102 N.W. 878 | N.D. | 1905
On June 21, 1902, an indictment was filed in the district court of Bottineau county charging the defendant with the crime of keeping and maintaining a common nuisance. The trial, which occurred on June 13,1903, resulted in a verdict of guilty, and on July 7th thereafter the defendant was sentenced to ninety days imprisonment in the county jail and to pay a fine of $300, together with the costs of the -prosecution, taxed at $50, and in default of payment of said fine and costs to serve an additional period- of three months. The defendant has appealed-from the judgment after taking steps to supersede its execution.
The errors subjoined to appellant’s brief and urged as grounds for reversal are stated as follows: “(1) The court -erred in overruling the motion to dismiss for failure to prosecute. (2) The court erred in overruling the motion to set aside the indictment. (3) The court -erred in refusing to set aside the verdict by reason of the insufficiency of the -evidence and in overruling the motion to advise the jury to acquit.” There are three further assignments, each of which is directed to the instruction t-o the jury.
The condition of the record is such that we are unable to review any of the questions presented by the assignments. The appellant has failed to prepare and present a record which will -authorize a consideration of any of the errors which he claims were committed by the -trial court. It is a well-settled rule of appellate procedure, applicable to criminal as well as civil cases, that one who would urge -error must present a record of the facts upon which the trial court acted in making the ruling or order complained of, and in case of failure to do so a review cannot be had. “The burden is al•ways upon an appellant to establish error, and it is necessary for him to embody in his abstract such portion of the record as will establish the facts necessary to sustain his contention.” Ashe v. Beasley, 6 N. D. 192, 69 N. W. 188. It is also well settled that “all matters which do not constitute a part of the record proper, at common law or by statute must be brought in by a bill of exceptions
That the third assignment cannot be reviewed in the absence of a statement is apparent from the mere recital of the errors sought to be reviewed. The instructions to the jury, which were oral, and were afterwards extended by the stenographer, and filed, some time after the trial was closed, with the clerk are set out in the abstract. They are not signed by the trial judge, or otherwise identified by him. Sections 8269, 8297, Rev. Codes 1899, provide that a copy of oral instructions written out by the stenographer and filed with the clerk shall constitute a part of the record of the action. Whether instructions given orally become a part of the record by the mere act of the stenographer in extending and filing them with the clerk, and in the absence of the signature of the trial judge or other indentification by him, is open to question. Under a statute somewhat similar (section 1176, Deering Code 1886, vol. 4) it was held by the Supreme Court of California in a series of cases that instructions inserted in the record by the clerk without the indorsement of the court, and not settled in a statement of the case, cannot be considered. See People v. Flahave, 58 Cal. 249; People v. January, 77 Cal. 179, 19 Pac. 258. It is not necessary for us to decide this question at this time for the reason that the defendant’s exceptions to the instructions which the abstract recites were subsequently filed with the clerk are not a part of the
The abstract also contains a motion for new trial. The motion was made upon the minutes, and the motion did not specify particularly or at all the errors relied upon, as required by section 8273, Rev. Codes 1899, and no error can therefore be predicated upon it. The absence of a statement is also fatal.
Furthermore, the defects which thus appear upon the face of the abstract and preclude a review of the .errors urged by -the appellant are not such as can be cured by an amendment of it. We have carefully examined the mass of miscellaneous papers embodied in the transcript returned to this court by the clerk of the district court, and find that it contains no statement of the case which can serve as a basis for reviewing any of the errors relied upon. Among other papers foreign to the record proper, it contains a transcript of the testimony taken at the trial. Also a transcript of the testimony taken upon the motion to set aside the indictment. It also contains a four-page document, which is styled a “statement of the case,” and a further document, consisting of eight pages, which is termed an “amended statement of the case.” These so-called statements are not settled or certified to by the trial judge, and this is also true of the two transcripts. The only 'document which bears the signature of the trial judge consists of four pages, upon which appear excerpts from the testimony of six witnesses. H-e certifies that this “is a true and correct statement of the proceedings had before me in the trial, * * * which do not appear of record.” It is entirely clear that this statement is not sufficient, either in form or substance, to authorize a review of any of the errors urged upon this appeal. It purports to be no more than a partial record. It contains no specification of errors, as required by section 8273, Rev. Codes 1899, and does not, therefore, present the questions involved in the motion for a new trial, and it embodies no facts relating to the other errors assigned upon this appeal. The record itself being thus defective, it is apparent that the abstract cannot be cured by amendment; and to permit the record to be sent down to the end that a proper
Judgment affirmed.