19 Kan. 335 | Kan. | 1877
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action in the district court of Atchison county to recover damages for personal injuries, in which judgment was rendered in favor of defendant in error. The contest in this court has been conducted with vigor and bitterness. There has been that irritation and suspicion on the part of counsel which is both unfortunate and unpleasant.
1st. The bill in referring to such extrinsic document must purport to incorporate it into and make it a part of the bill. A mere reference to the document, although such as to identify it beyond doubt, or a statement that it was in evidence, is not sufficient, for such reference and statement do' not make it certain that judge or counsel intended that it should be copied into and made a part of the bill.
2d. The document itself must be in existence, written out and complete at the time of the signature of the bill; otherwise the door is open for dispute as to its language, and the bill may not in fact be allowed by the judge within the statutory time. A reference to the testimony of some witness to be thereafter written out by him, and as written out to be inserted, is improper; and such testimony, though written out and inserted, must be disregarded; for that in effect places in the bill the witness’s statements of the testimony, and not the judge’s. So also, if a document has been totally or partially destroyed, it must be restored before the signature, and the paper as restored clearly identified. And again: Suppose a paper in a foreign language is received in evidence and translated to the jury by some witness on the stand; it will not do to refer to that paper in the original, leaving the translation to be thereafter written out by any one, not even the witness who translated it to the jury; but the translation must be written out and properly referred to, so that the*340 judge may approve it as the one given on the trial. The same principle renders it proper that short-hand notes be written out before the signature; for the notes of the stenographer are not a record; they are not conclusive as to what in fact was the testimony; they are not good against the certificate of the judge, and are no substitute for it. Whatever reliance the judge may place upon such notes, he after all must determine what was and what was not the testimony; and until those notes are written out, neither he nor counsel can determine what they will show as the testimony.
3d. And in this we appropriate the language of the supreme court of the United States in the case of Leftwich v. Lecann, 4 Wall. 187, in which the court says: “If a paper which is to constitute a part of a bill of exceptions is not incorporated into the body of the bill, it must be annexed to it, or so marked by letter, number, or other means of identification mentioned in the bill, as to leave no doubt, when found in the record, that it is the one referred to in the bill of exceptions.” And these means of identification must be obvious to all. No mere memorandum, intelligible it may be to a single person, even the clerk, but indicating nothing to any one else, will be sufficient. They must be such that any one going to the record can determine what document is to be inserted, or, after insertion, that the clerk has made no mistake. The record must prove itself, and not the record and the testimony of the clerk. The clerk changes; the record endures. And long after judge and clerk are both gone, the record, if good, must carry on itself the evidence of its own integrity.
“As will appear from a stenographic record thereof as follows : [Here oopy record of testimony as kept by stenographer, down to resting of plaintiff’s case.] The said depositions taken by plaintiff, to-wit: [Here copy names of witnesses, and depositions, as read.] ”
And the only identification of evidence offered by the defendant to be inserted in said bill of exceptions is as follows:
“Defendant, to maintain the issue upon its part, offered evidence which was received by the court of the kind and in order as follows, as also kept by such stenographer: [Here copy defendant’s evidence.]”
And the evidence of plaintiff in rebuttal is not even identified by the stenographic record, but it is stated that, “ The plaintiff offered evidence in rebuttal which was received by the court as follows: [Here copy evidence in rebuttal.] ” Among the papers brought from the office of the clerk of the district court, and offered in evidence on the motion, is a large roll which upon examination reads as the testimony of witnesses given upon this trial, and which appears to have been copied into the transcript filed in this court as the testimony referred to in the original bill. But upon this roll we find no file-marks, or other marks of identification. From an examination of this roll no one could tell when it was placed among the papers of the clerk’s office, or even when it was written
Ordinarily, as we have said, such matters should first be investigated privately before the court, and not in the hearing of the jury, in order that their attention may not be distracted to side issues; but still, whether it shall be so.had or not, is a matter largely within the discretion of the court. The charge may have become so public that there is a probability of its having reached the ear of the jury. In such a case the interests of justice and the rights of both parties ' would seem to demand that they know the exact truth rather than return a verdict with a suspicion of wrong in their minds. In the case before us it does not seem that the public investigation of the charge was such an error or wrought such prejudice to the rights of the defendant as would justify any interference with the judgment.
The judgment will be affirmed.