65 Mo. 634 | Mo. | 1877
The petition states that on the trial of a cause in which the present relator was plaintiff', and Chester H. ICrum, adm’r, was defendant, before Hon. John Wickham, one of the judges of the circuit court of St. Louis county, certain instructions were given by the court to which plaintiff' then and there excepted, and a verdict was found by the jury for defendant; that on the 24th day of January, 1877, within four days after the verdict was rendered, plaintiff filed his motion for a new trial, which the court, on Monday, the 5th day of February following, overruled; that on the next day he filed his motion for a rehearing, which the court overruled on Monday, the 12th of February, having erroneously taken it as submitted without argument, but afterwards granted plaintiff leave to file a brief thereon, to wit, on Saturday, the 24th of February, which brief was accordingly submitted; that by the practice and habit of said judge, Monday in every week has been established by custom for rendering his decisions; that counsel for relator used due diligence by attendance on said court up to Monday, the 12th of March, at which time said court had still delayed its decision on said motion, and to which fact he then called the attention of the court.; that on Monday following, to wit, the 19th of March, counsel for plaintiff again attended said court, and, on inquiry, was, to his surprise, informed that on Tuesday, the 13th of March, the court had overruled the motion; that from the custom of the court in delivering its decisions on Monday he was led into error, having cause to believe and believing that no decision would be rendered until Monday, the 19th of March, on which day, the time allowed under the rule for filing bills of exceptions had expired ; that he immediately proceeded to prepare his bill of exceptions and tendered the same to Judge Wickham on the 30th of March,
The petition discloses the fact that when the bill of exceptions was presented to Judge Wickham he declined to sign it among other reasons, because it “ contained nothing but a garbled statement of the evidence.” If he chose to adopt the strong language used by Judge Krum, we are not aware of any law to forbid it. The law does xxot require the return to be sworn to and Judge Wickham is represented here by respectable attorneys of this court, who have filed his return, and we cannot on the mere suggestioxx of the relator, say that this is xxot Judge Wickham’s return. We shall not examine the questioxi of sui prise presented by this petition, or determine whether Judge Wickham abused the discretion the law gave him as to signing bills of exceptions when presented out of time, because there is a point in the case fatal
The petition states that Judge Wickham refused to sign the bill of exceptions, because it did not fairly state the evidenee in the cause, and in his return the . . judge assigns that as one ox the reasons tor refusing to sign the bill. If we had no statute regulating the practice in this matter, and providing a remedy for a party when the coui’t refuses to sign his bill of exceptions on the ground that it is untrue, a court would scarcely by a mandamus, compel the judge of the court to sign a bill of exceptions, which he alleges to be untrue, and the party alleges to be true, and nothing else appeared to show which was right. But our statute, sec. 29, page 1044, Wag. Stat. provides that: “If the judge refuse to sign such bill, on the ground that it is untrue, he shall certify thereon, under his hand, the cause of such refusal.” Sec. 30, “ if the judge refuse to sign any bill of exceptions, such bill may be signed by -three bystanders, who are respectable inhabitants of the State, and the court shall permit every such bill (if the same be true) to be filed in court.” Sec. 32, “ when the judge shall refuse to permit any bill of exceptions, signed by the bystanders, to be filed, and shall have certified that it is untrue, either party in the suit may take affidavits, not exceeding five in number, in relation to its truth.” The relator’s replication shows that the judge endorsed on the bill of exceptions, his refusal to sign it, “because it was untrue.” Relator had then but to resort to the remedy provided by the statute, and if the court still refused to permit it to be filed, he should have taken his affidavits, and then.the appellate court could have passed upon the question of time, and, if it found from the affidavits that the bill of exceptions was true, and that there was an abuse of discretion in refusing permission to file the bill, the cause would be held to be properly in the appellate court. With the concurrence of all the judges, the peremptory writ of mandamus is refused. Writ Refused.