THE STATE v. ORVILLE MCLAIN, Appellant
18 S. W. (2d) 16
Division Two
June 4, 1929
324 Mo. 32
The judgment accordingly is affirmed. All concur.
Stratton Shartel, Attorney-General, and Joseph F. Holland, Special Assistant Attorney-General, for respondent.
COOLEY, C.—Defendant was convicted of the felonious sale of moonshine whiskey and sentenced to two years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary, and he appeals.
The Attorney-General in his brief makes the point that the purported bill of exceptions is not properly authenticated and that there is, therefore, nothing before this court for review but the record proper. From an examination of the record we find that this contention must be sustained.
The information was filed and the case was tried in the Circuit Court of Stoddard County, in which county the offense is alleged to have occurred. Stoddard County is in the 22d Judicial Circuit, of which Hon. W. S. C. Walker was at the time and still is the regular judge, having been re-elected to succeed himself at the 1928 general election. After the information was filed, defendant filed application with supporting affidavits for a change of venue from Judge Walker, disqualifying him, which application was sustained and thereupon Hon. E. P. Dorris, then the regular judge of the twentieth Circuit, was by proper order called in to try the case, and it was set down for trial for August 29, 1927, before Judge Dorris. At that date Judge Dorris appeared and assumed jurisdiction of the case. It was tried on September 1, 1927. Defendant timely filed his motion for new trial, which was continued to the next term when, on January 24, 1928, it was overruled and defendant was duly sentenced, and at the same term an appeal was granted defendant and he was given ninety days in which to file a bill of exceptions. Judge Dorris presided as judge in all of these proceedings. No further proceedings in the case appear from the record until January 18, 1929, when, in vacation of court, defendant filed his bill of exceptions which purports to have been signed and allowed on January 16, 1929, by Hon. Will H. Green, judge of the Twentieth Circuit. It is signed thus: “Will H. Green, Judge of the Circuit Court of the Twentieth Judicial Circuit of Missouri and successor in office of Judge E. P. Dorris, who presided as the judge in the trial of this case.” The foregoing is the only authentication of the purported bill of exceptions that appears in the record.
By the provisions of
Judge Walker, having been disqualified, was without authority to sign the bill of exceptions. Judge Dorris, who had gone out of office, no longer had authority to do so. [State v. Grant, 124 Mo. App. 129, 100 S. W. 1113; State v. Gordon, 196 Mo. 185, 95 S. W. 420; Coons v. Coons, 178 S. W. 484.] It appears therefore that
In State v. Grant, supra, the St. Louis Court of Appeals followed the then recent decision of this court in State v. Gordon, supra, in holding that a judge of another circuit called in to try a criminal case as was done here, is without authority to sign the bill of exceptions after his commission expires and he has become a private citizen. But the court intimates, arguendo, that the decision in the Gordon case indicates that the successor of such judge would be the proper person to sign the bill. This observation in the opinion in the Grant case, however, is obiter and an examination of the decision in the Gordon case will show that the court was not construing the provision of the statute involved here. In the Gordon case, Hon. Samuel Davis, Judge of the 15th Circuit, had been called in to try a criminal case in the St. Francois County Circuit Court upon the disqualification of Judge Anthony, the regular judge. There was a trial and conviction, but no judgment was rendered on the verdict at the time. Later and after the expiration of the then current terms of office of both Judge Anthony and Judge Davis, the court, with Judge Davis presiding, entered the proper judgment and sentence, nunc pro tunc. Judge Davis also extended the time for filing the bill of exceptions and eventually signed the bill. But Judge Davis had been re-elected and continued in office as judge of the 15th Circuit and this court was considering the question whether or not, he having been called in to try the case and having assumed jurisdiction, such
“It may be conceded that if Judge Davis had not been re-elected he would have had no authority whatever to enter the nunc pro tunc judgment and to pass sentence upon defendant, as it was only in his capacity of judge of the circuit court of the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit that he had such authority.”
In the same paragraph, however, this court says further:
“. . . but as he continued, without intermission, to be judge of that circuit, and his present or succeeding term of office as judge of said circuit, for which he had been duly elected, commissioned and qualified, commenced immediately upon the expiration of the term during which he presided at the trial of said case, there was, therefore, no vacancy in said office, and we are of opinion that he retained jurisdiction of the case.”
This court further held in the Gordon case that
The only case directly in point on the fact that we have been able to find after careful research, is Coons v. Coons, 178 S. W. 484. In that case the regular judge, Hon. W. S. C. Walker, was disqualified, having been of counsel, and Hon. Charles B. Faris, Judge of the 28th Circuit, was called in to try the case and did so. The bill of exceptions was signed after Judge Faris went out of office by his successor, Judge Frank Kelly, and also by Judge Walker. This court held that both were without authority to sign, Judge Walker
That course might have been pursued here under the provisions of
It was evidently the legislative intent that no litigant should be deprived of his statutory right to a hearing on appeal because the judge before whom his case was tried went out of office before a bill of exceptions could be procured. But it is also apparent that ample provision has been made whereby that result can be attained without giving to any portion of the statute law a strained construction, such as we think would have to be given to
There being no properly authenticated bill of exceptions, there is nothing here for review but the record proper. [Coons v. Coons, supra; State v. McCullough, 289 S. W. 814; State v. Gholson, 292 S. W. 27.] We find the record proper free from error.
The judgment, therefore, is affirmed. Davis and Henwood, CC., concur.
PER CURIAM:—The foregoing opinion by COOLEY, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court. All of the judges concur.
