STATE OF MISSOURI at the Relation of THE CHICAGO, ROCK ISLAND & PACIFIC RAILWAY COMPANY, a Corporation, Petitioner, v. HOPKINS B. SHAIN, EWING C. BLAND and FRANCIS H. TRIMBLE, Judges of the Kansas City Court of Appeals, and P. J. MOTT and GRACE MOTT
Supreme Court of Missouri
January 4, 1936
89 S. W. (2d) 654
Division Two
Luther Burns, Henry S. Conrad, L. E. Durham, Hale Houts and I. M. Lee for Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Company.
BOHLING, C.—Certiorari to review the decision of the Kansas City Court of Appeals in the case of P. J. Mott and Grace Mott, appellants, v. The Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railway Company, respondent (79 S. W. (2d) 1057). Relator (Railway Company), hereinafter designated defendant, contends said decision
Plaintiffs, respondents here, instituted an action for damages for the death of their minor son occasioned by a collision on a grade crossing between an automobile operated by deceased and one of defendant‘s trains. Among the issues on which plaintiffs submitted their case was the “humanitarian doctrine,” while defendant‘s submissible defenses embraced contributory negligence of deceased. From a verdict for defendant, upon which judgment was entered, plaintiffs appealed, alleging error in the giving of instructions for defendant and conflicts between the instructions given on behalf of the respective litigants.
The issue turns on the sufficiency of the bill of exceptions filed in the trial court to preserve for review the alleged errors. Plaintiffs’ bill of exceptions, allowed on an ex parte application, recited: “Plaintiffs introduced testimony tending to prove all the allegations of their petition. Defendant introduced testimony tending to prove all the allegations of its answer.” Defendant, during the same term of court, filed a motion to sеt aside the order approving said bill of exceptions alleging in substance, among other grounds, that said bill of exceptions did not contain all or any part of the testimony introduced at the trial; that the appellate court cannot properly pass upon the merits of the cause without having before it all of said testimony; that said bill of exceptions did not comply with the statutes and did not comply with the rules relating thereto of the Kansas City Court of Appeals or the Supreme Court of Missouri; and that the appellate court cannot properly pass upon the instructions, including demurrers offered by the defendant at the close of plaintiff‘s testimony and again at the close of all the testimony, without having before it all of said testimony. This motion was overruled, and defendant filed its term bill of exceptions. Defendant thereafter filed in the Court of Appeals a motion to dismiss the appeal or affirm the judgment because, among other grounds, the evidence in the case was not preserved by the bill of exceptions; and because plaintiffs’ assignments of error pertained solely to the giving of instructions and plaintiffs had not preserved in a bill of exceptions the evidence pertaining to any instructions given or refused.
Under these facts, the Court of Appеals applied Rule 8 of said court and held (following Good Roads Co. v. Kansas City Railways Co. (Mo. App.), 217 S. W. 858; and Montgomery v. Clem (Mo. App.), 300 S. W. 1020), the recitations in the bill of exceptions sufficient to preserve for appellate review the correctness of or conflict in the instructions; and, finding the instructions given on behalf of defendant erroneous and in сonflict with instructions given on behalf of plaintiffs, reversed the judgment and remanded the cause.
Rule 8 of the Kansas City Court of Appeals reads: “In actions at law it shall not be necessary, for the purpose of reviewing in this Court the action of any circuit court, or any other court having by statute jurisdiction of civil cases, in giving or rеfusing instructions, that the whole of the testimony given or excluded at the trial in the Court of first instance should be embodied in the bill of exceptions; but it shall be sufficient, for the purpose of such review, that the bill of exceptions should state that ‘evidence tending to prove’ a particular fact or issue was given, and that an exception was saved to the giving or refusal of the instruction founded on it.”
The bill of exceptions in the Klene case [321 Mo. 1. c. 165] stated: “The plaintiff introduced evidence tending to support the allegation of her petition.” Defendant‘s demurrer was overruled and exceptions saved. This court said [321 Mo. 1. c. 166]: “On this record, we are asked by appellant to consider and rule upon thе correctness of the defendant‘s given instructions, numbered 2 to 9, inclusive. This cannot be done. In attempting to perfect her appeal in this way, the plaintiff has failed to meet the plain requirements of the law, and the condition of this record clearly illustrates the reasons for such requirements. By defendant‘s Instruction No. 2 the jury was told that there is no evidence in this case that the defendant‘s employees operating the train in question violated any city ordinance or any law in operating the train at an excessive rate of speed. In other instructions challenged by plaintiff the trial court excluded from the consideration of the jury other items of negligence specifically alleged in the petition. Yet, the trial court signed and approved and ordered filed a bill of exceptions which states that ‘The plaintiff introduced evidence tending to support the allegation of her petition.’ Moreover, the record shows that the defendаnt demurred to plaintiff‘s evidence, duly excepted to the court‘s ruling thereon, and offered no evidence in its own behalf. With the plaintiff‘s evidence before us, we might conclude that notwithstanding the errors, if any, in defendant‘s given instructions, the demurrer should have been sustained, and that, therefore, the judgment, being for the right party, should be аffirmed. The failure of the plaintiff to include a transcript of the evidence in her bill of exceptions deprived the defendant of the right to supplement the record by filing an additional abstract, and, in this situation, a consideration of the questions presented by plaintiff‘s appeal, would mean a review of defendаnt‘s instructions without reference to the evidence on which they were based, and a denial of defendant‘s right to a ruling on its demurrer in this court. These are rights which the defendant has not waived, and which it now insists should not be ignored.” (Italics ours.)
A court may determine that given instructions are erroneous or in conflict without having the evidence before it. However, before
The Klene case (321 Mo. 1. c. 167), after setting forth our Rule 6, holds the provisions therein for a skeleton or abbreviated transcript of the evidence to enable this court to review the giving or refusing of instructions in the trial court relate to statemеnts in the abstract of the record filed here and not recitals in the bill of exceptions. We approve the ruling and the reasons given in support thereof. It harmonizes with the case and statutory law of the State. Discussing a skeleton bill of exceptions calling for the insertion of parol testimony, Tipton v. Renner, 105 Mo. 1, 5, 16 S. W. 668, states: “It is perfeсtly plain that he [the trial judge] cannot sign a bill as a true one until the parol evidence is written out and made a part thereof. He ought not to sign it until this is done, and, if he does sign the bill before such evidence is written out and inserted, the evidence must be disregarded in this court.”
We are not unmindful of the language in Clark v. Union Iron & Foundry Co. (en banc—1911), 234 Mo. 436, 447, 137 S. W. 577, 580(1), to the apparent effect thаt under our Rule 6 it is not necessary for the bill of exceptions to preserve the evidence where the object of the appeal is to have this court review the action of the trial court in giving and refusing instructions, and that a skeleton bill of exceptions (substantially as presented in this case) is sufficient for that purpose. Examining the files of the Clark case in this court, we are of the opinion the statements must be held dictum insofar as they may be interpreted to refer to a bill of exceptions filed in the trial court, because: First. Respondent‘s brief and argument attacked the sufficiency of the “abstract” but presented no issue going tо the sufficiency of the “bill of exceptions.” Appellant Clark‘s “Abstract of Record” denominated that portion thereof relating to the bill of exceptions “Bill of Exceptions in Abstract;” and, after stating the effect of the evidence and setting forth certain instructions, closed “The above is an abstract of said bill of exceptions and record in said cause.” Second. Clark had sued the St. Louis & Suburban Railway Company and Union Iron & Foundry Company jointly. Upon trial as to both defendants before the same jury, verdict and judgment went against defendant Railway Company and in favor of defendant Iron & Foundry Company. The Railway Company appealed from the judgment in favor of рlaintiff
The opinion of the Court of Appeals (79 S. W. (2d) 1. c. 1060) states: “Since, in the case at bar, there is no contention that there is ‘no evidence’ to support any fact in controversy, we will confine our examination to our Rule 8, since the other two rules, 9 and 10, have to do with that situation only.” Rule 9 of said court provides, in substance, that if the trial court be of opinion there is evidence tending to prove a fact, the bill of exceptions shall be allowed in the form stated in Rule 8 (quoted, supra), and the other party is then at liberty to prepare a bill of exceptions embodying the testimony applicable to such fact, and except to the
The opinion of respondents and record pursuant thereto are quashed. Cooley and Westhues, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion by BOHLING, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All the judges concur.
FRANCIS E. PAYNE ET AL., Appellants, v. EMMA PAYNE ET AL. 89 S. W. (2d) 665.
Division Two, January 4, 1936.
Silvers & Sheppard and Elmer B. Silvers for appellants.
