154 Pa. 582 | Pa. | 1893
Opinion by
A preliminary question is raised in this case, of much importance in practice. The appellant has no bill of exceptions. There is therefore nothing before us but the bare record, and as that is regular on its face, there is no error on which the judgment can be reversed.
But the impression seems to have lodged in the minds of some practitioners, and even of some judges, that bills of exception are no longer necessary. There could not be a more serious misconception. A trial by jury takes place in pais, and no part of it goes on the record except the calling of the jury and their verdict, (or nonsuit or other equivalent of the action of a jury) unless put there in accordance with express statutory-provision. The established mode of doing this, for six hundred years, has been by bill of exception, and it is still as necessary, and as sufficient for the purpose, as it was when enacted by the statute of Westminster. No better way has yet been invented, and as to matters of evidence, of witnesses, etc., there is no other way. To rulings upon the law and the charge to the jury, reference will be made further on.
The practice in regard to bills of exception, as at first writ
No better illustration of the necessity for the judge’s personal examination and approval of the bill could be needed, than the present case. What are apparently intended as notes of trial are not identified as such in any way. The name of a firm of three, styled official stenographers to the court, is printed at the head of the first page, but there is no signature or identification
In regard to the charge to the jury, including the answers to points presented by the parties, the several acts of assembly, of February 24, 1806, April 15, 1856, and March 24, 1877, have provided an additional way of getting them upon the record, besides a bill of exceptions, to wit, a filing by the judge upon request of a party. The act of May 24, 1887, P. L. 199, in relation to stenographers, makes it their duty to take stenographic notes and subsequently write out the charge for filing, and when filed it becomes part of the record. But what gives it authentication and validity as such, is the approval and certificate of the judge. It is his charge that is to be filed, and the filing must be his act, though he need not necessarily sign or seal it with his own hand. As said by Woodward, J., in Taylor v. Preston, already quoted from, “the stenographic notes that are to be ‘ the best authority in any matter of dispute ’ are the notes made up under the eye and direction, and with the approval of the court. They have then the effect erf the prothonotary’s certificate of the record of a cause, and are subject to be modified and molded in accordance with what may be judicially found to be the fact, precisely as its records are always subject to the court’s control.” It is much the better practice for the judge to settle all doubt or question as to the charge, as well as the evidence, by signing the bill of exceptions, but where that is not done, it should appear in some way affirmatively on the charge as reported hy the stenographer, that it is appi'oved by the judge as correct, and filed by his direction. Without that the filing by the stenographer is a nullity.
When the charge has been thus filed, by the judge’s direction at the express request of a party made before verdict, and only
It ought not to be necessary, and yet it seems to be so, to say that the true office of an assignment of error is not to act as a trap to catch the judge who tried the case, and give the appellant an undeserved second or extra chance before another jury, but to secure the uniform administration of the law, and correct application to' each case of the principles really essential in their bearing on the rights of the parties. That duty is committed to this court, as a single tribunal, having the advantages of fuller preparation and presentment of the cases by counsel, and more opportunity for investigation and delibera
The statute however which entails these evils, applies only to the charge. Matters of evidence, the competency of witnesses, and other incidents of the trial, are not affected by it. All such matters must appear on a bill of exceptions, and no assignments of error in reference to them, or which depend upon them, can be considered unless the bill shows that the exception was taken at the trial in the court below. As to such matters the case of Janney v. Howard, supra, has no application whatever. Even as to assignments of error in the charge, if they are such as depend for their correctness or their application to the case, on the evidence, and the evidence is not presented in a bill of exceptions, they cannot be considered, for they have no basis on which to rest.
It would be sufficient to dismiss this appeal, for want of a bill of exceptions to bring up the evidence, upon which the correctness of the charge depends. But as counsel may have been misled by the erroneous notion adverted to, we have looked into the case, as presented in the irregular notes of trial, and find no merit in any of the assignments.
Judgment affirmed.