296 P. 1074 | Wyo. | 1931
The cases have been argued and submitted both upon the merits and upon motions to dismiss filed by respondents. Of necessity these motions must first be considered, as they present the question whether the law governing direct appeals to this court has been followed in bringing the cases here, so as to permit us to entertain them for disposition on the other points relied upon to obtain reversals of the judgments attacked.
Respondents contend that no appeal record has been made or filed in these cases and point out, among other alleged defects, the want of due certification of the record on appeal by the clerk of the District Court as the law requires. An examination of that record, which is the same in each case, shows it to be in this condition:
There appear to be three volumes on file purporting to constitute the record on appeal. The first volume consists of 169 1/2 pages. On page 3 thereof there is a certificate by the Clerk of the District Court of Big Horn County authenticating a copy of "all the entries and notations of record on the appearance docket in case #3692" (the case number of the proceedings in the court below). This copy of the appearance docket sheets shows the making of a number of journal entries in the proceedings below aside from the judgments here attacked. On page 34, one of these entries authorizing and directing the state examiner to pay another claim, also found to be a preferred one upon the assets of the bank aforesaid, is separately certified by said clerk as a full, true and complete copy thereof. While there are incorporated in this volume what would appear to be the remaining journal entries noted on the appearance docket, they have no separate clerical authentications attached to them. On page 142 of the volume, we find a certificate of the clerk stating that, — "the foregoing being pages 4 to 141 inclusive of the record on appeal in Civil Case Number #3692, entitled, In The Matter of The Liquidation *9 of The Basin State Bank, and records on appeals from Judgment and Decrees allowing preferred claims Nos. 175, 174, 86, 369, 19-20-21, 352-353-354-355, 2 and 18, to consist of the Original pleadings, Motions, and Demurrers and all other papers filed in My Office in connection with said matter, except:" — certain documents which are therein listed as either missing or as appearing in volume 2 of the record. Pages 143 to 168 inclusive of volume 1 are copies of the several judgments, from which these appeals are undertaken to be prosecuted, each separately certified as full, true and complete. The volume is then closed by another certificate of the clerk appearing on pages 169 to 169 1/2 inclusive, to the following effect, omitting the official designation of the officer:
"I, * * * do hereby certify the foregoing to be Volume One, consisting of pages 1 to 168 inclusive, of the Record and Records on Appeal prepared by me in Civil Case No. 3692 in the matters of the appeals by Wm. C. Snow, Objector, from the Judgment and Decrees allowing and directing the payment of Preferred Claims as follows:" (Here are listed the several claims of respondents.)
The certificate then states:
"I further certify that the foregoing consists of all pleadings, motions, demurrers and all other papers filed in my office in connection with said Civil Case No. 3692, except as shown by my certificate at page 142 hereof, and excepting the transcripts constituting Volumes 2 and 3 of this record."
Volume 2, which appears to be a transcript of the evidence taken regarding the claim of one of the respondents, contains two certificates by the clerk. The first of these is on page 513 and separately authenticates the journal entry already mentioned as duly certified at page 34 of Volume 1, and which, in this volume, seems to have been used as an exhibit. The volume closes with the second certificate of *10 the clerk on pages 525 to 525 1/2 inclusive, to this effect, omitting official designation of the officer:
"I, * * * do hereby certify the foregoing to be Volume Two, consisting of pages 170 to 524 inclusive, of the Record and Records on Appeal prepared by me in Civil Case No. 3692 in the matters of the appeals by Wm. C. Snow, Objector, from the Judgment and Decrees allowing and directing the payment of Preferred Claims as follows:" (Here the claims of the respondents are listed.)
The certificate then continues:
"I further certify that the foregoing consists of the transcript of the hearing on Objection to Preferred Claim of Omaha Branch, Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City filed in my office in connection with said Civil Case No. 3692, filed in my office on the 5th day of May, 1930."
The final certificate of the clerk to Volume 3, which is set out on page 819 thereof, omitting the formal introduction, states: "the foregoing to be the record on appeal, consisting of pages 1 to 819 inclusive, of the Record and Records on Appeal prepared by me in Civil Case No. 3692 in the matters of the appeals by Wm. C. Snow, Objector, from the Judgment and Decrees allowing and directing the payment of Preferred Claims as follows:" (Here are once more listed the several claims of the respondents.) The remainder of the certificate, omitting testimonium clause and signature, is as follows:
"I further certify that the foregoing consists of all pleadings, motions, demurrers and all other papers filed in my office in connection with said Civil Case No. 3692, except as shown by my certificate at page 142 of this record, and also consists of the transcripts of the hearings upon Claim Numbers 175, 174, 86, 369, 19-20-21, 352-353-354-355, 2 and 18 filed in my office.
"I further certify that this certificate is attached to Volume 3 of the said Record which contains pages 526 to 819 inclusive; and consists of the transcripts of the hearings on *11 Objections to Claims Numbers 174, 86, 369, 19-20-21, 352-353-354-355, 2 and 18; and that Volume 2 of this Record consists of pages 170 to 525 inclusive and contains the transcript of the hearing on the Objection to Claim No. 175; and that Volume No. 1 consists of pages 1 to 169 inclusive, and contains all of the pleadings, motions, and other papers filed in my office in connection with said Civil Case No. 3692, except as shown by my certificate at page 142 of this record and excepting the transcripts constituting Volumes 2 and 3 of this record."
The law, so far as pertinent here (§ 6406, W.C.S. 1920), requires that the record on appeal, —
"Shall consist of the original or certified copies of the pleadings, motions, demurrers, instructions given and refused, verdict and findings, certified copies of the journal entries, including the entry of the judgment or order appealed from, and the notice of the appeal in the cause, securely attached together in their chronological order, and if a transcript of the testimony is prepared and filed, and is brought up on the appeal, the transcript with the exhibits and documentary evidence contained therein or attached thereto as a part thereof, shall also form a part of the record on appeal. When so prepared, the whole of such record shall be paged and numbered consecutively, and shall be certified to by the clerk of the District Court as true and correct and filed in his office."
It will be observed from the statement of the condition of the record as given above, that only part of the journal entries are certified as the law directs, and that there is no certificate attached to either of the volumes of the purported record on appeal that they or either of them constitute a "true and correct" record. Neither do they contain any language in the several certificates which can be construed as the substantial equivalent of the statutory words of certification.
In McClintock v. Ayres,
It is self evident reviewing courts "must be furnished with legal evidence of the fact that what are brought to them as records on appeal are in truth the transcripts or other proper reproductions of all that took place at the trials." Bognuda v. Pearson,
The necessity for, and the serious consequences flowing from a failure to procure certification of a record on appeal, has many times been pointed out by this court, and from almost the first appearance of cases here under that method of appellate procedure.
In Hahn v. Citizens State Bank,
"But it cannot properly be filed as the record on the appeal until it has been authenticated by the required certificate or certificates of the judge and clerk." *13
Again, in Kendrick v. Healy,
"So long as each certifies that the record is true and correct and each certificate is within the time for filing the record on appeal, that is sufficient."
See also Electrolytic Copper Company v. Board of County Commissioners, 289 Pac. (Wyo.) 1096, 1097, where it was said:
"An additional defect in the instant case is that the clerk's certificate was not made until June 24, 1929, long after the time for preparing and filing the record on appeal had expired. It is therefore evident that, if we could overlook the delay in filing the record in this court and defects in the certification of the record, we would have to dismiss the appeal for want of jurisdiction, because the record for the appeal was not perfected within the seventy-day period, which was not extended or enlarged."
While the law requiring the two certificates, as mentioned above, was in force, the case of Faulkner v. Faulkner,
In W.H. Holiday Co. v. Bundy, 289 Pac. (Wyo.) 1094, it was held that the failure to certify the record on appeal as the law directs constituted a ground for the dismissal of the appeal. The same rule was applied in Sandgren, et al. v. Bundy, et al., 289 Pac. (Wyo.) 1096; Laramie Auto Co. v. Bundy, et al., 289 Pac. (Wyo.) 1096.
Where a transcript of evidence on direct appeal was uncertified by the clerk, although the original papers were *14 properly authenticated by that officer, this court, in George Bolln Co. v. Freeman, 294 Pac. (Wyo.) 1110, declined to consider the questions involved in the appeal, as they arose solely upon the evidence offered and received in the case, and upon an alleged rejected instruction. The judgment below was therefore affirmed.
It may here be noted that the decisions listed above, establishing the necessity and importance of authentication of the record on appeal as the law indicates shall be done, are also in complete harmony with the disposition of a similar question arising under the other method provided by our statutes, for reviewing the final judgments and orders of the trial courts, i.e., proceedings in error.
In Mulhern v. Mahs,
Decisions of similar purport are readily found in other jurisdictions. See Bognuda v. Pearson, supra; Dickerson v. Botchleott,
Reluctant as we are to dispose of a case otherwise than upon the merits, nevertheless we are bound to give effect to *15 the enacted law of appellate procedure, as that has been applied in the prior decisions of this court. Under the provisions of the law and the authorities above cited, we are obliged to sustain the motions to dismiss. While no motion was filed in case No. 1651, yet the record there being in identically the same condition as that in all the other cases submitted on the several motions to dismiss and not being such a record as we may consider, our conclusion is that all the appeals must be dismissed.
Dismissed.
KIMBALL, C.J., and BLUME, J., concur.