, as disclosed by the case-made itself, and there was no attempt to otherwise show that said ease-mades had been so filed; and necessarily the motions to dismiss were properly sustained. We have an entirely different state of facts before us now. The uncontradicted affidavit of the clerk of the district court filed in this court shows that the original case-made was, as a matter of fact, filed in his office with the papers in the case and was withdrawn for the purpose of filing in this court. These facts, not being disputed, must be accepted as primen facie true. It is the actual depositing in the office with the clerk of the trial court which in law constitutes the filing. When the case-made is deposited with the clerk or his duly authorized deputy, in his office with the intent and for the purpose of filing with the papers in the cause, in law it is a valid, filing and effective as such, although the clerk neglects to place the file mark thereon or stamp same as filed; the purpose of which is to furnish evidence of such filing. This rule is well settled. Norris et al. v. Cross, 25 Okla. 296, 105 Pac. 1000; Eldred v. Malloy, 2 Colo. 20. In the case of Nimmons v. Westfall, 33 Ohio St. 213, the rule is stated as follows:

“The original papers and pleadings” on error to' the common pleas are sufficiently filed in the district court when placed in tne files of the district clerk, “without indorsing thereon additional file marks.”

In the case of Schmuck v. Missouri, N. & T. Ry. co., 85 Kan. 447, 116 Pac. 818, it is said:

*213 “When the party appealing has complied with all that the law requires of him in order to perfect an appeal, his rights cannot be prejudiced, nor can the jurisdiction of this court be defeated, by the failure of the clerk of the trial court to perform a duty which the statute imposes upon him.”-

In the ease of Aultman & Co. v. Utsey, 33 S. C. 611, 12 S. E. 628, the court said:

“Circuit Court Eule 49 provides that ‘where a party makes a case or exceptions, he shall procure the same to be filed within ten days after the same shall be settled, or it shall be deemed abandoned/ Held, that the appeal will not be dismissed, under this rule, where the case or exceptions were left with the clerk for filing in apt time, though he failed to mark the same ‘Filed/ and allowed the original to be taken from his office.”

In Harden v. Card, 14 Wyo. 497, 85 Pac. 251; it is said by the Supreme Court of Wyoming:

“The -bill is also assailed on the ground that it is not indorsed as filed in the court below after it was allowed and signed. * * * It is apparent therefore that, after Being signed, the bill was left with the clerk for filing, and his failure to indorse it as filed cannot invalidate it. It is sufficiently shown to have been filed in the clerk’s office. (Board et al. v. Shaffner, 10 Wyo. 181, 68 Pac. 14).

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Bluebook (online)
1915 OK 1, 145 P. 784, 45 Okla. 209, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tucker-v-thraves-okla-1915.