83 Va. 755 | Va. | 1887
delivered the opinion of the court.
The record presents the following very remarkable case in practice: At the October term, 1884, of the circuit court of Amherst county there were pending two cases .at law, on attachments, in one of which James S. Dillard and W. E. McCorkle partners, as Dillard & McCorkle, were plaintiffs, and Thomas Dunlop, defendant; and in the other, David Earn and John Hickson partners, as Earn & Hick-son, were plaintiffs, and said Dunlop, defendant. Such proceedings were had that said two cases came on and were tried together at the October term, 1884 (to-wit: on the fifteenth of October, 1884), of said circuit court. The jury found a verdict for the defendant in each of said causes, and thereupon the plaintiffs, respectively, moved the court to set aside said verdicts and grant a new trial, which
In this anomalous state of things the said plaintiffs, by their counsel, presented to this court, then in session at Richmond, a petition substantially setting forth the facts aforesaid, and praying for a rule against the Hon. G. A. Wingfield, the then judge of the said circuit court of Amherst county, returnable before this court at Richmond, requiring said judge to show cause, “ if any he can,” why a mandamus should not issue to compel him to certify the evidence in said causes, and to sign any proper bill of exception that may be presented in said causes, so that the proceedings therein might be brought by proper process before this court to be further considered.
On the fifteenth of January, 1885, this court awarded the rule against the Hon. G. A. Wingfield, judge as aforesaid, according to the prayer of the petition above referred to; and it seems that either on the award of the rule, or on the service thereof, the said judge agreed with the counsel for the plaintiffs in these causes that he would certify the evidence therein as required, and, thereupon, the following consent-order was entered by this court at its place of session in Richmond :
“In the supreme court of appeals, held at the State
“In the matter of the petition of J. S. Dillard and W. C. McCorkle, late partners as-Dillard & McCorkle, and David Earn and John Hickson, partners as Earn & Hickson, for a writ of mandamus to command Hon. G-. A. Wingfield, judge of the circuit court of the county of Amherst, to ■certify the evidence in the causes lately pending in the said court, in which the said petitioners were plaintiffs and Thomas Dunlop was defendant.
“ This day came as well the petitioners, by their counsel, as the counsel representing the defendant in the circuit court, and, by consent of said parties, it is ordered that the judge of the circuit court of the county of Amherst may proceed to certify the evidence upon the trial of the said causes at the October term, 1884, of said court, and to sign such proper bill of exceptions as may be presented by counsel for the petitioners in accordance with the requirements of the said petition, the same to have full legal validity and force as if the same had been done at said term of the court, or been signed in obedience to the mandate of this court, after the hearing of said cause on the rule awarded herein on the fifteenth of January, 1885, and, by like consent, the said rule is discharged.
“ Geo. E. Taylor, C. C.”
It seems that after the above consent-order of this court considerable delay occurred, for want of the co-operation of counsel for the defense in the circuit court; but finally the counsel for the plaintiffs prepared a bill of exceptions setting forth the evidence at the trial of these causes in the circuit court, whieh was shown to opposing counsel, and, after - due notice, was presented to the Hon. G. A. Wingfield, judge as aforesaid, to be signed, sealed and made part of the record in these causes. But the said
“ In vacation of Amherst circuit court, October 5,1885— “Dillard & McCorkle v. Thomas Dunlop, and Earn & Hickson v. Same.
“ Be it remembered, that upon the presentation of the bill of exceptions certifying the evidence in these causes, offered by the counsel for the plaintiffs, in accordance with the consent-order of the supreme court of appeals, entered May 7th, 1885, and the counsel for plaintiffs a,nd defendant not agreeing to said bill, and the court, from lapse of time and memory, being unable' to settle the said bill, doth decline to sign and seal the same. And the plaintiffs desiring said action of the court to be certified, the court doth sign this exception, and make it a part of the record.
“(Signed) G-. A. Wingfield.”
In vacation of the circuit court of Amherst county, in the clerk’s office of the said circuit court, on Wednesday, the seventh day of October, A. D. 1885, the foregoing bill of exceptions, together with copies of petition and order of the supreme court of appeals, were received and entered of record, as appears by the certificate of the clerk of said court.
The record being thus made up,' on the petition of the plaintiffs, by their counsel, a writ of error was awarded to the judgments respectively entered in said causes on the fifteenth of October, 1884.
The petition for writ of error assigns:
I. “It was error in the said court to refuse to certify, either the facts or the evidence in said cases, the one or the other, as appears on the proceedings on the petition for mandamus.”
III. “Lapse of time and memory, under the circumstances of this case, are no answers to the mandate of the appellate court requiring the act to be done.”
The first assignment of error, which asserts the proposition that the circuit court erred in refusing to certify either the facts or the evidence, is unquestionably well taken, and it was so held by this court in Powell v. Tarry’s Adm’r, 77 Va. 250. In that case, Lacy, J., delivering the unanimous opinion of this court, said: “ While mandamus will lie to compel the judge to certify the evidence when he shall so refuse, it is also error to so refuse, of which any party injured may complain to this court, and for which this court will reverse the judgment of the court below. It is the right of a suitor to have the evidence-certified to this court in a case where the judge refuses to certify the facts proved, on the ground that the evidence is conflicting. To refuse to do so, is to deny to the suitor his right of appeal.” This language is strikingly appropriate-to the extraordinary procedure of the trial judge in these-cases. For when the jury returned their verdicts in the two cases, the counsel for plaintiffs moved the court to set aside the verdicts and grant a new trial, but the court overruled the motion; and, thereupon, the plaintiffs, by their counsel, moved the court to certify the facts proved, which the court refused to do; and then the court was asked to-certify the evidence, and this the court agreed to do, pro
The second assignment of error asserts a proposition equally as true as the first. It is, that the circuit court erred in requiring, as a condition precedent to certifying the evidence, that counsel for plaintiffs and defendant must agree the statement of evidence. This was, in effect, to make the plaintiffs’ right of appeal dependent upon the concurrence of the defendant’s counsel as to what the evidence was, when all experience teaches us that counsel will disagree—and honestly disagree—in a majority of •cases, which makes it the duty of the presiding judge to
The third assignment addresses itself to the action of the circuit judge in refusing to certify the evidence as he was directed to do by the said consent order of this court. A bill of exceptions was presented to the judge, setting forth the evidence as it was claimed to be by the plaintiffs’ counsel. It is not claimed by the judge that the evidence was incorrectly set forth in the bill of exceptions presented, by counsel, for the plaintiffs. On the contrary, the -judge certifies that he refused to sign and seal the same on the ground that the counsel for the plaintiffs and defendant did not agree, and from lapse of time and memory he could not settle the matter.
In Powell v. Tarry’s Adm’r, supra, among others, it was assigned for error that the court, having certified that the evidence was conflicting, and refused, therefore, to certify the facts proved, refused also, upon the motion of the plaintiff, to certify the evidence in the cause upon the ground that the lack of time and lapse of memory, two days after the verdict, rendered it impossible to certify accurately the evidence in the case.
In discussing this as ground for reversing the judgment of the court below, Lacy, J., says: “Mere lack of time cannot be considered a discharge from the obligations imposed upon a judge to perform his whole official duty. The law makes ample provision for cases where the press of business prolongs the term, and, if it is necessary for the proper administration of justice, the judge should take time; it is his plain duty to do so, and lack of time furnishes no valid excuse for the failure to perform an act which the law makes it the duty of the judge to do. The
The said judgments must be reversed and annulled, and the causes remanded to the said circuit court for a new trial to be had therein in accordance with the views herein, expressed.
Judgments reversed.