128 P. 624 | Wyo. | 1912
This case was submitted to this court upon two motions. One by C. M. Roberts, executor, to be substituted as defendant in error; and the other by the defendant in error to strike the bill of exceptions from the files.
It appears that since the filing of the petition in error the defendant in error, Andrew J. Parker, died, and that C. M. Roberts has been duly appointed, and is now the duly qualified arid acting executor of the will of Parker, deceased. The motion to substitute is not resisted; and it appearing to be a proper case for substitution, the motion will be granted.
The motion to strike the bill of exceptions from the record is based on the ground that it was not presented for allowance within the time allowed by law and fixed by the court. The motion for a new trial was denied November 25, 1910, and at that time the defendant below, Ada Meadows, plaintiff in error, was given until and including the first day of the next regular term of the court in which to present for allowance her bill of exceptions. The next regular term of the court commenced on the third Monday in May following, being May 15, 1911. It appears by the certificate of the Judge of the District Court that on May 15, 1911, the bill was presented to him for allowance; “that at that time the said bill of exceptions was not complete in that the same did not contain the transcript of the testimony given upon the trial of said cause; that permission was at that time given to the attorneys of the defendant to withdraw said bill of exceptions and to complete the same; that the facts in regard to said' completion are correctly set forth in the affidavit of Charles L. Carter, Official Court Reporter, which said affidavit appears in this record; that the said bill of exceptions was afterwards completed and presented to me on the 5th day of January, 1912; that upon the 8th day of January, 1912; the plaintiff, by Enterline & RaFleiche, his attorneys, filed'their written objection to the allowance of said bill of exceptions, supported by the affidavit of Charles L. Carter,
The statutes governing the preparation; and presentation of bills of exceptions are as follows: (Sec. 4595, Comp. Stat. 1910) : “The party objecting to the .decision must except at the time the decision is made; and time may be given to reduce the exception to writing, but not beyond the first day of The next succeeding term.” Sec. 4596, id.: “No particular form of exception is required, and the exception must be stated, with the facts, or so much of the evidence as is necessary to explain it, and no more, and the whole as briefly as possible.” Sec. 4598, id.; “When the decision is not entered on the record, or the grounds’of objection do not sufficiently appear in the entry, or the exception is to the opinion of the court on a motion to direct a non-suit, to .arrest the testimony from the jury, or, for a new trial for misdirection by the court to the jury, or because the verdict, or if a jury was waived, the findings of the court, is against the law or the evidence, the party excepting must reduce his exception to writing and present it to the court, or to the judge thereof in vacation, within the time given for allowance. If true, it shall be the duty of the court, if presented in .open court, or the judge of the court before whom the cause was tried, if presented in vacation, to allow and sign it, whereupon it shall be filed with the pleadings as a part of the record, but not spread at large upon the journal. If the writing is not true the court or judge shall correct it, or suggest the correction to be made, and it shall then be signed as aforesaid.” A writing which does not contain the exception taken at the time the decision is made, with the facts, or so much of the evidence as is necessary to explain the exception, is not such a bill as the statute requires to be presented within the time allowed, and is no bill. In this case the writing purporting to be a bill of exception which