203 P. 245 | Wyo. | 1922
This case is here on error for the review of an order denying an application of the plaintiff in error, the plaintiff below, for the appointment of a receiver of partnership property and assets as a provisional remedy pending the action brought by the plaintiff for dissolution and accounting. A prior proceeding in error for the review of the same order was dismissed by this court without prejudice. (See Fitzpatrick v. Rogan, 197 Pac. 565.)
It was further stated in the opinion, however, that a consideration of the question presented upon the merits of the cause would be prevented for the further reason that the motion upon which the hearing was had in the court below had not been brought into the record by a bill of exceptions ; and the principle was stated, citing decisions of this court in support thereof, that a bill was necessary to make the motion a part of the record. And in that connection it was said that while the petition contains a prayer for the appointment of a receiver, it does not ask for such appointment pendente lite, and it did not appear that the application was made upon that prayer, but, on the contrary, that it was made by motion, after the issues had been made up by the filing of the necessary pleadings.
Defendants in error have filed a motion to dismiss this proceeding in error upon the ground that the record is insufficient to authorize a review of the order complained of, and our former opinion aforesaid is referred to in the motion as stating the reasons more particularly. And the
The petition in error in the present proceeding specifically assigns as error -the order refusing to appoint a receiver •pendente lite, alleging it to be contrary to law, and that plaintiff’s application should have been granted upon the facts admitted by the pleadings. And it is contended that the prayer for the appointment of a receiver is sufficient to cover or include such appointment pendente lite, that it was so intended and was so understood by the parties.
The briefs, as well as the record in the former proceeding, have been filed also in this, and an additional brief has been filed by each of the parties, that of defendants in error being in support of their motion to dismiss, and the additional brief of plaintiff in error explaining in his behalf that when the petition in error in the former proceeding was filed it was intended to have a bill of exceptions prepared and allowed, and when that was abandoned upon a belief that a bill was unnecessary counsel overlooked the fact that a bill of exceptions was referred to in the petition in error, and that the ruling upon the motion for a new trial was the only matter assigned as error; and contending that the record as it stands is sufficient for a consideration of the errors now assigned, upon' substantially the following grounds: That the petition in the action, fairly construed, shows that a receiver was applied for “pendente lite;” that all the parties so understood the matter, as shown :by the fact that the motion was filed only at the hearing, and thé.
Such additional brief of plaintiff in error seems also to question the correctness of the former decision in holding that the motion can be brought into the record only by a bill of exceptions, and to assert that it had not been so held by any previous decision of this court and that the Wyoming eases cited in the opinion in support of the principle are not in point. That matter will be discussed later, and we need only say at this point concerning it that the view entertained by counsel as to the effect of the previous decisions of this court relating to the necessity of a bill of exceptions to bring a mere motion into the record in a proceeding in error differs from our understanding of those decisions and the practice settled thereby, and that, with respect to the rule, requiring a bill of exceptions to bring a motion into the record, there is no material difference between a
So far at least as the motion aforesaid is to be considered as the application for the appointment of a reeever and as showing the grounds of the exception to the order appealed from we remain of the opinion that it is not properly in the record. Yet we think that, regardless of that fact, the case may be considered and disposed of upon the merits, and for the following reasons:
In the first place, we are satisfied upon a closer examination of the petition that the prayer for the appointment of a receiver may reasonably be construed as an application for such appointment pendente lite. After having disposed of the cause upon other grounds, we were led to the remark in the former opinion to the effect that the petition did not ask for the appointment of a receiver pendente lite, by the unnecessary though not improper separation of the prayer for relief into numbered paragraphs; and the prayer for a receiver found in a paragraph numbered 5 was considered as standing alone, or as not connected with the last preceding paragraph numbered 4, asking an injunction pendente lite. Counsel for plaintiff in error, in their additional brief, quote these two paragraphs together without the separating
“That in the meantime, the defendant, Frank P. Rogan, be enjoined from collecting or receiving, or in any manner interfering or intermeddling with or disposing of the debts, moneys, or other property, good will or effects of said partnership. That a receiver of said partnership, moneys, property, good will and effects may be appointed with the usual powers and duties.”
The last sentence asking for a receiver is paragraph 5 of the prayer in 'the petition. In the paragraphs immediately preceding 4 and 5, it is prayed: 1. That certain real estate be decreed to be held in trust for the partnership, by the defendants. 2. That the partnership 'may be dissolved and an account be taken of all dealings and transactions of the partnership, and of all moneys received and paid by plaintiff and defendant Frank P. Rogan, respectively in relation thereto. 3. That the partnership property, both real and personal, be sold together with the good will of the partnership business; and that the debts and liabilities of the partnership be paid, and the surplus, if any, be divided between the plaintiff and defendant partners according to their respective interests.
In view of the prayer of the petition for a dissolution and an accounting and the prayer following that for an injunction “in the meantime”’restraining the defendant partner from interfering with or disposing of the partnership property and effects, which the petition alleges to be in his exclusive possession, it does not seem unreasonable to read the prayer for a receiver as connected with the immediately preceding prayer for an injunction, and as relating to the same purpose, that of preventing the disposition or improper use of the partnership property and effects by the defendant partner during the pendency of the action.
That being the effect of the prayer for a receiver as we are now convinced, it' appears further that the facts upon which the right' of the plaintiff to have a receiver appointed are based, and which áre claimed to be admitted by the
We shall, therefore, consider the merits so far as to determine whether or not the facts admitted by the pleadings show the plaintiff to have been entitled to the order appointing a receiver at the time of the hearing of the matter in the court below.
The pleadings show that the partnership had been entered into by written agreement between the plaintiff and the defendant, Frank P..Rogan, for carrying on the business of “undertakers” at Rock Springs, Wyoming; each contributing one-half of the capital, and the parties to share equally in the profits and losses of said business, and that said Rogan was the managing partner on a fixed salary; said salary being fixed by the partnership agreement at «$80 per month. The wife of Rogan, the other defendant, was made a party because of certain allegations of the petition relating to real estate alleged by the petition to have been purchased in her name by the defendant partner m violation of the agreement and his obligation as such partner. But it is not alleged or claimed that she was at any time a member of the partnership. The partnership agreement is dated April 24, 1919, and provides that the partnership is organized for a period of five years from and
The petition was filed on May 19, 1920, and alleges, after stating the partnership agreement, that pursuant thereto, the parties entered upon the business of the partnership, and this is admitted by the answer of the defendant partner. It also alleges a continuance of the said business from the time of said agreement, without any other agreement being made in relation to said partnership, and the answer admits that the partnership business was continued up to and including March 20, 1920, but not after that date, and admits also that no other agreement was made, except that an inventory was taken and an accounting had on March 12, 1920, and the value of the partnership assets then determined and agreed upon. The other material averments of the petition are substantially as follows:
The answer of the defendant Frank P. Rogan admits that since a stated date, he has paid himself as manager of the partnership a salary of $125 per month, and that it was in violation of the partnership agreement, but denies that it was done fraudulently or with the intent of causing the plaintiff to become dissatisfied or to force him to withdraw from the business or the partnership-, and alleges that the plaintiff was informed of the amount of salary the defendant was drawing and raised no objection, but as
In a separate defense, which may have been intended as a cross-petition, said defendant alleges substantially the facts above stated as to the notice of his intended retirement, the making of the inventory, and the continuance of the business by him in his own name and as his own business, and, further, that he is ready and willing to either buy or sell the partnership assets on the basis of said inventory and in addition thereto to pay to the partnership or to the.plaintiff any amount which the plaintiff or the partnership may be entitled to for the salary drawn in excess of the amount provided for by the agreement. And that defense closes with a prayer to the effect that a decree be entered directing the plaintiff to transfer to the defendant all the plaintiff’s right, title and interest in and to the partnership and the assets thereof, upon the payment to the plaintiff by said defendant of the sum of $5718.89, plus $100 for excess salary. The plaintiff filed a reply, denying generally each allegation of said answer not admitted by the petition. It is unnecessary to refer to the answer of Mrs. Bogan, the other defendant, since it relates solely to the averments of the petition respecting the purchase of real estate, which the petition, upon a second cause of action, prays may be decreed to be held in trust for the partnership, and is not, we think, material upon the question presented upon the application for a receiver of the partnership property, moneys and effects, except, perhaps, to limit the scope of the receivership, if ordered, to the personal property and other admitted assets of the partnership.
The petition alleges as to such real estate, in the first cause of action, that, in violation of the partnership agreement, the defendant partner purchased the premises, describing the same, upon which the partnership business was being conducted, taking title in the name of his wife,
The pleadings are each verified positively by the oath of the party, in the usual form of such verification. And there does not appear to be any substantial conflict between the petition and the answer of the defendant partner upon the facts, except such as relate to the purchase of the real estate aforesaid. They differ slightly in some other respects, as, for example, in the date of the notice to plaintiff of said defendant’s intention to retire from the partnership, the purpose or intent of defendant in paying himself a larger salary than that fixed by the agreement, and the fact alleged by the answer that plaintiff had knowledge of such payments and assented thereto. But we think that difference immaterial .with reference to the question now presented. And the answer alleges the taking of an inventory of the partnership assets, which
The averment of the answer, however, that there was an accounting is evidently based alone upon the fact of the taking of said inventory, since no other fact, or act of either party, is alleged to show an accounting or from which the fact may he inferred. The answer does not allege a settlement, or that a balance due from one to the other was agreed upon, or even that an account was rendered showing such a balance, and makes no reference to liabilities, profits or losses, or the amount of capital originally contributed. And, certainly, an accounting between partners must usually embrace something more than a mere inventory of partnership assets. An accounting generally imports an adjustment of the dealings or accounts of the parties. (Apple v. Smith (Kans.), 190 Pac. 80; Harris v. Thompson, 61 Colo. 87, 156 Pac. 149; Turgeon v. Cote, 88 Me. 108, 33 Atl. 787; Whitewell v. Willard, 1 Metc. 216.)
While the answer denies that the defendant, since March 20,1920, had been conducting the business in his own name in violation of plaintiff’s rights, and alleges that his oivn business, in which plaintiff had no interest, was being con-ductéd by him in his own name,-it is apparent that the business theretofore conducted in the partnership name was being continued by the said defendant partner in his own name, and that the only difference between the parties in that respect, upon th§ pleadings, is in their contentions as to the legal effect of defendant’s acts in giving notice and continuing the business; the defendant alleging, and claiming here, that, as a result of the notice of his intended retirement, the partnership was dissolved upon the taking of the inventory aforesaid, and the plaintiff alleging and claiming that the defendant was continuing the partnership business wrongfully in his own name. And we think it clear, not only from what is alleged in the answer, but from the fact that more is not alleged, that the partner
In thus contending that the partnership property should be left in the possession of the defendant partner, to be used in the business as conducted by him in his own name, and for his own benefit, counsel seem to have overlooked the provision of the partnership agreement that, upon the final dissolution of the firm by lapse of time or otherwise, “the said business shall be wound up, the debts paid, and the surplus divided between the partners equally, share and share alike. ’ ’ Defendant seems to have assumed that upon the failure of the plaintiff to take advantage of the provision of the contract permitting the remaining partner, upon a dissolution of the partnership, to purchase the interest of the retiring partner, he had the right, as retiring partner, to take and retain exclusive possession of the
*250 “Whether the partnership had been effectually dissolved by the declaration of Mrs. Zimmerman on August 9,1911, or not, her action in excluding Harding from joint possession and control until the affairs had been wound up was under either hypothesis indefensible. The partnership property continued to be partnership property, after as well as before dissolution. ’ ’'
And the opinion in that case clearly intimates, ive think, a disapproval of the action of the trial court denying a receiver pendente lite.
In the other case cited, the court said: “Even if the partnership should be considered as having been actually dissolved at that date, yet the dissolution did not put an end to the plaintiff’s right to his share in the property and the profits of the partnership.” And in an earlier case, the same court said: “However the question may be decided, whether one partner may by his own mere will dissolve a partnership formed for a definite purpose or period, it is clear that upon such a dissolution one partner cannot appropriate to himself all the partnership assets, or turn over the share of his partner to another with whom he proposes to form a new partnership. ’ ’ (Pearce v. Ham, 113 U. S. 585-593, 5 Sup. Ct. 676.)
Both of the parties desire a dissolution of this partnership. Defendant insists that it is already dissolved, and the plaintiff prays for a dissolution and upon just grounds, as determined by the pleadings, if there has not been a dissolution; and the partnership property and assets are in the exclusive possession of the defendant, who is using the same in a business conducted by him in his own name as a continuation of the business previously established and conducted by the partnership, and is collecting the debts due the partnership. Under these circumstances, we think the application for the appointment of a receiver should have been granted. (2 Lindley on Partnership, 2nd Am. Ed. 1194-1202; 23 R. C. L. 30, 31; 30 Cyc. 474; Jones v. Weir, 217 Pa. St. 321, 66 Atl. 550, 10 Ann. Cas. 692; Cole
It is said in Lindley, page 1194, that if a partnership is already dissolved, a receiver is usually appointed almost as a matter of course: In High on Receivers, 4th Ed., § 515, it is said: "When both partners are desirous of a dissolution of the firm, and the circumstances of the ease as disclosed by hill and answer, are such as seem to require a dissolution, the bill charging and the answer admitting that plaintiff is excluded from the partnership premises, sufficient cause is presented for a receiver to collect the firm debts and take charge of the assets. ’ ’ And in Riddle v. Whitehall, 135 U. S. 621, 10 Sup. Ct. 924, the court, by Mr. Chief Justice Fuller, said:
‘ ‘ Of course, where the partnership expires in accordance with its terms, or is dissolved by agreement, such partner as a general rule has an equal right to the possession of the* partnership property, and if they cannot agree as to the disposition of it, a court of equity will appoint a receiver to collect and apply the effects. Each partner has a right to have the partnership assets applied in liquidation of the partnership debts, and to have the surplus assets divided, and each may insist on a sale, and that nothing shall be done except with a view to wind up the concern.”
The defendant is hardly in a position entitling him to urge very strongly against the appointment of a receiver that it would greatly injure his business, for whatever injury might ensue would he the result of his own act in dissolving or making necessary a dissolution of the partnership, without any alleged or apparent ground or reason except his own desire for a change, and thereupon taking exclusive possession of the partnership property and assets and using the same for his own benefit, or in what he alleges to be his own business, instead of proceeding to .have
We are not informed respecting the condition of the cause in the court below at this time, but if it remains there undisposed of upon its merits, or in a condition shown by the pleadings with the defendant partner in exclusive possession of the property and assets, or the proceeds thereof, without a complete settlement of the partnership affairs having been made, our order will direct that in such case a receiver be appointed with all such usual powers as may be necessary to protect the interests of the parties pending the final disposition of the cause.
We should prefer to close the opinion here. But since the correctness of our statement in the opinion in the former case’that the motion was not properly in the record is doubted, if not directly challenged, by counsel for plaintiff in error, we are not satisfied, nor do we think it fair to counsel, to leave the matter without further discussion explaining more fully our reasons for the rule stated, and particularly the grounds upon which we are unable to agree with counsel’s argument that the rule is not sustained by the previous decisions cited in its support, and that a different rule should be adopted allowing a motion to be considered in a proceeding in error, as a part of the record without a bill of exceptions.
We think that the decisions cited upon the proposition in the former opinion are all in point, and that counsel misunderstands the effect thereof and what was intended thereby to be decided. Bach of them clearly hold that the motion involved in the case was not in the record because not brought into it'by a bill of exceptions; and that such motion could not be considered for that reason. But all of our decisions on the question were not, by any means, exhausted by the citations in the former opinion. Believing the question to be thoroughly. settled here and no longer
The early territorial decisions having been followed by a court rule requiring a bill to show the motion- for a new trial, the ruling thereon and exception thereto, as well as the making of the motion in the court below as a condition-precedent to the consideration on error of any matter which" might properly be included in such a motion, the validity of the rule was assailed in two cases, (Johns v. Adams Bros., 2 Wyo. 164, and U. S. v. Trabing, 3 Wyo. 144, 6 Pac. 721.)
To sustain the rule it must have been found not to be inconsistent with the statute, for the assault upon it in the two eases above cited was upon the ground that it was in conflict with the laws of the territory, though in the Trabing case it was assailed only in. respect of the provision requiring the making of a motion for a new trial in the court below. The later decisions, commencing with Van Horn v. State, 5 Wyo. 501, 40 Pac. 964, decided in 1895, base the
And in Boulter v. State, 6 Wyo. 66, 42 Pac. 606, in an opinion by the same learned judge, in which the other justices concurred, after referring to the fact that the transcript contained no bill of exceptions but contained copies of certain motions made during the trial and after its termination, including a motion for a new trial, it was said:
“For nearly a quarter of a century, the practice has been followed, as directed by the rules and decisions of this court, to insert a motion for a new trial in a bill of exceptions, certified to by the judge, and not to recognize or consider any matters on appeal, arising during the trial, which were not a part of the record proper, except such as were embodied in the bill of exceptions. Our rule is but the general doctrine that a motion for a new trial must be incorporated in the bill of exceptions in order to be preserved for review on appeal.” (Citing 3 Ency. Pl. & Pr. 400.) Thereupon, referring to the statute aforesaid, which was then Sec. 2681, Rev. Stat. 1887, providing that the records of the court in civil cases shall be made up from the petition, the process, the return, pleadings subsequent thereto, reports, verdicts, orders, judgments, and all material acts and proceedings of the court, and to the provision of .the criminal code that the taking of bills of exception are governed by the rules established in civil cases, it was further said:
‘ ‘ The record proper in the cause, either civil or criminal, does not contain a motion for a new trial, as it does not fall within any of those enumerated matters, * * # And the only method whereby such motion can become a part of the record is by order of the court or judge making it so,*256 when it is embodied in the bill of exceptions, which is made a part of the record by such order but not spread at large upon the journal.”
Again, in Bank v. Anderson, 7 Wyo. 441, 53 Pac. 280, speaking for the court, the' writer hereof said, concerning a motion for a new trial: ‘ ‘ The motion is not máde a part of the record by statute, although the pleadings are, hence the necessity for preservation by bill of exceptions to give it a place in the record. ’ ’ And, in another opinion by the writer in which the other justices concurred, it was said: “It is well settled that motions are not in the record on' proceedings in error unless embraced'in a bill;” the particular motions involved in that case being a motion to strike the motion for a new trial from the files, and a mo-' tion to amend the motion for a new trial. (Harden v. Card, 14 Wyo. 479, 85 Pac. 246.)
We think counsel clearly mistaken in the view that the decision in Perkins v. McDowell, supra, with reference to a motion for a change of venue, was based' alone upon the fact that the affidavit in support of the motion was not' included in the bill.' The opinion in that case was by Chief' Justice VanDevanter, Associate Justices. Corn and Saufly concurring, and clearly shows that the decision was based also upon the fact that the motion for a change of venue was not properly in the bill. We quote the concluding1 words of the court upon that subject: ‘ ‘ These motions not being made a part of the record, the rulings thereon cannot-be considered by this court.'” It appears also- from the opinion in that case, as indicating the general understanding of the practice, that counsel' for plaintiff in' error had attempted to bring each motion into the bill, but had done” so only by referencé, and that was held to be insufficient.
That case has been 'followed with reference to an application for- a change bf venue-or judge in Syndicate Imp. Co. v. Bradley, 6 Wyo. 171, 43 Pac. 79, and Littleton v. Burgess, 16 Wyo. 58, 91 Pac. 832. In the first of the two cases last cited a motion to dissolve an attachment was held hot a part’ of -the record unless brought into it by a bill of exceptions;
We know of no decision of this court, and none has been cited, where it was held as to any motion in a proceeding in error that the motion was a part of the record proper or without being embraced in a bill of exceptions, or where any such motion has been considered in such a proceeding, unless brought into the record by a bill. But we know it to have been the general practice to .incorporate motions in a bill of exceptions, with the ruling thereon and the exception thereto, when sought to have alleged error in such ruling reviewed in this court; and that has been the practice as to motions relating to provisional remedies. It is of course possible that a motion may have been considered, though not made a part of the record by bill, through failure on the part of the court to notice the defect in the record. And indeed, that occurred when the case of Perkins v. McDowell, supra, was first decided, that decision being found in 3 Wyo. 203, 19 Pac. 440, and the fact is referred to in thé later and final opinion in the cause, above mentioned, the court saying: “This cause was heard by this court, and an opinion rendered therein, at a former term. No briefs having been filed by the defendant in error, the
Under a statutory provision in Oklahoma, describing what shall constitute the record in the same language as our own statute, that state having the Ohio code, it has been uniformly held that motions, rulings thereon and exceptions thereto, are not part of the record unless embraced in a bill of exceptions. (Fisher v. U. S., 31 Pac. 145; Black v. Kuhn, 6 Okla. 87, 50 Pac. 80; Tribal Development Co. v. White, 28 Okla. 525, 114 Pac. 736; Stonebraker-Zea Cattle Co. v. Hilton, 34 Okla. 225, 124 Pac. 1062.) Quoting the statute, in Tribal Development Co. v. White, supra, it is said: “Under this statute, it has been held that motions and orders thereon are not part of the record proper, and can be made part of the appeal record only by bill of exceptions or case-made, the rule being stated in the case of Menten v. Shuttee et al., 11 Okla. 381, 67 Pac. 478, as follows: ‘Motions presented in the trial court, the rulings thereon, and exceptions are not properly part of the record, and can only be preserved and presented for review on appeal by incorporating the same into a bill of exceptions or case-made. The record proper in a civil action consists of the'petition, answer, reply, demurrers, process, rulings, orders, and judgments; and incorporating motions, affidavits, or other papers into a transcript will not constitute them a part of the record unless made so by a bill of exceptions. Motions and proceedings which are not part of the record proper can only be presented for review by incorporating them into a case-made, or by preserving them by bill of exceptions and embracing them in the transcript.”
A motion to revoke the appointment or to discharge a receiver is held not to be part of the record unless included in a bill of exceptions. (Bank of Dexter v. Stoddard Co. Bank, 169 Mo. 74, 68 S. W. 902; Cottrell v. Aetna Life Ins. Co., 97 Ind. 311.) Also that a bill is necessary to bring into the record a motion for judgment on the pleadings.
Counsel refer to a different practice in Ohio. We are and have been aware of the practice in that state to consider a motion for a new trial, and some other motions, apparently as in the record without a bill, though not affidavits in support thereof. So far as the decisions of the supreme court of that state are concerned, the principle that they are in the record proper does not seem to have been directly stated. But there is an early decision to the contrary. (Harvey v. Brown, 1 Ohio. 268.) In 1887, after the practice had been settled here requiring a bill to bring a motion for a new trial, the ruling thereon and the. exception, into the record, it was decided by one of the Circuit Courts of Ohio that it was not necessary for the bill of exceptions to recite the filing of the motion for a new trial, the overruling of it or the exception, for the reason that the motion was a part of the record and the ruling and exception would therefore be sufficiently shown by the journal 'entry of the ruling noting the exception. That case is Fleischman v. Shoemaker, 2 O. C. C. 152; the discussion of the question appearing on page 156. But the ease shows that the question was then a doubtful one in that state. The opinion states: “This is a question which has been suggested in argument to us once or twice, and it is apparent that members of the profession have different views upon the subject, and we have heard that some one of the courts of the state has held that it is necessary that these matters should appear upon the face of the bill itself. We, however, are of the opinion that it is not necessary.” That case was called to our attention and considered in Freeburgh v. Lamoureux, 12 Wyo. 41, 73 Pac. 545, decided in 1903; we then said that we were not disposed to overrule Johns v. Adams Bros., Perkins v. McDowell, Boulter v. State, and other cited decisions, and that we were - satisfied that they proceed upon a correct interpretation of the statute; but that if we entertained a contrary opinion, the rule of practice established by them had stood too long to be lightly
But our attention has now been called to another Ohio Circuit Court decision, or rather to a note in Whittaker’s Annotated Code citing it together with Fleischman v. Shoemaker upon the point stated in the note that to- bring a motion before a reviewing court it must be made a part of the record, but it is not necessary that it be included in the bill of exceptions; that note appearing under the section of the code corresponding to section 5903 of our latest compilation, and known as section 5334 of Ohio Rev. Stat., or, as re-numbered, section 11607. The citations in the note are: 9 C. D. 520; 17 C. C. 152; 2 C. C. 156; 42 O. S. 449. The case cited from 42 O. S. merely cites and quotes the section, without deciding anything relating to the question before us. The 2 C. C. citation is Fleischman v. Shoemaker, above mentioned, and the two other citations refer to Barclay v. Salmon, reported in each of the volumes, and decided in 1898 by the Fayette Co. Circuit Court. The question in that case was whether a bill was necessary to bring before the reviewing court an affidavit filed in the court below for a change of judge. It was said in the opinion that affidavits filed in support of a motion cannot be considered unless made part of the record by a bill of exceptions, but that it is not necessary to bring the motion before a reviewing court to include it in the bill, ‘ ‘ although it is not required by section 5334 of the Revised Statutes to be made a part of the record.” That an affidavit showing the disqualification of the judge is not in support of some motion or application, “but as an original paper in the case, upon its being so
If it was intended by that to hold that when filed, and, as required by statute, noted upon the docket, the affidavit becomes a part of the record, not alone from the fact of its being filed but because noted on the docket, it is not in disagreement with any of our decisions. But if it was intended to hold that merely as an original paper filed in the cause it was upon the record without a bill, then it conflicts squarely with Perkins v. McDowell, and the two other decisions of our court following it, as to an application for change of venue or judge, two of which cases were decided prior to the date of that decision, and certainly it cannot be accepted as even persuasive authority, especially since it is not a decision of a court of last resort, or the highest court in the state. If intended to hold that merely as an original paper, not a part of the record proper, the affidavit could be properly brought before the reviewing court by filing it with the petition in error under the Ohio section substantially like our own, as it was prior to 1901, and not essentially different from our present statute, except the latter provides for an application and order for the papers and journal entries upon filing the petition in error instead of filing the same with the petition, as formerly, then it is in conflict with a decision of another circuit court in Ohio, and out of harmony, as we think, with several decisions of the Supreme Court of that state, as well as contrary to our interpretation and understanding of the statute last mentioned. The circuit court decision we refer to is Strauck v. Massillon Stoneware Co., 4 O. C. C. Rep. (N. S.) 536.
In that case it was held; (1), that the court has jurisdiction to review, vacate or modify a judgment of the court of common pleas only for errors appearing upon the record ; (2) that the mere filing of a bill of exceptions does
It should, perhaps, be remarked here that in this jurisdiction a journal entry of the allowance of a bill is not necessary to make a bill a part of the record. (McBride v. U. P. Ry. Co., 3 Wyo. 183, 18 Pac. 635; Hogan v. Peterson, 8 Wyo. 549, 59 Pac. 162; Harden v. Card, 14 Wyo. 479, 85 Pac. 246.) The court said in the McBride case, after showing the difference in that respect between the Ohio and our statute: “The allowance, signing, and perhaps filing, are what constitute it a part of the record, and no journal entry is necessary for that purpose. ’ ’
Our comments upon the Ohio decisions under the Code section 6716 of that state may sufficiently indicate our interpretation of the corresponding section of our statutes, now Sec. 6376 Comp. Stat. 1920, with reference to which counsel asks if the provision for an application and order for original papers upon the filing of a petition in error has nothing to do with the matter. But to make our position clear as to that, we think it proper to say further that we agree with the Ohio decisions in holding that the statute refers to and intends to include only such original papers as are properly a part of the record in the court below. And that has always been the understanding of the court as to said section. By section 6371 of our said compilation, as originally enacted and as amended in 1921 (Laws 1921 Ch. 145), it is provided that a judgment or final order of the District Court may be reversed, vacated or modified by this court “for errors appearing on the record.” And section 6376 provides for the filing with the petition in error of an application for an order directing the clerk of the district court to transmit to this court all such original papers in the case, and a duly authenticated transcript of all such journal entries, or other entries of record as the plaintiff in error may desire “and as may be necessary to exhibit the error complained of;” and that thereupon.the clerk of this court shall issue such order, and when “such original papers” and transcript are received they shall be
The case of Barclay v. Salmon, supra, seems to be in accord with our decisions to the effect that a motion is not made a part of the record by statute, and, notwithstanding a different practice in Ohio, we think it more logical to require that a paper which is not part of the record proper shall be brought into it by bill to entitle it to consideration than to assume to consider it, although not embraced in a bill and not otherwise a part of the record.
We think it unnecessary to enter into a further citation of authorities, although we have at this time as well as heretofore examined with much care the decisions of other states upon the question, those declaring a different rule of practice from that adopted in this state being usually explained by a difference in statutory provisions. But we are satisfied that our practice requiring a bill to bring a mere motion upon the record, which is the result of an unbroken line of decisions covering a period of fifty years, should not be abandoned by judicial decision because of an occasional decision elsewhere seemingly not in accord with it.
Although this discussion has been extended beyond the limit within which the writer had expected to confine it, it has seemed proper to go into the matter thoroughly, hoping that it might be- of service in making clear to counsel and the bar generally the court’s position concerning the important question of practice presented.
Reversed.