76 N.W. 987 | N.D. | 1898
This was an original application to this Court by Carl A. Kaeppler for a writ of mandamus directed to Hon. Charles A. Pollock, Judge of the Third District. The application discloses the following facts: Kaeppler brought an action in the District Court of Cass County against the Red River Valley National Bank. The case came on regularly for trial before Judge Pollock and a jury, and resulted in a verdict for the defendant. In due time, plaintiff served notice of his intention to move for a new trial, on the ground of errors of law occurring at the trial in the admission of evidence and in the instructions to the jury, and followed that with the service upon defendant’s attorneys of his proposed statement of the case. Thereafter, and within the time for serving proposed amendments to said proposed statement, the attorneys for defendant served upon the attorneys for plaintiff an order to show cause, at a date specified, why an order should
In part, the applicant has mistaken the practice. The writ of mandamus is mandatory in character, and of a moving nature. It is not a preventive or corrective writ. It cannot fill the office of an injunction or of an appeal or of a writ of certiorari. This is elementary. See High, Extr. Rem. § 177, and cases cited; 14 Am. & Eng. Ene. Law, p. 93, and cases cited. If the order of the District Court was a discretionary order, such discretion could not be controlled by mandamus before its exercise; much less can the erroneous exercise of that discretion be corrected by that writ. And, if the order was in excess of the jurisdiction of the District Court, then the statute clearly prescribes a remedy by certiorari, when the order cannot be reviewed on appeal. Rev. Codes, § 6098. This Court cannot, by mandamus, act directly upon that order.
But applicant asks that the trial judge be required to settle a statement of the case. This is a duty which the statute specifically imposes upon that official. Rev. Codes, § 5467. The applicant desires to move for a new trial in the case of Kaeppler against Red River Valley National Bank, and he wishes to make such motion .on a statement of the case. He has served his proposed statement upon the adverse party, and the time for serving proposed amendments thereto has passed, and yet the judge refuses to settle the statement, unless applicant procures and files with the clerk of the District Court an additional transcript of the stenographic notes covering the testimony of witnesses whose testimony is not included in applicant’s proposed statement. Can the judge legally decline to settle the statement for the reason given? We think not. The District Judge bases his action upon Dist. Ct. Rule No. 44, which reads: Transcripts of the stenographic reporter’s minutes shall be made in the exact words and in the form of the
That it is not competent for the trial Court, by rule or otherwise, to require one party to produce a transcript of the entire testimony in the case, at the instance or for the benefit of his adversary, is to our minds perfectly clear. The point is perhaps closer where, as in this case, the trial judge states that he cannot properly settle and certify the statement of the case without the transcript of the testimony of other witnesses. But we do not think the law is different. The statute, in mandatory terms, requires him to settle the statement. It does not in that connection say by what method he shall reach the settlement. If the respective attorneys have honestly performed their duties, — the one in preparing a statement, the other in preparing amendments thereto, — the task of the trial judge can seldom be arduous, and the law gives him all the means for the proper performance of that task. The stenographic minutes of all the testimony is on file with the clerk of the Court. The judge can at any time require the stenographer to read the testimony, or any disputed portion of it, to him, or to make a transcript for his use. A few moments, or, at most, a few hours, of time, is all that is required. The fact that the statute fixes no compensation to the stenographer for such services is of no consequence. He knows such services may be required of him, and he accepts the office cum onere. The hardship is imaginary, rather than real. Court stenographers often render such services, and no complaint
It follows from what has been said that no valid excuse for not proceeding to settle a statement of the case in the case of Kaeppler against the Red River Valley National Bank has been presented; and while this Court may not, in this proceeding, set aside the order requiring a full transcript, although void, yet it is our duty to require the trial Court to disregard such order. We must not be understood as in any manner curtailing the power of the trial Court to extend the time for serving proposed amendments to the proposed statement. But a writ of mandamus will issue from this Court requiring the Honorable Charles A. Pollock, judge as aforesaid, to settle a statement of the case in the action named, according to law. It is so ordered.