538 P.2d 1364 | Mont. | 1974
delivered the Opinion of the Court.
Application by appellant Bill Eoscoe Merseal for an order compelling Carroll B. Copeland, official court reporter for the fourth judicial district, to supply him with one original copy of the transcript of the proceedings in the district court and charge him no more than T1/^- per folio (100 words). Appellant intends to reproduce the transcript on his own, for an appeal from a conviction for second degree assault. Appellant is not an indigent.
The issue raised is: May a nonindigent appellant in a criminal case compel a court reporter to furnish only the original transcript of the trial court proceedings, and furnish other copies of the transcript himself?
In support of his position appellant simply asserts there are no explicit rules concerning the number of copies of the transcript which must be filed on appeal.
Eule IV of the Eules of the Montana Supreme Court, 1966, states:
“1. In all criminal appeals the Montana Eules of Appellate Civil Procedure may be followed in the preparation of the record on appeal insofar as they are applicable and not in conflict with a specific statutory provision of the Criminal Code. # *
Eule 10 of the M.E.App.Civ.P. states:
“(a) * * * Six copies of each transcript must be lodged with the Clerk of this Court for filing. #
This Court is clearly entitled to six copies of the trial transcript. The only statute in Montana’s Code of Criminal Procedure at variance with the above-quoted rules is section 95-2428, E.C.M.1947, which concerns itself with indigent appeals and is not applicable here.
In view of the foregoing, it is incumbent that the copies of the transcript needed by the parties for use on appeal also be procured from the reporter.
The relief sought by appellant is denied.