Underwood v. David

61 P. 1012, 9 Wyo. 178, 1900 Wyo. LEXIS 12
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 1, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 61 P. 1012 (Underwood v. David) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Underwood v. David, 61 P. 1012, 9 Wyo. 178, 1900 Wyo. LEXIS 12 (Wyo. 1900).

Opinion

Pottbb, Chief Justice.

The defendants in error move for a dismissal of the proceedings in error in this cause.

The first ground of the motion is that there is no transcript of the record. Attached to the petition in error is what purports to be a transcript of the record, and in the petition in error occurs the following: “A transcript of the files, records, and papers of said final order and judgment, and the orders and proceedings are duly certified to by the said clerk of the court of said die-[180]*180trict under the seal thereof, and are hereto annexed and made a part of this petition in error. ’ ’

Counsel for defendant in error contends that this is not a compliánce with the provisions of the statute (Sec. 4254) and Rule Eleven of this court requiring that there shall be filed with the petition in error a transcript of so much of the record as shall be necessary to exhibit the errors complained of. The proposition urged is that annexing the transcript to the petition in error and mating it by allegation therein, a part of it, does not amount to a filing of the transcript with the petition in error. We think there is no merit in the contention. The distinction, if any, is altogether too technical. By being attached to the petition and in that manner filed, the transcript is filed with the petition as much so as if filed as a separate paper. We cannot perceive that the statement making it a part of the petition renders the separate filing of another transcript necessary.

Another ground upon which the motion is based is that there is no bill of exceptions; and it is insisted that the record discloses no question for consideration in the absence of a bill. Counsel for plaintiff in error, on the other hand, contends that the order complained of was made solely upon the record proper, and that a bill is not required for a consideration of the errors 'assigned.

No bill of exceptions, is contained in the record. A bill of exceptions is only required to make that a part of the record which is not otherwise a part of it.

If counsel for plaintiff in error is correct in his views that the record proper discloses all that is required for a determination of the questions presented by the petition in error, then it is evident that, upon the ground of the absence of a bill of exceptions the proceedings should not be dismissed.

These proceedings are instituted for the review of an order, made by the district court, vacating a former order confirming a sale to plaintiff in error upon an execution issued upon a judgment in a certain causo [181]*181wherein valentine Baker, et. al., were plaintiffs and Helen Jenkins, Edward C. David, James B. David, Alexander G. McGregor, and Alice Parshall, were defendants. The order appealed from not only vacated the previous order of confirmation, but adjudged the sale to plaintiff in error to be null and void.

The suit above mentioned was brought to subject certain real estate belonging to Helen Jenkins to the payment of judgments theretofore recovered against her by the plaintiffs in the suit. Edward 0. David, James B. David, and Alexander G. McGregor, defendants in the suit, respectively, held mortgages covering various tracts of the lands in question. The final decree awarded personal judgments to each of the last above-named defendants, declared the mortgages of Edward 0. and James B. David, respectively, to be first and prior liens upon the lands covered by them, and ordered the sale of all the property by special master commissioner therein appointed for that purpose. Ho sale was made by such commissioner; but three years after the entry of the final decree an execution was caused to bé issued by the Davids, and in June, 1895, a sale was had thereunder, the sheriff of the county officiating, and the Davids became severally the purchasers, part of the property being bought by Edward 0. David, and part by James B. David. That sale was confirmed.

A few days prior to any action on the part of the Davids to obtain an execution, the asignee of the Mc-Gregor judgment caused execution to issue thereon, and certain lands were levied on, being some of the same lands embraced in one or the other of the David mortgages. Ho tice of sale was published, but the execution was returned unsatisfied and without sale, for the reason as stated in the officer’s return, that he had received notice that the district court had allowed an injunction to issue in the case of Helen Jenkins v. Alexander G. McGregor, and he therefore returned the execution not satisfied, by order of the court.

[182]*182In June, 1896, the assignee of the McGregor judgment caused an alias execution to issue thereon, under which the sale was made to plaintiff in error of the lands in question, they being part of the same lands covered by one or the other of the David mortgages, and purchased by one or the other of them at the sale held under the execution issued at their instance in 1896. That sale to plaintiff in error was confirmed over a protest filed by Edward C. and James JB. David. Subsequently they moved a rehearing of the order of confirmation, which was granted, the sale declared null and void, and the prior order of confirmation vacated; this last order being the one now complained of.

The foregoing facts are all obtainable from an inspection of the record proper. Some matters are incorporated in the transcript which are not part of the record, and cannot be considered'. The order appealed from was made in the case of Valentine Baker, et al., v. Helen Jenkins, et al., already mentioned. We observe in the transcript the pleadings, proceedings, orders, and judgments in a case wherein Helen Jenkins was plaintiff and Alexander G. McGregor, Albert Chapman, and Ira L. Fredendall-were defendants. Chapman was the assignee of the McGregor judgment and Fredendall was the sheriff of the county. That case is probably the one wherein the injunction issued which prevented the sale under the Mc-Gregor execution issued in 1896. Without a reference to the record of that case, however, the court would have no means of knowing that to be the fact, nor is there anything elsewhere in the transcript to show what final disposition was made of that suit. That action was an independent one. Neither,. of the Davids were parties to it, nor was the plaintiff in error. The proceedings in that action, although certain of them, such as the pleadings, and orders, constitute the record in the suit wherein filed or made, are not in any sense in and of themselves part of the record proper in these proceedings seeking the reversal of an order made in an altogether different cause. [183]*183They could not have been properly considered in the district court in making the order complained of unless introduced as evidence; and if so introduced they could not be preserved as part of the record except by a bill of exceptions. They do not appear in a bill of exceptions, and therefore are clearly improperly embraced in the present transcript.

It is noticeable that the clerk does not authenticate them as papers and proceedings in the action wherein the order appealed from was entered, but they are certified as the papers and proceedings in the suit of Helen Jenkins v. Alexander G. McGregor and others, and very properly so.

Incorporated in the transcript also is a written opinion of the district court certified to as filed in the cause of Baker, et al., v. Jenkins, et al.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 P. 1012, 9 Wyo. 178, 1900 Wyo. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/underwood-v-david-wyo-1900.