Wilson v. Tranbarger

402 S.W.2d 449, 218 Tenn. 208, 22 McCanless 208, 1965 Tenn. LEXIS 511
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 9, 1965
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 402 S.W.2d 449 (Wilson v. Tranbarger) 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
Wilson v. Tranbarger, 402 S.W.2d 449, 218 Tenn. 208, 22 McCanless 208, 1965 Tenn. LEXIS 511 (Tenn. 1965).

Opinions

[212]*212MR. Justice Chattin

delivered the opinion of the Court.

These lawsuits grew out of a collision between a 1955 Oldsmobile owned and operated by Etta Mae Pierce, Deceased, in which Charles Daniel Wilson and Nathan Jerome Pierce, both deceased, were riding; and a truck loaded with gravel owned by Hubert Tranbarger, doing business as Tranbarger Trucking Company, which was at the time operated by Shurrals Barker on the business of the owner as his employee.

All three of the occupants of the car were killed in the accident. The accident ■ occurred on October 20, 1962. There have been two trials. These two cases were consolidated with a third case in which the Administrator of the Estate of Etta Mae Pierce, Deceased, had sued the defendant, Tranbarger. The jury returned verdicts in substantial amounts in favor of the two plaintiffs herein, [213]*213but returned a verdict of not guilty in the third case of the Administrator of the Estate of Etta Mae Pierce, Deceased.

Defendant filed motions for a new trial which the trial court granted in the two cases which we have under consideration. Although defendant listed nineteen grounds in each of his motions, the trial court sustained only four and overruled the remaining grounds.

Plaintiffs preserved a wayside bill of exceptions. The second trial resulted in verdicts for defendant, which were approved by the trial judge and judgments entered thereon.

Plaintiffs perfected an appeal to the Court of Appeals as to both trials.

When the suits reached the Court of Appeals, defendant filed a motion to strike the wayside bill of exceptions on the ground it was incomplete in that some twenty-nine exhibits had been used in the first trial and none of these exhibits had been authenticated by the trial judge and ordered filed as a part of the wayside bill of exceptions.

The Court of Appeals sustained this motion and affirmed the action of the trial judge in granting a new trial. That Court then proceeded to consider the record and assignments of error at the second trial and affirmed the judgments in favor of defendant.

We have granted plaintiffs’ petition for certiorari.

Plaintiffs have assigned as error the action of the Court of Appeals in striking the wayside bill of exceptions and affirming the action of the trial judge in granting the new trial.

[214]*214It is first urged in support of the assignment that when the trial judge signed the wayside hill of exceptions which contained the statement, “these were all of the proceedings had and evidence introduced in the trial of these cases,” he, in fact, authenticated each of the exhibits because the court reporter had marked “Ex,” the number of the exhibit and the date thereon; and the exhibits could be traced to their proper places in the bill of exceptions by the number and date of each.

None of the exhibits used in the first trial are attached to the wayside bill of exceptions. There are some sixteen items in a large brown envelope consisting of photos, plats, criminal warrants, and other documents upon which is written “Ex,” a number and a date. None of these exhibits show they were filed by the Clerk in the trial court. Nor do any of them bear any identification or authentication by the trial judge. Likewise, there is nothing* on the envelope containing them to show they were ever ordered filed collectively by the trial judge nor that they were filed by the clerk of that court. It was the duty of the trial judge to examine the exhibits and to authenticate each in such a manner to make their identity certain and order them filed.

“In order to make extraneous matters a part of the record, they must be examined by the trial judge, and authenticated by his signature in such manner as to make their identity certain. Parts of a bill of exceptions may be in the form of exhibits to be inserted in their proper places according to the directions given therein; but all of the bill of exceptions, whether in one or more documents, must be present and examined when it is signed by the judge, and the several papers to be copied must be so marked as exhibits that no [215]*215mistake in tlieir identity can be made, and it mnst not be left to tbe clerk, or other person, to determine what constitutes any part of the record. When extrinsic matters, which can only be made part of the record by bill of exceptions, appear in the transcript without proper authentication, they cannot be considered by an appellate court, but will be stricken out when called to its attention. Battier v. State, 114 Tenn. 563, 86 S.W. 711; Railway S Light Co. v. Marlin, 117 Tenn. 698, 99 S.W. 367; Wynne v. Edwards, 7 Humph. 418, 26 Tenn. 418, 419; Ivy v. Bain, 2 Tenn.Civ.App. 626; Cosmopolitan Life Insurance Co. v. Woodward, 7 Tenn. App. 394; Hayes & Chunn v. Holland, 11 Tenn.App. 490.” Frierson v. Smithson, 21 Tenn.App. 591, 113 S.W.2d 778 (1937).
"It is settled by repeated decisions of our Supreme Court that the contents of a bill of exceptions cannot be considered for any purpose by appellate court unless it affirmatively appears that it was authenticated by the trial judge and filed with the clerk within the time allowed by law. Jackson v. Bell, 143 Tenn. 452, 455, 226 S.W. 207; Hinton v. Sun Life Insurance Co., 110 Tenn. 113, 118, 72 S.W. 118; Cronan v. State, 113 Tenn. 539, 542, 82 S.W. 477, Bundren v. State, 109 Tenn. 225, 230, 70 S.W. 368; Wright v. Redd Bros., 106 Tenn. 719, 721, 63 S.W. 1120; Jones v. Moore, 106 Tenn. 188, 190, 61 S.W. 81; Muse v. State, 106 Tenn. 181, 183, 61 S.W. 80.
"This rule, of course, applied to the entire bill of exceptions, and, therefore, in order to make exhibits a part of the bill of exceptions it must affirmatively, appear that they were authenticated as such by the trial judg’e and filed by the clerk within the prescribed [216]*216period.” Cosmopolitan Life Insurance Company v. Woodard, 7 Tenn.App. 394 (1920).
“The rule which we dednce from the cases relied on by appellees, and from other cases therein cited, or which we have found by independent research, is that notwithstanding a recital in a bill of exceptions that it contains all of the evidence, if it affirmatively appears that other evidence was introduced in the lower court, which either was or might have been material, and where consideration of the evidence is material to the issues raised on appeal, the recital in the bill of exceptions that it contains all the evidence will be ignored and the judgment of the lower court affirmed.” State for Use and Benefit of Henderson County ex rel. Hanover v. Stewart, 46 Tenn.App. 75, 326 S.W.2d 688 (1958).

It is further insisted by virtue of T.C.A. 27-104 it is not now necessary exhibits introduced as evidence in law cases tried on oral testimony be included in a bill of exceptions in order to be considered in the appellate courts as a part of the evidence.

T.C.A. 27-104 provides in part:

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Bluebook (online)
402 S.W.2d 449, 218 Tenn. 208, 22 McCanless 208, 1965 Tenn. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-tranbarger-tenn-1965.