138 W. Va. 332 | W. Va. | 1953
Lead Opinion
On December 10, 1951, the defendant Guy Clarence Cruikshank was tried and convicted by a Justice of the Peace of Clay County of the offense of wilfully neglecting and refusing, without lawful excuse, to provide for support or maintenance of his two legitimate children, under the age of sixteen years, in destitute and necessitous circumstances, under Section 1, Article 8, Chapter 48, Code, 1931, upon a warrant issued by the justice on the sworn complaint of Ruby Olive Cruikshank, the wife
Under Section 4, Article 8, Chapter 48, Code, 1931, as amended, the defendant appealed from the foregoing judgment of the justice to the Circuit Court of Clay County and gave bond in the penalty of one thousand dollars, the amount fixed by the justice, with Stella Cruikshank and Paul Cruikshank as his sureties. That section of the statute provides that a defendant who is convicted of an offense mentioned in Section 1 and who desires to appeal from such conviction shall give bond in the penalty of not less than five hundred dollars, conditioned that he appear before the court to which he appeals, and that if upon trial of the appeal he is again convicted of the charge, the payments shall be fixed by the judge of the court to which the appeal is taken in an amount to be determined by him. The section also provides that the amount, as fixed by the judge, shall relate to the date of the trial before the justice; that such bond shall be liable for the payments of the sums so fixed; that judgment may be entered upon such bond against the defendant and his surety; and that the court may enter such further judgment as may be proper under the statute.
The bond executed by the defendant and his sureties was conditioned that he personally appear before the Circuit Court of Clay County on the first day of its next regular term to answer the State of West Virginia for the offense of which he had been convicted and that he should not depart without leave of the court, but contained no express condition that he satisfy any judgment rendered by the court upon the appeal.
On appeal to the circuit court, the defendant, on June
By their assignments of error the defendant and his sureties seek reversal of the judgment of the circuit court on substantially these grounds:
(1) That Section 2, Article 8, Chapter 48, Code, 1931, authorizing a justice of the peace to try a husband or a parent for the offense created and made a misdemeanor by Section 1 of the same article and chapter of the Code, is unconstitutional because violative of Article III, Section 10, and Article III, Section 14, of the Constitution of West Virginia; (2) that Section 4, Article 8, Chapter 48, Code, 1931, as amended, limits the right of a defendant to appeal from the judgment of a justice of the peace to the extent of denying such appeal unless the defendant gives bond with surety in a penalty of at least five hundred dollars, with condition that he appear before the court to which he appeals and satisfy the judgment of the appellate court if convicted upon such appeal, and for that reason is unconstitutional as violative of Article III, Section 10, and Article III, Section 14, of the Constitution of West Virginia; (3) that the appeal bond, given under Section 4, Article 8, Chapter 48, Code, 1931, as amended, is void except as a bond to require the personal appearance of the defendant and can not constitute the basis of a judgment for the payment of money, and any such judgment rendered upon such bond is void; (4) that the bond given by the defendant and signed by the sureties contains no express condition to pay the judgment rendered by the circuit court upon the appeal and for that reason that court was without jurisdiction to render any judgment against the sureties on the bond; and (5) that, even if the bond is valid, the liability of the sureties is limited to the aggregate of two hundred and forty dollars, the amount fixed by the circuit court for
The questions sought to be raised by the assignments of error were not presented to or passed upon by the circuit court and the defendant and his sureties undertake to present them in the first instance to this Court upon this writ of error. The plaintiff, the State of West Virginia, insists that, as the defendant did not raise in the trial court the points now relied on for reversal of the judgment, he and his sureties may not raise them for the first time in this Court under the well recognized general rule that errors not assigned in the trial court will not be considered on appeal or writ of error.
The failure of the defendant, clearly shown by the record, to interpose any objection, to take any exception, and to make a motion to set aside the verdict and award a new trial, presents a preliminary question which must be determined before the questions sought to be raised by the assignments of error which challenge the validity of the judgment rendered by the circuit court may be considered or resolved.
“The general rule, subject to certain limitations and exceptions * * *, is that an appellate court will consider only such questions as were raised and reserved in the lower court. This rule is based upon considerations of practical necessity in the orderly administration of the law and of fairness to the court and the opposite party, and upon the principles underlying the doctrines of waiver and estoppel. Obviously, the ends of justice are served by the avoidance of the delay and expense incident to appeals, reversals, and new trials upon grounds of objection which might have been obviated or corrected
In the early case of State for the use of Price v. Phares, 24 W. Ya. 657, this Court said in point 3 of the syllabus that “In a case tried by a jury, no matter how many exceptions are taken to rulings of the court made during the trial, unless a motion is made before the trial-court to set aside the verdict, and that motion is overruled, all such errors saved will by the appellate court be deemed to have been waived.” In Banks v. Rodeheaver, 26 W. Va. 274, this Court held that if errors or supposed errors are committed by a trial court in its rulings during the trial of a case by a jury an appellate court cannot review such rulings unless they were objected to when made, the point saved, and a bill of exceptions taken showing such rulings, and unless a new trial is asked of the trial court and refused and such refusal objected to and noted of record; and that if either of those essentials is omitted the appellate court can not review the rulings of the trial court. Many subsequent decisions of this Court are to the effect that errors not specified on a motion for a new trial or not the subject of a special bill of exceptions will be treated as waived and will not be considered by an appellate court. State v. Thompson, 26 W. Va. 149; Kemble v. Herndon, 28 W. Va. 524; Gregory’s Admr. v. Ohio River Railroad Company, 37 W. Va. 606, 16 S. E. 819; State v. Henaghan, 73 W. Va. 706, 81 S. E. 539; Ireland v. Smith, 73 W. Va. 755, 81 S. E. 542; Parr v. Howell, 74 W. Va. 413, 82 S. E. 126; Bartlett v. Bank of Mannington, 77 W. Va. 329, 87 S. E. 444; State v. Jones, 77 W. Va. 635, 88 S. E. 45; Hinton Milling Company v. New River Milling Company, 78 W. Va. 314, 88 S. E. 1079; Holt v. Otis Elevator Company, 78 W. Va. 785, 90 S. E. 333, LRA 1917A, 1194; Freeburn, Admr. v. Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company, 79 W. Va. 789, 91 S. E. 990; Guyandotte Coal Company V. Virginian Electric and Machine Works, 94 W. Va. 300, 118 S. E. 512; State v.
The requirement that in the trial by a jury of an action at law a motion for a new trial must be made and refused and the refusal excepted to and noted of record, however, does not apply when the trial court is without jurisdiction of the subject matter involved, Hall v. Wadsworth, 30 W. Va. 55, 3 S. E. 29; or when a verdict is directed by a trial court, Breedlove v. Galloway, 109 W. Va. 164, 153 S. E. 298; or in instances in which the errors are of such character as to render the judgment of the lower court void, 3 Am. Jur., Appeal and Error, Section 247. In the Hall case a motion in arrest of judgment was made and overruled but there was no motion to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial. A motion for a new trial is also not required in a case tried by a court in lieu of a jury. Capitol City Supply Company v. Beury, 69 W. Va. 612, 72 S. E. 657; Fisher, Admr. v. Bell, 65 W. Va. 10, 63 S. E. 620; Citizens’ National Bank v. Walton, 96 Va. 435, 31 S. E. 890.
Section 35, Article 6, Chapter 56, Code, 1931, provides in part that “Any party may avail himself of any error appearing on the record, by which he is prejudiced, without obtaining a formal bill of exceptions, provided he objects or excepts* **to the action of the court complained of, and provided it is such a matter as can be considered without a formal bill of exceptions.” (Emphasis supplied.) This Court has consistently held that in order to
The general rule, previously stated, that an appellate court will consider only such questions as are raised and reserved in the lower court is limited to questions which are not jurisdictional in character. It does not apply to jurisdictional questions, and those questions, though not raised in the trial court may be considered and determined for the first time in an appellate court. 3 Am.
To obtain a review by this Court of the action of the circuit court in entering the judgment of July 9, 1952, upon the verdict of the jury it was incumbent upon the defendant to object or except to such action by that court.
As neither the defendant nor his sureties objected or excepted to the final order of the circuit court entering judgment against him and them as his sureties on the appeal bond, under Section 35, Article 6, Chapter 56, Code, 1931, and the decisions of this Court in Baker v. Gaskins, 124 W. Va. 69, 19 S. E. 2d 92; Harmon v. Spurlock, 121 W. Va. 633, 5 S. E. 2d 797; and Perry v. Horn and Carroll, 22 W. Va. 381, the questions which the defendant and his sureties seek to present by their assignments of error will not be considered or determined upon the present writ of error, and the writ heretofore granted must be discharged as improvidently awarded. This action of this Court, however, does not preclude or prevent them from presenting the jurisdictional questions embraced in their assignments of error in a proper proceeding to challenge the jurisdiction of the justice originally, and of the circuit court on appeal, to try the defendant upon a warrant, or the jurisdiction of the circuit court to enter judgment against the defendant and his sureties. If the justice of the peace originally, or the circuit court on appeal, was without jurisdiction to try the defendant upon the warrant, or the circuit court, having jurisdiction of the case, exceeded its legitimate powers in entering the judgment, questions which are not considered upon this writ of error, adequate relief may be obtained by the parties affected in a proceeding in prohibition. The writ of prohibition lies as a matter of right in all cases of usurpation and abuse of power, when the inferior court does not have jurisdiction of the subject matter in controversy, or having such jurisdiction, exceeds its legitimate powers. Section 1, Article 1, Chapter 53, Code, 1931.
For the reasons stated the writ of error heretofore granted is discharged as improvidently awarded.
Writ of error discharged.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I am of the view that the record in this case clearly shows the judgment complained of to be void, as being without the jurisdiction of the court, and that this Court, on its own motion, should notice lack of jurisdiction. The majority opinion, as I understand, concedes the judgment to be void. It refuses, however, to adjudicate the question on this writ of error for the reason that no objection was made thereto in the trial court. The bond was given pursuant to Code, 48-8-4. By no interpretation of the statute can it be contended that the court was empowered to enter judgment against the sureties on the bond for a sum greater than the amount thereof, and probably not for a sum greater than the aggregate of accrued support and maintenance payments ordered by the justice of the peace, to the time of the entry of the judgment in the circuit court. Yet the judgment complained of purports to require support and maintenance payments, in monthly sums of forty dollars, to be made by the sureties “until said children severally reach the age of sixteen years * *
In the instant proceeding we are not concerned with the general rule pointed out in the majority opinion, “ * * * that an appellate court will consider only such questions as were raised and reserved in the lower court * * but with the exception to that rule, also pointed out in the majority opinion, that the rule “does not apply to jurisdictional questions, and those questions, though not raised in the trial court may be considered and determined for the first time in an appellate court.” See authorities cited in the majority opinion. Yet in the face of this statement and of the numerous authorities cited in support thereof, the Court refuses to “consider and determine” the jurisdictional question, and dismisses the writ of error as having been improvidently awarded, simply because no objection to the question was made in the lower court.
In this State there is no question that void judgments may be reached by appellate proceedings. In the opinion in Hibner v. Belcher, 115 W. Va. 387, 176 S. E. 422, we find this statement: “The courts are not in entire accord on the right of appeal from a void judgment. 3 C. J., subject Appeal and Error, section 123. In this jurisdiction we have followed the majority rule and upheld the right. McCoy v. Allen, 16 W. Va. 724; Cook v. Dorsey, 38 W. Va. 196, 18 S. E. 468. We are supported
Under the authorities cited above, I can see no chance of doubt that the judgment complained of is void, being without the jurisdiction of the trial court; that such a judgment may be reversed through appellate procedure; and that it is the duty of this Court to notice such jurisdictional defect, whether or not there be other errors in the case and whether or not objection was made to the judgment in the lower court. Inasmuch as courts must necessarily, under our form of government, determine questions involving their own jurisdiction or powers, they are always, and always should be, careful in safeguarding against any abuse or unauthorized exercise or extension thereof, and especially should appellate courts be ever on guard against any improper exercise of jurisdiction or powers. For such reasons courts should not hesitate, but are duty bound, to examine questions of jurisdiction, on their own motions, wherever and whenever such questions appear.
The majority opinion relies heavily upon Harmon v. Spurlock, 121 W. Va. 633, 5 S. E. 2d 797, and Baker v.
■ I think Baker v. Gaskins, supra, from which was quoted the point of the syllabus applied in the instant ease, demonstrates the course heretofore followed by this Court in such circumstances. As to the question upon which the writ of error was granted, the Court stated: “ * * * Defendants’ counsel say that the writ was improvidently awarded because there was no objection or exception to the order upon which it is based. In this regard defendants’ position is well taken. To the order, plaintiff, in fact, did not object or except, and this Court is committed to the rule that a writ of error to an order of a trial court, to which no objection or exception has been taken, should not be awarded. * * Nevertheless, the Court noticed, on its own motion, and determined a jurisdictional question and carried the decision of the point into the syllabus, which reads: “An order of a trial court rendering judgment for costs alone but not adjudicating the merits of a case is not a final judgment, to which a writ of error will lie. Such defect is jurisdictional and should be considered by the appellate court ex mero motu.”
It appears to me to be an anomaly for this Court, where a writ of error has been granted, even if granted without "warrant, where it is clearly apparent from the record before the Court that there exists a jurisdictional question rendering the judgment complained, of void, in whole or in part, to dismiss the writ, simply because
Being of the views indicated, I respectfully dissent. I would consider and determine the jurisdictional question, set aside the judgment of the trial court in so far as it is void, and remand the case for the purpose of enforcing the judgment in so far as it is valid.