REDMOND v. HILLIARD.
No. 34375
Supreme Court of Mississippi
Dec. 9, 1940
Feb. 10, 1941
199 So. 83 | 200 So. 130
(In Banc.)
The other questions in the case are not of sufficient merit to require a discussion.
Affirmed.
Argued orally by J. B. Stirling, for appellant, and by G. Q. Whitfield and H. Chalmers Alexander, for appellee.
McGowen, J., delivered the opinion of the court on motion.
Appellee filed a motion to strike the transcript of the court reporter‘s notes from the record for the reason that the court reporter was not given notice by the appellant to transcribe his notes, as required by
Redmond replied at length to the suggestion of error, and filed a carbon copy of a letter to the court reporter, dated March 25, 1940, requesting said court reporter to transcribe his notes. Relative thereto, he said: “Appellant was told on March 25th, 1940, by Hon. J. H. Howie, who was then representing appellant in this cause, that appellant‘s motion for a new trial had that day been overruled, and being desirous of an appeal, appellant immediately prepared a notice to the Hon. R. S. Streit, Court Reporter, and asked the Honorable Mr. Streit to transcribe his notes in said cause and send them up, a copy of said notice is attached hereunto marked ‘Exhibit A’ to this answer and asked to be considered as much a part hereof as if copied herein.” Redmond answered further that he sent notice to the clerk to prepare the record and to send it to the Supreme Court; also, that the docket (referring to the circuit court docket) shows notice to both stenographer and clerk under date of May 22, 1940. The record shows that an order was entered by the court on May 22, 1940, overruling appellant‘s motion for a new trial.
In connection with this motion, appellant filed a separate motion for certiorari, requiring the clerk to send up the docket entries as to the filing of certain papers pertinent to this motion, and a certificate of his docket entries relative thereto, which includes the written notice to the stenographer. Appellant does not allege how or when or if ever he served the notice on the court reporter. If, however, he has actually had the notice served on the court reporter in accordance with the statute, he may file a copy with the circuit clerk and have it sent up.
The motion for certiorari will be granted as prayed for; and the motion to strike the transcript of the record will be passed until the circuit clerk has made his return in answer to the writ of certiorari herein granted. The
Smith, C. J., delivered the opinion of the court on motion.
This is a motion to strike the stenographer‘s transcript from the record, the grounds thereof being:
- The record fails to disclose notice from appellant to the Circuit Court stenographer to transcribe notes (transcript) of the evidence.
- The transcript does not appear to have been signed by the trial judge of the court below, nor to have been agreed on by the parties, nor to have become a part of the record as provided by statute. Neither any attorneys for the plaintiff nor for the defendant—not any counsel at all—are shown to have passed upon or approved or disapproved the transcript.
- The appeal to this court was barred by the Statute of Limitations when the bond therefor was filed.
If there is no merit in the first of these two grounds, the second disappears, since the motion contains no allegation that the transcript is incorrect in any material particular.
A final judgment herein was rendered in the court below at its September 1938 term. A motion then made by the appellant for a new trial was continued for disposition by the trial judge in vacation. No vacation order was made, and the motion was not overruled until May 22, 1940, during the regular May term of the court. The court-reporter filed a transcript of the evidence within an extension of time allowed him by the court in which so to do. No notice to the reporter to transcribe his notes, was filed with the clerk of the court below as required by
The judgment finally disposing of this case, prior to which no appeal to this court would lie, was the judgment overruling the motion for a new trial rendered at the May, 1940, term of the court below. Mayflower Mills v. Breeland, supra. This notice to the reporter was served on him, not only prior to the adjournment of that term of the court, but prior to the entry on the minutes of the judgment overruling the motion for a new trial. The reason given by the appellant for serving the notice on March 25, 1940, is that the judge of the court below on that day overruled the motion for a new trial, meaning, of course, that the judge on that day announced that he would overrule the motion. The allegation to this effect in the appellant‘s answer to the appellee‘s motion not
The third reason given is really a plea in bar to the appeal on the ground that the bond therefor was filed
The request of the appellant for leave to file an assignment of error will be granted.
So ordered.
