16 Ind. App. 260 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1896
This is an original proceeding by the relator to obtain from this court a writ of mandate against the defendant, Ared F. White, as special judge of the Montgomery Circuit Court, commanding him as such special judge to sign a bill of exceptions in a cause tried by and before him in said court, and appealed to this Court. The facts as gathered from the pleadings appear to be that Judge White, who is the judge of the 47th judicial circuit and resides at Rock-ville, Parke county, was called as special judge of the Montgomery Circuit Court to try the case of John D. Holland v. William M. Davis and William L. Smith. The cause was tried on the 13th day of June, 1895, the
The record containing the draft of said bill of exceptions was then immediately withdrawn from the custody of the clerk of the Parke Circuit Court and taken away by said attorney. On Sunday, the 14th day of June, 1896, the said attorney for the first time presented said bill of exceptions to Judge White and requested him to sign the same as if it had been presented to him on the 17th day of September, 1895. The judge retained the paper until the 16th day of June, 1896, when he returned it to said attorney with the statement that he would not sign it as requested. The sworn statement of the attorney accompanying this application says that the defendant, Holland, was then a poor man and in bad health and unable to work most of the time since the trial, his labor being his only means of obtaining money to procure said bill of exceptions; that the said record was very voluminous, being made so by the improper admission in evidence by said judge in the trial of said cause of divers
Under these circumstances it is hardly necessary to state that the relator has shown no diligence whatever to comply with the order of the court in the presentation of the bill of exceptions. Assuming without deciding that the plaintiff’s financial inability to procure the record sooner constituted a valid excuse for delaying the presentation of the draft of the bill to the judge up to within two days of the expiration of the time given for presenting the same, the attorney was at fault in not leaving the document either at the residence of the judge, or with the clerk of the Parke Circuit Court with the request that it be presented to Judge White upon his return to Eockville. Instead of pursuing some such course as this he took the paper away with him and retained it for nearly nine months without ever making a single effort to have the same signed during that period. It appears to us that this delay is inexcusable. Had the judge signed the bill at the time he was finally requested to do so and dated the presentation thereof back to the 17th day of September, 1895, and that fact were made to appear, we should be compelled, on motion of the appellee, to strike the bill of exceptions from the files or proceed as if no such bill had ever been filed. To compel the judge now by the mandate of this court to sign the bill would be both unprecedented and unwarranted. If it be true that the cost of the record was unnecessarily increased by the illegal admission of documentary evidence so that the relator, who is poor, and was in ill-health, was unable to procure the same from the stenographer at an earlier date, it is a misfortune for which the law does not furnish such a remedy as he invokes here. As already observed, if the relator or his attorney had left the draft of the
The prayer of the petition for the writ is therefore denied, at the cost of the relator, John D, Holland.