210 P. 940 | Wyo. | 1922
The case is pending here on a motion to strike and also on a motion to dismiss, both made by respondent. Appellant in turn filed a motion to send back the record to the lower court for correction, in case we should hold that necessary or proper as a consequence of our ruling on the motions of respondent. The reasons assigned in the latter motions will appear fully in the discussion that follows, and it is not necessary to set them out at length.
1. The judgment in the court below was rendered Nov. 18, 1921, and the costs taxed therein. Thereafter a
2. In the record appears a form of judgment. No date appears thereon, nor does it appear therefrom that it was entered of record below. Attached to the copy in the record here is a certificate of the clerk showing it to be a true and correct copy of “that certain journal entry entitled ‘judgment for plaintiff on the verdict rendered in the district court of Goshen County, Wyoming, on the 18th day of November, A. D. 1921, which said judgment was duly entered on the journal of the District Court of Goshen County, Wyoming, on the 30th day of November, 1921, and is recorded in Book 3 on page 155 thereof.’ ” The final certificate attached to the whole record contains the same statement of facts in somewhat different form.
No such presumption, of course, can arise from such certificate as to the date of the journal entry, and unless such date is sufficiently supplied by the certificate of the clerk, it is-not shown by the record in this court. The date must appear in order that we can determine whether or not the appeal has been taken and perfected in time. ¥e must concur with counsel for respondent at least insofar that we cannot commend the form of the journal entry herein. The court, the term, the date should appear, and a formula as to the proceedings of each day something like the following: “The following proceedings were had and done on this date and entered of record, to-wit: ’ ’ But whether or not the absence of the date in the journal entry herein is fatal, as contended by counsel for respondent, is another matter. It is material herein only for the purpose above mentioned. The entry or record of a judgment is not void merely because it is not dated. (23 Cyc. 849.) The dating of the judgment is simply directory to the clerk and may be corrected at any time. (Clark v. Molton, 19 S. C. 509.) It is no doubt true that, as a general rule,
“This certificate shows as fully as possible that the identical paper is a true copy of the entry on the journal and the date of the entry. ’ ’
The judgment itself, as we have seen, did not necessarily have to be dated. Had the date thereof, and the date of the entry béen supplied, as it should have been, it would have been supplied by the clerk by a simple statement of the fact in the journal. Instead of doing so in the journal he has done so in the certificate attached to a certified copy
3. Respondent moves that the case be dismissed for the reason that it does not appear that the paper purporting to be the final judgment or the verdict returned were ever filed. No filing mark appears on these papers. The judgment, however, when in the form as appears in the record, prepared as a separate instrument signed by the judge, will, if any filing is necessary, be presumed to have been filed from the fact of its entry on the journal. As to the verdict, the clerk’s final certificate to the record recites that it contains the “verdict and other papers filed in the above entitled cause.” Under the holding of Harden v. Card, supra, we must hold this sufficient as showing the actual filing thereof.
4. There are in the record certain documents which were offered in evidence, but it does not appear that they were ever admitted. Respondent moves that these be stricken from the record. This court has held that a bill of exceptions cannot be amended, corrected or in any manner changed by the appellate court. (Hall Oil Co. v. Barquin, 28 Wyo. 151, 201 Pac. 160.) The same rule should apply to the record on direct appeal. To strike out certain por- , tions of the record is but a form of amendment or correction. If the matters to which counsel object form no part of the record, they will not be considered' by the court
5. Certain exhibits were introduced in evidence and appear in the record as part of, and attached to the transcript of the evidence. The certificate of the court reporter states that these are “the exhibits offered, introduced and admitted in the trial of said cause;” the certificate of the clerk states that they are the original exhibits offered or received in evidence. From an inspection of the record these exhibits appear to be copies and coun-, sel for appellant admits them to be such. We shall not, therefore, inquire to what extent we shall treat the record as a verity. The respondent moves that these exhibits be stricken from the record, and further, that the case be dismissed because it appears that the record is not complete, since Section 64Q6 of the statute requires the originals of the exhibits offered and introduced in evidence to be embodied in the record. What we have heretofore said as to a motion to strike applies to the motion to strike the foregoing exhibits, and we pass, therefore, to the consideration of the motion to dismiss; The statute does not expressly require that the “original” exhibits shall be embodied in the record. It is left somewhat doubtful as to whether or not copies would suffice. Courts generally hold that in the absence of an express statute, copies and not the originals should be used, except only where the latter are necessary for certain purposes. (4 C. J. 432. See an able discussion of this subject in Brotherhood Acc. Co. v. Notter, 67 O. S. 413; 66 N. E. 528.) In view of the statements of counsel on the oral argument of this case, hereafter shown, we think we are not called on to decide this question and we prefer to leave it open for future determination. A motion has been made by appellant that the record be sent back to the lower court for correction in case we should hold that the original exhibits rather than the copies thereof should appear in the record. Now, in
The motions of respondent are accordingly overruled.