1 Kan. App. 730 | Kan. Ct. App. | 1895
This .action was commenced by the plaintiffs in the district court of Ford county to recover from the defendant the sum of $304, money overpaid by plaintiffs to him for work done as subcontractor in the construction of one mile of road-bed on the Chicago, Kansas & Nebraska railway in Ford county, Kansas, in 1887. An order of attachment ■was issued at the commencement of the action and defendant’s property seized by the sheriff, but the attachment was afterwards discharged by agreement of the parties. The defendant filed an answer to the petition of the plaintiffs, denying any indebtedness to them, and also a cross-petition demanding judgment against the plaintiffs for the sum of $3,058.58, as a balance due for work done under contract with plaintiffs as a subcontractor in the grading of one mile of road-bed on the Chicago, Kansas & Nebraska railway in Ford county, Kansas, in 1887. After issue had been joined, by agreement of all the parties, the action was referred to a referee for the purpose of taking the testimony and reporting his findings of fact and conclusions of law to the court. The case was heard before the referee, who made findings of fact and conclusions of law and reported the same to the court. The plaintiffs made the following exception to the finding of the referee : “I will ask you to put in a general exception for us, so that our rights will not be entirely lost in the matter.” The defendant made his motion in writing, asking the court to enter up j udgment in his favor in accordance with the findings of the referee. The court afterward, in the presence of the attorneys for both parties, rendered judgment in favor of the defendant, in accordance with the find
“1. The findings of facts made by the referee are not sustained by,/but are contrary to, the evidence.
“2. His conclusions of law, based upon the facts as found, are erroneous.
"3. Error of the court below in overruling plaintiffs’ exceptions to the findings of facts and conclusions of law of the referee.
“4. Error of the court below in causing judgment to be rendered in defendant’s favor, and in not causing judgment to be rendered in plaintiffs’ favor as prayed for in their petition.”
This court cannot review the findings of the referee to determine whether the findings are supported by sufficient evidence, or whether they are contrary to the evidence, as the plaintiffs did not have all the evidence taken on the trial before the referee preserved in such form as this court can review it. The referee says in his report that he has reduced the evidence taken by him to writing, and that the same is appended to his report. The transcript brought to this court has the following certificate attached:
“I, Thomas Lahey, clerk of the district court in and for the county and state aforesaid, in the twenty-seventh judicial district of said state, hereby certify that the foregoing and annexed papers contain true, full and complete copy and transcript of all pleadings and papers filed in the above-entitled cause, all orders of the court, the report of the referee, the evidence*735 submitted with the report, the judgment of the court, and all the proceedings in the above-entitled cause, as the same appears on file and of record in my office, save and except' that part of transcript which relates to agreement of parties to this case, which does not appear of record ; but that part marked thus £-’ in said report is only a minute on trial docket.”
The transcript fails to show that it contains all the evidence upon which the referee made his findings. In fact, the report of the referee shows that there was other evidence not included in the written evidence reported by him. It was the duty of the plaintiffs, if they desired the court to review the findings of the referee, to preserve the evidence in a bill of exceptions or a case-made, showing that it contained all of the evidence. (Walker v. Manufacturing Co., 8 Kas. 397; Bayer v. Cockerill, 3 id. 282; Simpson v. Woodward, 5 id. 571; Porter v. Hall, 11 id. 514; Davis v. Wilson, 11 id. 74; Hale v. Bridge Co., 8 id. 466; Blair v. Fields, 5 id. 58 ; Murray v. Kelly, 23 id. 667; Brown v. Johnson, 14 id. 378; The State, ex rel., v. Comm’rs Harper Co., 43 id. 195; Moody v. Arthur, 16 id. 419; Hill v. National Bank, 42 id. 364; Muscott v. Hanna, 26 id. 770; Insurance Co. v. Hogue, 41 id. 524; Russell v. Thompson, ante, p. 467.)
The plaintiffs failed to take any exceptions to the findings of the referee or to his report. An exception is an objection taken to a decision of the court or judge upon a matter of law. The party objecting to the decision must except at the time the decision is made, and time may be given to reduce the exception to writing, but not beyond the term. No particular form of exception is required. It must state so much of the evidence as is necessary to explain it, and no more, and the whole as briefly as possible. Where the decision is not entered on the record, or the grounds of objec
“The report of the referee was made and duly served on the plaintiff in error on April 9, 1885, and was not filed in the court until April 13, 1885, but no exceptions were taken or made to the report, or to any of the proceedings before the referee. They complain that the report is not as definite and complete as it should have been, in failing to state the existence, terms and conclusions of the partnership, and because it did not contain a detailed account of the assets and indebtedness of the firm, the amount invested by each partner in the business, and the amount drawn out by each, as well as the liability of each for the amount awarded in favor of the defendant in error. The plaintiffs in error are hardly in a position to complain. Aside from the fact that no exceptions were taken to the action of the referee, they did not request him to find more fully or specifically, although they had four days’ notice, before filing of the report, of what findings it contained, nor did they ask the court after the report was filed to refer the same for an additional or more complete statement of facts. Having brought none of the testimony or proceedings taken or had before the referee, we are unable to say what further findings the referee could or should have made. . . . Without, the evidence or any exceptions, the only question to be considered is, whether the findings support the judgment rendered ;■ and this we determine in the affirmative. The questions principally argued are not fairly raised upon the record. The defects complained of are such as might have been made the*738 subject of an application for further and more specific findings, but the plaintiffs in error chose not to avail themselves of the remedy. ... . All of the evidence and proceedings were before the court when it overruled the motion to set aside the report; and without these we cannot say the rulings were erroneous.”
Counsel also calls our attention to the case of Koehler v. Ball, 2 Kas. 160; but in .that case the plaintiff in error made his motion in the district court to set aside an order of the court confirming a sheriff’-s sale, also the appraisement and sale of the land, and the court refused to entertain his motion. He filed his petition in error in the supreme court to reverse the order of confirmation of said sale, and attached to his petition in error a transcript of the proceedings had in the district court. Cobb, C. J., delivering the opinion of the court, quoting with approval from the opinion of the supreme court of Ohio the case of Commercial Bank v. Buckingham, 12 Ohio St. 402 :
“ ‘The object of an exception is generally to bring upon the record for review a decision of the court upon a matter of law which the record would not otherwise show. In such cases the exception must be reduced to writing and allowed and signed by the court. But where the decision excepted to is entered on the record and the grounds of objection appear in the entry, the exception may be taken by the party causing it to be noted at the end of the decision that he excepts.’ ... If the record shows such final judgment, to be erroneous, it is the right of the party aggrieved to' have it /eversed’, vacated or modified on petition in error to the proper reviewing court.”
There being nothing in the record showing the proceedings to be erroneous, the only question that this court can consider is whether the final judgment rendered by the court is in accordance with the findings