66 So. 866 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1914
At common law, prior to the enactment of the statute of Westminster (St. 13 Ed. I, c. 3), the only errors reviewable on a writ of error were such as were apparent on the face of the record proper, which consisted of the pleadings, process, verdict, and judgment. Exceptions to the rulings of the court during the progress of the trial, based, 'as they were, on oral or parol matters, formed no part of the record, and could not therefore be reviewed. With a view of remedying this condition and of providing a means for such review in civil cases, the English statute cited was passed, which is the origin of bills of exceptions, whose functions have now been extended in this and other jurisdictions to criminal cases also. — 3 Ency. Pl. & Pr. 373; 2 Mayf. Dig. 480; Code, § 3018, and citations there.
A bill of exceptions may, consequently, be defined as “a formal statement in writing of exceptions taken by a party on the trial to a ruling, decision, charge, or opinion of the trial judge, setting out the proceedings on the trial, the acts and rulings of the trial judge alleged to be erroneous, the objections and exceptions taken thereto, together with the grounds therefor, and authenticated by the signature of the trial judge.” — Ency. supra; 3 Cyc. 26, 27; Code, § 3018, and citations.
. Its character as a record and its verity as such comes from the fact of its approval by the trial judge, which can be evidenced in no other way than by his signature thereto; hence, under the common-law practice, documents that it was desired should be a part of the bill
Under modern practice, however, the rigor of these rules has been, to some extent, modified, and it is now generally permissible to omit copying into the bill itself the document that it is desired to incorporate, provided the bill, at the place where it is desired to insert the document, properly describes and identifies the document and contains there a direction to the clerk to so insert it when making out the transcript of the original. — Code, § 3018, and cases cited; Ency. supra, 430, and cases cited; 3 Cyc. 26, 27. Such a bill is termed a skeletoln bill, and the documents so referred to, and set out as a part of the bill in the transcript of it, become, for purposes of review on appeal, a part of the bill of exceptions. To have this effect, however, the documents so directed by the judge to be copied and incorporated into the transcript of the bill must, before the bill is signed, be so clearly referred to therein and be so definitely identified by their date, name of parties, amount, or other identifying features as, in the language of our Supreme Court, “to leave no room for mistake in the transcribing officer.” — Looney v. Bush, Minor, 413; Ency. supra; Code, § 3018, and cases cited. And it is held that it is not enough that it be so described that the clerk of the court serving at the time the case was tried could insert it without room for mistake, but it must be so described that a succeeding clerk could transcribe it without room for mistake. — Parsons v. Woodward, 73 Ala. 348; Kyle v. Gadsden Land Co., 96 Ala. 376, 11 South. 478; Quigley v. Campbell, 12 Ala. 58; Pearce v. Clem
Under this practice, while the hill leaves the hands of the trial judge as a skeleton bill, containing merely a reference to and description of the documents, together with a direction, at- appropriate places therein, to the clerk to insert, as “[Clerk, here insert],” yet, when the bill comes before the reviewing court, it comes transcribed in its completed form, with the insertions made as directed, so that the reviewing court is not required to look beyond its four corners to ascertain its contents.
In the present case, the bill omits setting out the documents — some 30 odd — and likewise omits any direction to the clerk to insert them in the bill, but seeks to make the documents a part of the bill by a statement in the bill that they are thereto attached, marked “Exhibit A,” “Exhibit B,” etc. In the transcript before us, at a place immediately following the bill, is what purports to be a transcript of these numerous documents so marked as exhibits. Motion is made by the appellee to strike them on two grounds, to wit: First, that under the law they cannot be made a part of the bill by attaching them to it merely as exhibits, but that it is necessary either that they be set out in the bill before it is signed, or that the bill before it is signed contain a direction to the clerk to insert them therein in making out the transcript, and that unless so inserted in pursuance of such direction, they are extraneous matter that cannot be considered as a part of the bill; second, that even if the practice of attaching them as exhibits is permissible, they .are not .described in the bill here with definiteness sufficient for
Being of opinion that there is merit in the second proposition renders it unnecessary to consider the first, though in passing we wish to say at least with respect to it that, even if the law now permits documents to be made parts of bills of exceptions by attaching them merely as exhibits to the bill, it is a method which is certainly not to be commended. A bill of exceptions is a judge-made record, gaining, as before said, its character from his approval, which must be verified by his signature. It is of the utmost importance that its integrity be jealously guarded, and that its certainty be cautiously preserved, for upon it rests, to a large extent, the law’s protection for the most sacred of human rights with which it deals — life, liberty, and property. When documents are made part of the bill by being attached thereto as exhibits, it opens a wide door for fraud and mistake, for in such case there is nothing to prevent the detachment of such exhibits from the bill after it leaves the hands of the trial judge and the substitution of others for them, correspondingly marked “Exhibit A” or “Exhibit B,” etc., before the clerk makes out the transcript, thereby occasioning a necessity for courts of review to resolve themselves into a jury and constantly engage in hearing evidence pro and con for the purpose of determining, with uncertainty at best whether or not a particular document that is-copied into the transcript as an exhibit to the bill of exceptions is the real exhibit that was attached to the bill at the time it was signed- — ■ in other words, whether what purports to be the record in this respect is or is not the record. Without condemning in toto a practice which would lead to such results and which would impair to some extent the integrity and certainty of bills of exceptions, opening them
The second contention of appellant must, in the light of the authorities hereinbefore last cited, prevail, as said, and all of the exhibits will therefore be stricken, because none of them are sufficiently identified in the bill of exceptions. — Authorities supra.
The action is one of detinue, to which the defendant pleaded the general issue and some 21 special pleas, attempting in each to assert as a defense, in varying phraseology, one or the other of the following three grounds, upon which it was alleged that the mortgage which plaintiff was alleged to rely upon for recovery was void, to wit: (1) That the consideration of said mortgage was the purchase price of certain fertilizers sold and delivered to defendant by plaintiff, and the transaction was one of intrastate business, and that the plaintiff was at such time a nonresident corporation, and had not then complied with the Constitution and statutes of this .state (Const. § 232; Code, § 3642 et seq.) so as to authorize it to do business here; (2) that at the time the plaintiff sold and delivered to the defendant the said fertilizers, to secure the purchase price of which the said mortgage was given, the plaintiff had not secured from the State Commissioner of Agriculture and Industries, as required by sections 25 and 6884 of the Code, a license to sell or deal in fertilizers; (3) that the bags or sacks containing the said fertilizer so sold and delivered to defendant, forming the consideration of said mortgage, were not tagged as required by General Acts 1911, p. 367, and section 6881 of the Code. The court sustained demurrers to each of
It is needless to consider whether or not these pleas were defective on grounds as pointed out in the demurrers ; for, even assuming that they were not upon either of such grounds and that it was error, therefore, to sustain, the demurrers, there was no injury, for the reason that under the plea of the general issue the defendant got the benefit of each of such defenses. — Peters v. Balke-Collender Co., 6 Ala. App. 507, 60 South. 431. Besides, it occurs to us, though it is not necessary here to so decide, that in this character of action, detinue, a plea of the general issue is the proper way to set up such defenses, since as a general proposition it puts in issue the validity of any title upon which plaintiff might rely for recovery. It is a denial of his cause of action, and it would seem that, if it developed from the evidence that the plaintiff relied for recovery solely on a mortgage, and that for any reason such mortgage was void, or, if once valid, had ceased to¡ be of efficacy as a result of payment or otherwise, then plaintiff could not recover. — Code, § 5331; Carlisle v. People’s Bank, 122 Ala. 446, 26 South. 115; Snellgrove v. Evans, 145 Ala. 600, 40 South. 567; Wellden v. Witt, 145 Ala. 612, 40 South. 126; Pinchard v. Bramlett, 165 Ala. 330, 51 South. 557. However, we refrain from a decision upon the question.
The plaintiff offered evidence, which was not disputed, tending to show both that the sacks or bags containing the fertilizers were tagged, and that the plaintiff had, at the time of the sale, taken out and procured from the State Commissioner of Agriculture and Industries, as required by law, a license to sell such fertilizers. There was no evidence, however, tending to show that the plaintiff had ever qualified as a foreign cor
The mortgage is not before us, it being one of the many papers hereinbefore referred to as being attached to the bill of exceptions as exhibits, all of which, as before ordered, have been stricken therefrom as forming-no part thereof. But, since bills of exceptions are to be construed most strongly against the exceptor (Hauser v. State, 6 Ala. App. 31, 60 South. 549), it will be presumed that the contents of such mortgage were not favorable to appellant’s contention in the particulars mentioned — a presumption, we may add, which is fortifiéd by the facts of the case, if the said exhibit attached to the bill as purporting- to be a copy of said mortgage is in fact a copy, but which, for reasons stated, we cannot so regard or consider. There seems, however, to have been no dispute but what plaintiff was a foreign corporation —in fact, such was practically admitted on the trial — . but the defendant’s evidence as to the character of the sale or transaction out of which the mortgage arose (even if we concede, which we do not so decide, that such evidence was sufficient, if unrebutted, to authorize a finding by the jury that such sale or transaction was one of intrastate business) was rebutted by evidence for the plaintiff tending to show that such sale or transaction was purely an act of interstate commerce (Ewart Limber Co. v. Am. C. & P. Co., 9 Ala. App. 152, 62 South. 560, and cases cited; Stratford v. City Council, 110 Ala. 619, 20 South. 127; Lee v. Town of La. Fayette, 153 Ala. 679, 45 South. 294; Miller v. State, 7 Ala. App. 183, 62 South. 307); consequently the court did not err in refusing the general affirmative charge requested by appellant upon any theory to the contrary.
The case of Peters v. Balke-Collender Co., 6 Ala. App. 507, 60 South. 431, cited us by appellant, does not disclose the facts upon which the decision was rested, and we will presume, in support of the correctness of that authority, that the facts it dealt with were not dissimilar in legal aspect to those upon which the cases it cited were predicated, most of which dealt with contracts growing out of a loan of money by a foreign corporation to a resident of this state. Money, unlike commercial fertilizers, is not an article of commerce, but is merely a medium of exchange, and the loaning of it by a foreign corporation to a resident of this state does not, like a sale of articles of commerce, constitute interstate commerce, or fall within the protective provisions of the commerce clause of the federal Constitution. — Nelms v. Edinburg Am. Land Mort. Co., 92 Ala. 161, 9 South. 141. The other cases cited in Peters v. Balke-Collender Co., supra, not involving a loan of money, as well as the many cases cited in appellant’s brief, are so clearly and easily to be differentiated from the one here upon grounds similar to those stated as not to require discus
Our statute (Gen. Acts 1911, p. 33) has abrogated the common-law rule entailing upon a plaintiff in detinue, when the general issue is pleaded by defendant, the duty of proving the possession by defendant of the property at the time of the commencement of the suit. Such plea is, since the statute cited, an admission by defendant of such possession, and relieves the necessity for any such proof. The court consequently did not err in refusing the affirmative charge, requested on the basis of the absence of such proof, or in overruling appellant’s motion, predicated on such ground, to exclude all of plaintiff’s evidence. Nor in this case was it necessary for the plaintiff to prove the value of the property sued for, since it appears that at the time of the trial it was in plaintiff’s possession under the statutory bond — the defendant having declined to replevy the property. — Jones v. Pullen, 66 Ala. 306; Dykes v. Clarke, 98 Ala. 657, 13 South. 690; Barnhill v. Howard, 104 Ala. 417, 16 South. 1.
•What we have said, in connection with the authorities we have cited, is sufficient, without the necessity for further discussion, to indicate the reasons of our
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.