247 P. 676 | Okla. | 1926
This case is appealed from the district court of Creek county, and defendants in error move the dismissal of the appeal upon the ground that there is no order of the court in the record overruling the motion for new trial. There appears in the record the following recital:
"And now this cause came on for further hearing before the court, and judgment, rendered as per journal entry; and the plaintiff files his motion for a new trial, and said motion is overruled, and exceptions allowed. And now upon notice in open court of the plaintiff's intention to appeal to the Supreme Court of Oklahoma, the court granted 60 days to make case-made, 10 days to suggest amendments, and 5 days' notice to settle and sign said case-made."
This recital was copied into the record from the clerk's minutes, as the record itself shows, and not from the journal of the court, and the clerk's minutes constitute no part of the record. Section 685, C. O. S. 1921. provides that "all judgment and orders must be entered on the journal of the court and specify clearly the relief granted or order made in the action." An analogous question was before the court in the case of DeWatteville v. Sims,
"This memorandum made by the court constitutes no part of the record in the case. It is customary for the trial court to keep such a record, but there is no statutory provision for the same, and it is not part of the record proper."
In Pennock et al. v. Monroe,
"It is true that the record contains a copy of the minutes made by the judge, before *45 whom the case was tried, upon his trial docket and under the title thereof. But this is all that appears. Such minutes are no part of the record in any case, and might be omitted entirely without affecting in any manner the validity of any proceedings had or determined therein by the court."
The minutes of the court as disclosed by its trial docket not being a part of the record, it necessarily follows that the minutes of the clerk are not and cannot be made so by simply transcribing them therein.
The record contains no order of the court overruling motion for a new trial, and this is fatal to the appeal. The recital in the record heretofore set out is not an order of the court, but a mere transcript of the minutes of the clerk. An order overruling a motion for a new trial should be made and entered in the court's journal in the same manner as though it were a judgment.
In Lillard v. Meisberger,
"An order of the trial court overruling a motion for a new trial must be made with the same solemnity as a judgment on the merits, and a mere recital in the clerk's minutes as in the case at bar, which finds its way into the case-made, cannot be substituted for such an order, or supply the defect for failure to make it."
The court in its opinion quotes with approval from Morris v. Caulk,
"On the first point mentioned, while it is true that there is a recital in the case-made that the motion for a new trial was, in fact, overruled and excepted to, yet it appears therein merely as a recital, and there is no order of court exhibited to such effect."
And in support thereof are cited Ford v. McIntosh,
In the absence from the record of an order of the court overruling the motion for a new trial, as indicated in this opinion, there is nothing before the court for its consideration and the appeal is dismissed.