8 Kan. App. 368 | Kan. Ct. App. | 1898
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Defendant in error presents a question of jurisdiction. He contends that there is no case-made presented to this court to authorize it to review the judgment of the court below. This contention is based on the construction of sections 547, 548 and 549 of the code (Gen. Stat. 1897, ch. '95, §§ 588, 589, 690). At the time the judgment was entered, June 24, 1897, the court, at the request of the plaintiff in error, granted it sixty days from that date in which to make and serve a case. There were several extensions of time allowed for making and serving a case, the last of which expired on the 1st day of January, 1898. On the 30th day of December, 1897, before the expiration of the last extension, an order was made granting to the plaintiff in error until the 1st day of March, 1898, to make a case for the court of appeals. The form of the order is: “For good cause shown, it is ordered that the time for making a case for the court of appeals is extended until the 1st day of March, 1898.” It will be observed that there is no provision in this order extending the time for serving the case.. There were several other orders made extending the time in which to make and serve a case, but all of them were made after the 1st day of January, 1898.
The supreme court has likewise recognized the distinction between making and serving a case. In B. K. & S. W. Rld. Co. v. Gillen, 38 Kan. 673, 17 Pac. 334, it is said :
“Ninety days were given by the trial court to- ‘ make a case/ Nothing was said in the order about the time within which ‘the case’ was to be served. It does not appear from the record that the case was ever served at any time, and there is nothing presented in the record, or otherwise, to show that service of the case was ever waived.”
In Weeks v. Medler, 18 Kan. 425, the supreme court said : “The making and serving of a case are the acts of the plaintiff in error ; the suggestion of amendments the act of the defendant in error; and the settling and signing of the case the duty of the judge.” And it is said in the-third clause of the syllabus in that case: “The jurisdiction of the judge to settle the case is a special and limited jurisdiction, which only arises at the times and under the circumstances specified by law.” The same language is used in M. K. & T. Rly. Co. v. City of Ft. Scott, 15 Kan. 435.
The question of making a case was likewise under consideration in M. K. & T. Rly. Co. v. Roach, 38 Kan. 592, and again in J. C. & Ft. K. Rly. Co. v. Wingfield, 16 id. 217; also in Ingersoll v. Yates, 21 id. 90. In the case of Denny v. Faulkner, 22 Kan. 91, the court said:
“ Now, it is contended that the exceptions taken to-the rulings at the trial must be reduced to writing at; the term; that the continuance of the motion for a. new trial does not continue the right to reduce the exceptions to writing; and that no exceptions having-*372 been reduced to writing during the term, no subsequent reduction of the exceptions to writing is of any validity. Whatever might be true if the case stood upon a bill of exceptions, we think our statutes warrant a case-made with exceptions reduced to writing after the close of the term. There is no inherent vice in so reducing exceptions to writing; the legislature can authorize such action, and the question is one of policy only. Until the provisions for a case-made the statute was clear, .and compelled action during the term. The court was not authorized to further extend the time. But the court is authorized generally to extend the time for making a case. No limitation is placed in the statute. Full discretion seems to have been granted. And the case-made is not the mere collection of the pleadings and previously prepared bills of exceptions — it is itself the statement of the proceedings and evidence, or other matters, or so much thereof as is deemed necessary to present the errors complained of. It is an original document and not a compilation. Extending the time to make it extends the time to make it conrpletely and Avholly. It may all be done on the very last day of the extended time. The testimony and exceptions may on that day for the first time be reduced to writing. This would seem logically to follow from the provisions of the general statutes. But, as if to avoid any doubt, the legislature in 1870, and again in 1871, amended by providing that ‘the exceptions stated in a case-made shall have the same effect as if they had been reduced to writing, allowed and signed by the judge at the term they wei'e taken.’ This plaizzly izzzplies that the exceptions are first redizced to writing Avhen the case-made is prepared, and declares that they are to have the same effect as if redizced to Avriting at the time they were taken ; and the tizne in which they may be so reduced to writing, is as extensive as the time for making the case.”
The requirement of service of a case-made is a new feature Avhich was made necessaz’y by the fact that the time for making it was extended beyond the
In Ætna Life Ins. Co. v. Koons, 26 Kan. 215, it was decided that the district judge has no power to extend the time for making a case after the time fixed by the statute and by the order of the court or judge has once elapsed. The same rule is reiterated in Hammerslough v. Hackett, 30 Kan. 57, 1 Pac. 41. In Gimbel v. Turner, 36 Kan. 679, 14 Pac. 255, it was held that the judge could not, after the time fixed for serving a case had expired without such service, settle and sign the same so as to give it any validity.
The special orders of the court extending time for serving the case which were made after the time had expired were without authority, by the force of these decisions. This being the case the record is a nullity, and leaves us without jurisdiction to review the judgment of the district court. The petition in error is dismissed, at the cost of the plaintiff in error.