MEMORANDUM OPINION BY ORDER
The Court’s Order of April 6, 1992 Denying Appellee’s Motion to Dismiss is hereby WITHDRAWN, sua sponte, and the following order is substituted therefor:
Appellee’s Motion to Dismiss this appeal is DENIED. The handwritten minute overruling appellant’s motion to reconsider, initialed by the trial judge and filed of record on December 2,1991, did not commence the time in which to file an appeal.
Title 12, O.S.1991, § 32.3 provides:
“A. It is the duty of the court to write out, sign and record its orders, judgments and decrees within a reasonable time after their rendition. To aid in the performance of this duty, the court may direct counsel, the district attorney or the court clerk to prepare the written memorialization for its signature and, after it is signed, to file it in the case of record.
B. A recorded written order, judgment or decree signed by the court is a jurisdictional prerequisite to appellate review.” [E.A.]
The minute entry was not signed but simply bore the initial “C”. We can find no Oklahoma cases dealing with the question of whether initials constitute a proper signature of a judge. 46 Am.Jur.2d, Judgments, § 69, however, provides as follows:
“The courts are in accord in holding that where the signature of the judge is necessary to a judgment, a signature by initials only, of both the Christian name and the surname is insufficient. The signature is sufficient, however, if the surname is written out in full, even if the initials only of this Christian name are used.”
In support of this statement, American Jurisprudence cites
Fairbanks v. Beard,
Section 1 of the annotation found at
In
Depuy v. Hoeme,
Statutory provisions regarding the mode and sufficiency of rendering judgments are controlling. Paragraph B was added to § 32.3 (then § 32.2) in 1981. Prior to this amendment, a judgment was rendered and existed as such when it was pronounced from the bench and before it was reduced to writing. See:
Austin v. King,
Prior to 1981, § 32.2 read:
“When the judicial acts or other proceedings of any court have not been regularly memorialized the court shall cause the same to be memorialized by counsel or by the clerk within such time as it may direct.”
12 O.S.1981, Ch. 15, App. 2, Rule 1.11, provided:
“... if the case is tried to the court, judgment is deemed rendered when its terms are completely pronounced by the judge and clearly resolve all the issues in controversy ...”
The statutory requirements controlling the mode and sufficiency of the rendition of judgments have changed, however. With the 1981 amendment of § 32.2 the legislature clearly and explicitly required the signature of the judge as a jurisdictional prerequisite to appellate review, using “sign” “signature”and “signed”four times in its enactment. The obvious legislative intent is an appealable judgment is entered when a record entry was signed rather than being initialed.
In the instant case, two typewritten orders, one sustaining defendant’s motion for summary judgment and the other overruling appellant’s motion for new trial, were prepared by counsel, signed by the judge and filed in the case on December 19, 1991. This commenced the appeal time, and the appeal was timely filed on January 17, 1992.
