103 Ky. 637 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1898
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellant, Mayo, was plaintiff in tbe court below, and upon tbe trial of the case upon its merits, his petition
The statute provides that the evidence which the commissioner takes shall be in writing, and shall be legal evidence, and shall be returned to the clerk of the court and safely kept by him. The statute does not provide that the evidence which the commissioner is required to take, shall be used in place of the parts of the record which are lost. The testimony which he takes is simply the evidence upon which the court must act in making a substitution for the lost record. To supply the lost record it is essential that the court should make an order to that effect, and he sends his commissioner out to get the evidence upon which to act. Instead of the court making an order of substitution, it adjudged in effect that the evidence taken by the commissioner was insufficient to enable him to make such order. The fact that the case is •off the docket did not prevent the court from making an order appointing a special commissioner to take testimony. The same duty is imposed upon the court to pass upon the question of supplying the lost parts of the record in a case that is off the docket as it is where a commissioner has been appointed in a case that is on the docket and undisposed of.
It is urged by counsel for appellant that the court had no authority to make the order which it made with reference to the report of the commissioner. If the court had the power when the case was no longer pending in court,
In Haney v. McClure, 88 Ky., 146, the court recognized that it was the duty of the lower court to make orders in relation to the matter of the substituting of papers for those which were lost.
The case of Commonwealth v. Keger, 1 Duvall, 240, is to the same effect.
It results from this conclusion that the plaintiff has failed to bring to this court a transcript of the parts of the record which were lost. This included the pleadings in the case and all depositions taken by the defendant. In the absence of such transcript this court can not adjudge that the court below erred in dismissing the plaintiff's petition.
The judgment is affirmed.