271 Mo. 696 | Mo. | 1917
Plaintiff brought this action in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis for personal injuries, wherein he placed his damages at $25,000. Upon a trial he recovered from the defendant, who is the appellant here, the sum of $12,500. Prom this judgment defendant appeals.
On the view we are constrained to take of this case any extended statement of the facts will be wholly unnecessary. Briefly the facts are that on a certain August night about 12 o’clock, plaintiff in an automobile with six others, including the chauffeur, of plaintiff, who was
Since, however, the facts in the case are not, in the view we are compelled to take of it, material to an under-: standing of the points up for discussion, we will content us with this brief statement of the salient facts in evidence. Other questions of fact upon which our views turn will be found set forth fully in the discussion of the case.
We lately held in an opinion by Williams, J., which went to Banc and was therein adopted as the opinion of this court (State ex inf. v. Sweaney, 270 Mo. 685), that pursuant to the amendment of 1911 (Laws 1911, p. 139). it is no longer necessary as a condition precedent to the filing of a proper bill of exceptions in vacation, to obtain leave for such filing in term time; that, since the greater includes the lesser, the statutory privilege of filing (caeteris paribus) a bill of exceptions at any time before the ease is required to be abstracted and briefed here, ex vi termini, renders wholly unnecessary the making of an order by the trial court that such bill may be filed in vacation.
However, the general point urged by respondent that we may not under the law consider the bill of exceptions because it was untimely filed is, we think, good' for another reason and must be sustained. This point is that when this appeal was granted, there was so as we are now advised, no apparent error shown, unless such error was shown by the record proper, which record and no more was before the. learned judge who granted this appeal upon an inspection thereof.
The brief chronology of the ease makes this point clear: The case was tried on February 19, 1913, at the February term of the circuit court for the city of St. Louis. Within the requisite four-day period thereafter
This condition of the record regarded, we are not warranted in considering that part of the record formerly embraced in the bill of exceptions'. The reasons for this view are manifest. The statute pursuant to which this appeal was granted, provides, among other things not pertinent, as follows:
“Any judge of the Supreme Court or either of the courts of appeals, respectively, in cases appealable to said courts, upon inspection of a copy of the record, may grant an appeal by special order for that purpose at any time within one year next after the rendition of the final judgment or decision in the cause. But no such order shall be granted by such court or judge unless it appear from an inspection of a copy of the record that error was committed by the trial court against the party applying for the order, and materially affecting the merits of the action.” [Sec. 2043, R. S. 1909.]
Since the statute means and in plain -terms says that such special appeal shall not be granted “unless it appear from an inspection of - a copy of the record that error was committed by the trial court,” we assume that apparent error did appear on the record proper. If this was. so, that error should have been shown by the abstract before us and called to our attention by the briefs
The above section means: (a) that the special appeal therein provided for shall be granted upon an inspection of so much of the record as shows the apparent errors to be urged upon the briefs and argument here; (b) that unless error materially affecting the merits appear from such exhibited record, the appeal will not be granted, and (c) therefore that such special appeal will not be granted upon one part of the record and the cause heard formally in the appellate forum upon another part. The statute designates the appeal as being one grantable by special order, i. e., it is a special or emergency appeal, and so it is no hardship if in its requisite steps it should follow a procedure sui generis. It contemplates, we repeat, as in terms it says, the exhibition to the judge of the appellate court of the identical record which is to be relied upon at the hearing; not any other or different record. To hold otherwise would be to render meaningless or to repeal by unwarranted judicial construction the provision thereof that the record shall be exhibited to the inspection of the judge; as also that which limits such judge’s action by providing that unless such record so exhibited to him contains apparent error materially affecting the merits of the action, no appeal shall be granted. For if this special appeal must be heard upon a part of the record not in existence when the appeal was granted, then by the same token it would follow that it must be granted either upon an inspection of a record which shows no error, or upon the inspection of an incomplete record, e. g., a mere copy of the judgment rendered nisi. Neither is it to be allowed upon an inspection of a mere certified transcript of the evidence, if such transcript contain the errors relied on, for such a transcript is not a record, or any part thereof, and the
So we hold that the bill of exceptions herein filed under the circumstances and at the time stated cannot be considered by us, and therefore there is before us nothing but the record proper. Upon this record we find no error, and none is called to our attention by the appellant. It follows that the' case must be affirmed. Let this be done.