110 Tenn. 487 | Tenn. | 1903
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The relator in this case was tried at the October term, 1902, of the circuit court of Lauderdale county, and found guilty of murder, in the second degree, of one Hammond, and his punishment was fixed at 20 years’ confinement in the State penitentiary. A motion for a new trial being overruled, an appeal was prayed and granted to this court.
The relator filed his present petition asking this court to grant him its writ of mandamus requiring the Honorable R. E. Maiden, the judge who presided at the trial of the cause, to authenticate a draft for a bill of exceptions which accompanies the petition as an exhibit, and which it is alleged is substantially correct, in the room and stead of a hill of exceptions already signed by him, and filed with the clerk as a part of the record in the cause, which latter hill, it is averred by relator, “does riot correctly state the proceedings in the said cause, and is not the bill, of exceptions upon which the
Judge Maiden has made an answer under oath to this petition, in which he denies distinctly and in detail every averment in the petition, to the effect that the bill of exceptions already signed and filed by him is in any respect incorrect or unauthentic. To the contrary, he asserts it contains a true and complete history of the proceedings during the trial of the cause, as well as of those subsequently incident to it. He also avers that the paper or draft submitted by the relator, and which the latter now asks this court to require the respondent to sign, is full of inaccuracies, and is in many respects incorrect and seriously misleading.
The question is thus again presented whether this court will compel a circuit judge to certify a bill of exceptions which he, under his oath, states is not a true record of what transpired in the progress of the trial of the cause, after he has already signed a bill of exceptions which he avers does contain a full and correct report of such trial and all proceedings incident thereto. To this question we repeat, without hesitancy, the answer given in the case of State, ex rel., v. Cooper, Judge, 107 Tenn., 202, 64 S. W., 50.
It is unnecessary to restate the reasons for
In addition, however, the delay in this cause would be of itself sufficient to repel the relator. The case was disposed of on the first of November, 1902, the bill of exceptions was noted by the clerk as filed on the 28th day of November of that year, and the present petition was not presented until the lapse of a little over four months from that date. This, under the facts disclosed, was an unreasonable delay. Sprague v. Fawcett, 53 Cal., 408; People v. Judge, 31 Mich., 72.
It follows that the writ of peremptory mandamus is refused, and the petition is dismissed.