Walcher v. Stone

1905 OK 5, 79 P. 771, 15 Okla. 130, 1905 Okla. LEXIS 5
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 11, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1905 OK 5 (Walcher v. Stone) 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
Walcher v. Stone, 1905 OK 5, 79 P. 771, 15 Okla. 130, 1905 Okla. LEXIS 5 (Okla. 1905).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

Inwin, J.:

The first proposition which is presented for ou'r consideration is the motion of the defendant in error to dismiss for insufficiency of the certificate of the clerk, and because no proper or sufficient record is presented whereon this court can review the action of the district court, and ac *132 companying this motion to dismiss is a motion made on the part of the plaintiff in error for leave to withdraw the certificate of the clerk from the files in this court, for the purpose of having the same amended. This court, in the ease of Wade v. Mitchell, being No. 1319, decided at the June term, 1904, of this court, held that such certificates as those described in the record in the case at bar, were insufficient to present such a record as would authorize this court to review the action of the district court. This court, in that opinion decided that a certificate of the clerk which states that a transcript contains “a full, true and correct copy of the petition, demurrer, and journal entry” is sufficient. We take the rule to be well established, and supported by an almost unbroken line of authorities, that nothing short of a full transcript of ail the proceedings is sufficient to bring the alleged error up for review, and that such a full and complete transcript of all the pleadings must be evidenced by the certificate of the clerk, and the certificate must contain language which shows this fact. The statutes of this Territory providing for appeals and writs of error to the supreme court was adopted from the state of Kansas, and hence any rule of construction that has been adopted and generally followed by the supremo court of that state, prior to its adoption by this Territory, was adopted with the statute by the legislature of this Territory, and is recognized as a binding rule of construction upon this court.

In the case of William Eckert v. Hannah P. McBee, 25 Kan. 705, the supreme court of that state say:

“Where a bill of exceptions purports to incorporate therein the pleadings, journal entries, and other matters which of themselves are a part of the record, but the certificate of the clerk is merely to the effect that the foregoing is the true bill of exceptions on file in his office in the cause, the *133 supreme court cannot reverse the judgment of the court below, as no case made or certified transcript of the record is attached to or filed with the petition in error.”

In the case of Westbrook vs. Schmans, reported in 32 Pac. 892, the Kansas supreme court say;

“Where the record brought up for review of the rulings of the district court is based upon a transcript, it is essential that it shall contain all the proceedings of the case as shown by the record in the court below, and that it is a complete transcript, must appear from the certificate of the clerk.”

And that court used the following language:

“This proceeding was brought to review the rulings and judgment of the district court of Butler county in an action to quiet title.. The right to a review is challenged on account of the insufficiency of the record. The petition in error is based upon a transcript, instead of a casemade, and the clerk, in the certificate attached, certifies that it is a full, true, and correct copy of certain proceedings had in said court in the case therein entitled as the same appears of record in my of-, fice. The certificate fails to show that the record contains a complete transcript of the proceedings in the cause. Nothing short of a full transcript of all the proceedings is sufficient, and that it is a complete transcript must appear from the certificate of the clerk.”

In the case of Todd v. Gurney Ranch Co., reported in the 53 Pac. page 789, the Kansas supreme court say:

“A transcript of the record is not sufficiently authenticated unless the clerk’s certificate states that it contains all the records and proceedings in the case.”

In the case of Bank of Santa Fe v. Hussey, et al., reported in the 50 Pac. page 977, the Kansas supreme court speaking through Mr. Justice Johnson, say:

“The certificate fails to show that the record contains a complete transcript of the proceedings in the cause. Noth *134 ing short of a full transcript ¿of all the proceedings is sufficient, and that it is a complete transcript, must appear from the certificate of the clerk.'”

In the case of Byers v. Leavenworth Lodge, 54 Kan. 321, 38 Pac. 302, the supreme court of Kansas say:

“The clerk could have certified, if such were the case in two or three lines, that the transcript to which he attached his name was a true, full and complete transcript of the proceedings in the case, as the same appears of record in my office/ He.did not do this. Instead thereof, he certified That the transcript contained a true, full and complete copy’ of certain pleadings, motions, entries, etc. His certificate does not show that these were all the records and proceedings that should have been certified to this court in the transcript.”

This was held to be insufficient. Hence, under the authorities herein cited, and the rule announced by our own supreme court at the June term, in the case of Wade v. Mitchell, we think there can be no doubt that these certificates are wholly insufficient to present a record upon which this court could review the action of the district court.

That brings us to a consideration of the question of the right of the plaintiff in error to withdraw the certificate of the clerk from the files of this court for the purpose of having the same amended. Objection is .made to this on the ground that more than one full year has elapsed since the judgment in this case was rendered, and consequently no amendment of the certificate of the clerk could properly be allowed. This proposition seems to have been squarely met by the Kansas supreme court in the case of Cook et al., v. Challis, in an opinion rendered June 8, 1895, reported in the 40 Pac. page 643 where the court says:

*135 “It is now too late to amend tbe certificate, more than one full year having elapsed.”

We think this doctrine laid down by the supreme court is sound in principle, as the certificate of the clerk being a necessary step to properly present the record to this court, and the statutes of this Territory providing that the record must be presented to this court within one year from the date of the rendition of the judgment complained of, if .the certificate of the clerk is a material and necessary step to present this record, that step must be taken within the time prescribed by law, and any failure so to do cannot be corrected by amendment after the time for presenting the record has expired by limitation of law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1905 OK 5, 79 P. 771, 15 Okla. 130, 1905 Okla. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walcher-v-stone-okla-1905.