27 Mont. 197 | Mont. | 1902
delivered the opinion of the court.
The state of Montana, at the relation of its attorney .general, has instituted this proceeding in- mandamus to compel the stenographer of Department II of the district court of Silver Bow county to furnish a copy, written out at length, of the testimony and proceedings upon a trial involving the validity of two supposed wills. The allegations contained in the application are to the effect that the state of Montana, by its attorney general, filed objections to the probate of two certain proposed wills of oner Colbert, deceased, asserting that the wills pre
An alternative writ was issued, and the defendant was required to answer on yesterday, October 28, 1902. He moved that the writ be quashed on several gTounds, the first being- that the application does not set forth any sufficient reason why the writ should issue from the supreme court, instead of from the district court of Silver Bow county. Subdivision 2 of Rule II of this court requires, among other things, that the application for the issuance of the writ of mandate must set forth the reasons which render it necessary that the writ should issue originally from the supreme court, and that the sufficiency or insufficiency of the reasons so set forth will be determined by the court in awarding or refusing the writ. When we ordered the writ to go, we decided the reasons set forth in the application to be sufficient. The motion to quash admits as true the matters urged as reasons. If the defendant had traversed the aver-ments, or pleaded new matter in avoidance, a different question would arise. The first ground of the motion is untenable.
The next contention is that the attorney general should have asked the district court of Silver Bow county for a rule or order requiring the defendant to furnish the copy demanded. In State ex rel. Kranich v. Supple, 22 Montana Reports, 184, (56 Pac. 20), we gave a kindred question some consideration. There the stenographer had refused to obey the command of Section 372 of the' Code of Civil Procedure, which provides that “all objections made, the rulings, decisions and opinions of the court, and the exceptions taken during the trial, or hearing, must be written out at length, or printed in type, by the stenographer and filed with the clerk forthwith after the close of the trial or hearing,” and the district court refused to order him to comply therewith. A careful reading of the opinion discloses the fact that this court did not deem the refusal of
Another ground of tbe motion to quash is that a full transcript of all tbe proceedings bad upon tbe trial is not necessary to a settlement of tbe bill of exceptions, and therefore Section 1874 of tbe Code of Civil Procedure bas no application; and tbe last ground argued is that the alleged facts set forth in the petition do not entitle tbe state to a writ of mandate.
Section 373 of tbe Code of Civil Procedure provides, among other things, that tbe stenographer must, upon request, furnish, with all reasonable diligence, to a party or bis attorney in a civil cause in which be bas attended tbe trial or bearing, a copy, written out at length or in narrative form, from bis stenographic notes, of the testimony and proceedings upon tbe trial, upon payment, by tbe person requiring tbe same, of 5 cents per folio for tbe copy written out at length, and 7% cents per folio for tbe copy written out in narrative form. Section 1874 of tbe same Code reads as follows: “The state or a county, or any subdivision thereof, or any officer when prosecuting or defending an action on behalf of tbe state or county, or subdivision thereof, is not required to pay or deposit any fee or amount lo- or with any officer during the prosecution or defense of an action. Nó officer so prosecuting or defending shall be taxed
The motion to quash having been overruled, the defendant, hy leave of court, filed his answer today. Therein he avers that he has never written out at length, or otherwise, the testimony or proceedings had upon the trial; that in June, 1902, the attorney general requested the defendant to! prepare for him a transcript of the testimony and proceedings, and agreed to pay him the regular fees therefor; that, relying upon the promise of the attorney general, the defendant entered into a contract with one Deavitt, by which Deavitt agreed to transcribe the stenographic notes and write the testimony and proceedings at length in consideration of one-half of the fees allowed by law to be paid to him therefor upon delivery of the transcript to the attorney general; and that thereafter Deavitt, in compliance with the contract with the defendant, did prepare a typewritten tran
From the evidence taken it appears that the defendant read and dictated to Deavitt from his stenographic notes all the testimony and proceedings taken at the trial, and that Deavitt printed the same upon a typewriting machine; that Deavitt delivered three copies to the defendant, and that the defendant now has these copies in his possession. He says, however, that he does not feel at liberty to deliver any one of them for the reason that the defendant and Deavitt agreed that no copy should pass from the possession of the defendant to the attorney general until the fees were paid. The defendant, a public officer, will not be permitted to avoid the performance of a duty enjoined upon him by law by showing that he and another person had made a contract under the terms of which the public officer promised to violate that duty. This court is not concerned with the. respective rights of the defendant and Deavitt as between themselves. The assertion that the attorney general does not need the transcript for the purpose of aiding him in proposing amendments to the bills of exceptions may be disposed of by observing that the- law has omitted to clothe the stenographer with the right or privilege of raising or solving the question, which must, necessarily, be decided by the attorney general, who has the legal right to a copy of the extended notes, and by him only.
It is therefore ordered that a peremptory writ of mandate issue as prayed for, and that the defendant make return thereof at 10 o’clock on Friday, the 31st day of October, 1902.
Writ granted.