In November, 1899, A. S. Bacon & Sons applied to the judge of the superior court for a writ of prohibition against a magistrate, seeking to prohibit him from exercising jurisdiction in a certain case. The judge granted the writ, and to his action no exception was taken. The case was regularly returned to the superior court, and in February, 1902, it was reached upon the docket and was tried before a jury upon the issues of fact made by the petition and answer. Evidence was introduced by both parties. The jury found for the defendant; whereupon the plaintiffs filed their bill of exceptions complaining of certain rulings as to the admissibility of evidence, and of the refusal of the judge to direct a verdict in their favor. This bill of exceptions was not presented to the judge within twenty days after the trial of the case, but was presented within the proper time for an ordinary bill of exceptions. When the case reached this court,' the clerk placed it on the docket as a “ fast ” writ of error. When it was reached in its order in this court, the defendant in error moved to dismiss the writ of error, on the ground that the bill of exceptions had not been sued out within the time prescribed for “fast” writs of error. The plaintiffs in error, on the other hand, moved to transfer the case to the docket of the next term, on the ground that it was not a “ fast” writ of error but an ordinary one. These motions are in order for consideration, but of course we can not now consider the merits of the case.
Prior to 1870 every such case brought to this court came up under the general law, which required a bill of exceptions to be signed and certified within thirty days from the adjournment of the court. In 1870 the legislature enacted that in cases of application for injunction and the granting or refusing of the same, in applications for the appointment of a receiver or other extraordinary remedy in equity, the dissatisfied party might bring the case to this court within ten days thereafter. Subsequently this time was increased to twenty days. The terms of this act show plainly that it applied to interlocutory and not to final judgments. The provisions of the act were afterward extended to other cases including those in which complaint was made of the granting or refusal of temporary ali
Considering the history of the legislation upon this subject, we can not conceive that it was intended to make “ fast ” the writs of" error in all the cases mentioned, whether the judgments were interlocutory or final. . We can not conceive that it was intended,, by placing all these cases in one section, that a case in which there was an application for an injunction or receiver, which had never been passed upon by the judge at chambers but had gone its regular course to final trial before a jury and in which the injunction or receiver was granted or refused, should come to this court by a “fast” writ of error; nor that it was intended that on the final trial of a divorce case, where the jury awarded permanent alimony, exceptions to the decree could be brought up by a “fast” writ of error. Nor would such a writ of error lie in case of a final judgment in an attachment proceeding against a fraudulent debtor.' The enumeration in the code section would seem, therefore, not to
Ordered accordingly.
