147 P. 552 | Or. | 1915
Opinion
This is an original mandamus proceeding in this court whereby it is sought to compel the defendant judge of the Circuit Court for Multnomah County to sign a bill of exceptions in terms prescribed in the alternative writ. Prom the recitals of that document it appears that, in a divorce suit wherein the plaintiff here was plaintiff and Prank Kubik was defendant, the court over which the present defendant presided as judge entered a decree April 28, 1913, dismissing the complaint at the cost of the plaintiff thérein. No findings of fact or conclusions of law were made until December 12, 1914, when, on motion of the defendant in the divorce suit, the court prepared and filed them nunc pro tunc, making an order to that effect. The plaintiff here, desiring to appeal from that order, presented a bill of exceptions to the court first having served the same upon opposing counsel, and, after further time had been granted in which to present an amended statement, it appears, as narrated in the writ, that the judge admitted that the new bill was true, but nevertheless declined to sign it because the matters set forth therein were already apparent from
“The provisions of Chapters VI and IX of Title II of this Code shall apply to suits, but the final determination of the rights of the parties thereto is called a decree, and any intermediate determination is called an order. ’ ’
It is to be observed that Chapter 7 of Title 2 is omitted from this category, and it might well be said
Hence the demurrer to the writ is sustained.
Demurrer Sustained.