25 Ind. App. 102 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1900
—Appellants have, in due form, filed an application and motion for an alternative writ of mandate, to issue against the lion. George W. Beeman, judge of the Pulaski Circuit Court, to require him to show cause/ if any he has, why he does not sign a certain bill of exceptions prepared by appellants and tendered to him for signature, within the time fixed by the court for filing such bill, and, if said bill is not correct, that he be ordered to correct the same, etc. The facts upon which the motion and application rest are fully stated therein and are as follows: Appellees commenced, and were prosecuting in the court below,
In the bill of exceptions prepared by the judge, and which he caused to be filed, is the following statement: “And within the time allowed, to wit, February 2, 1900, the defendants tendered their bill of exceptions and prayed that the same may be signed, sealed, and madq a part of the record, which was not signed as a bill of exceptions for the reason that the same did not contain all the facts, and now on this 9th day of February, 1900, this is signed and sealed and made a part of the record as the bill of exceptions in said cause.” Then follows the signature of the judge.
The action of the judge in refusing to correct the bill tendered to him within the time, so that it would speak the truth, and his failure and refusal so to correct and sign the bill so tendered, and to have it filed, can not prejudice the right of appellants in their appeal. When they tendered to the judge, within the time given them, a bill which they believed embraced all the facts, or, as the statute designates it, “a proper bill”, they thus discharged the duty cast upon them by the law. They had no power to compel him either to correct or sign it. The statute made it his duty to sign
The bill here signed by the judge, and which appears in the record, imports absolute verity, and though it was not filed within the time given it shows that a bill was tendered within the time, and we must regard this as a corrected bill. Both by the plain language of the statute and the decided cases, the delay of the judge in signing and filing a bill of exceptions, when it has been presented to him within the time given, can not affect the rights of the parties. Hamm v. Romaine, 98 Ind. 77; Robinson v. Anderson, 106 Ind. 152; Ohio, etc., R. Co. v. Casby, 107 Ind. 32; Vincennes Water, etc., Co. v. White, 124 Ind. 376 ; Wysor v. Johnson, 130 Ind. 270.
Under the statute and the authorities, there is a bill of exceptions signed by the judge in the record. This bill presents the very question which appellants seek to present in the bill tendered by them, and which they ask this court to require the trial judge to sign, or, if not true, to correct and sign; and as the motion for a change of venue, the ruling thereon, and the exceptions thereto are properly in the record by the bill, the motion and application for an alternative writ of mandate is overruled.