OPINION OE THE COURT.
PER CURIAM..1 By the provisions of Chapter I of the Laws of 1889, a party may prepare a bill of exceptions twenty days before the first day of the term of the Supreme Court, and give five days notice to the opposite party, who has five days to propose amendments thereto, arid the judge shall settle and sign the exceptions ten days before the term of the Supreme Court in which thé case shall first be docketed, unless for good and sufficient reason the time therefor has been extended.
In this case no application was made for an extension of time, and none was granted. The bill of exceptions was first presented to the judge for his signature on the fourth instant, and was by him settled and signed on that date.
2 This court has held that a motion to strike out a bill of exceptions under an appeal taken in a criminal case, . when said bill was signed and sealed by the trial judge at a day later than that allowed by the statute, to-wit, ten days before return term, will be sustained; the statute is mandatory, and the judge exceeds his authority in such case in settling the bill at such time. Haynes v. United States, 56 Pac. 282.
It would seem that this decision, which settles the law and practice so far as this Territory is concerned, is controlling in this particular case, so far as the settling and signing of the bill of exceptions- is concerned.
It is urged, however, on behalf of the appellant, that he was delayed by reason of the inability of the official stenographer to furnish him a transcript of the testimony. While there is some potency in this suggestion, yet the appellant had his remedy in such emergency, in that he could have applied to the district judge for an extension of time within which to have his bill of exceptions settled and signed. The fact that he allowed the time within which to have his bill of exceptions signed to elapse, without having such extension, divested the judge of any jurisdiction, and he was powerless to exercise any discretion in the premises.
Unless the appellant is protected by the provisions of chapter XCIX of the laws of 1901, the appeal herein should be dismissed, and the judgment and sentence of the court below affirmed.
This act provides that the appellant shall have the right to docket his appeal at any time before motion by appellee to docket and affirm the judgment; and that when such case shall be docketed by the appellant, the record may be perfected within thirty days thereafter.
The question arises as to whether this provision, pro-, viding that “The record may be perfected within thirty days thereafter, changes in any way the practice relative to preparing, settling and signing a proper bill of exceptions.
We are of tbe opinion that it is not so intended. If a party desires to prepare and file a bill of exceptions, so that it may become a part of tbe record, be must pursue tbe well-defined practice in that behalf. Tbe law of 1901 does not undertake in any manner to change tbe practice relative to tbe preparation, settling and signing of tbe bill of exceptions, and we must regard tbe practice as it existed previous to tbe enactment of chapter 99 of tbe laws of 1901 to still prevail with reference to bills of exceptions. If any additions are to be made to tbe record, or tbe appellant desires to take any additional steps with tbe view of perfecting bis record, tbe statute gives him thirty days within which to accomplish that purpose.
To hold otherwise would be to recognize Chapter XCIX of tbe Laws of 1901 as an amendment to tbe practice act, and would operate as a repeal of many well-defined and well-understood statutes, which have been construed by the court, touching tbe practice relating to tbe preparation, settling and signing of bills of exception and tbe preparation of tbe record on appeal. This act does not in any way suggest a substitute or method of procedure which would take tbe place of tbe statutes referred to touching tbe practice in this particular, and with reference to procedure in this court on appeals and writs of error. This court can not recognize tbe application of statutes which are so vague and indefinite in their language as to leave doubt as to their purport and intent; and can not construe them as repealing by implication numerous specific acts touching particular procedure, and especially is this so when no repealing clause is embodied in tbe act in question.
Tbe word “perfected,” as used in Chapter XCIX of tbe Laws of 1901, can not, we think, be construed as meaning tbe right to prepare a record in its entirety. In section 3140 of the Compiled Laws it is provided that a perfect transcript shall be filed by tbe appellant. In sub-section 172 of tbe Code, it is provided that a bill of exceptions shall be signed and perfected thirty days before the first day of the Supreme Court.
We are therefore of the opinion that the use of the word “perfected,” in Section 1, Chapter XCIX of the Laws of 1901, has reference to the perfecting of an imperfect record, and not to the preparation and filing of such record in its entirety in the first instance.
In Crolot v. Maloy, 2 N. M. 198, it is held that the hill of exceptions was imperfect in that it did not have at the close of the testimony a certificate that it contained all of the evidence. This was such an imperfection that the court was relieved from the necessity of examining the case, before ordering either dismissal or affirmance.
Imperfections of this character could undoubtedly be perfected, upon a proper application, addressed to the discretion of this court.
The method of procedure with reference to the preparation and signing of a hill of exceptions is well defined and has been frequently passed upon by this court, so that it can not he regarded as presenting a novel question in procedure. See Crabtree v. Segrist, 3 N. M. 495; Co. Commr’s v. A. T. & S. F. Ry. Co., 3 N. M. 677; Evans v. Bragg, 4 N. M. 67; Gonzales v. Santa Fe Ry., 3 N. M. 515; Haynes v. United States, 9 N. M. 519; Martin v. R. R., 7 N. M. 161.
The appellant has selected his own method of procedure. He sought to make a bill of exceptions, and to have it made a part of the record in this proceeding, and being unable to perfect it in time, it was his duty, if he desired to have such hill of exceptions settled and signed and made a part of the record, to procure an extension of time in the event it could not be done within the time limited. This he neglected to do, and thereby lost his right unc[er the statute to have his bill of exceptions settled and signed or made a part of the record and considered by this Gourt.
3 At the time the district judge signed the bill of exceptions in this proceeding, the limitation of time within which it could be done had expired, and the judge was without jurisdiction and had neither the power at that time to sign the bill of exceptions nor to extend the time within which the same could be signed.
Again, it may well be questioned whether the Act of 1901, has any application. whatever to criminal cases. The act seems to bé in harmony with the practice in civil cases therein the record may be made up without a bill of exceptions, and where the filing of a transcript of the stenographer’s minutes, duly certified, with the district clerk, malees such minutes a part of the record, while on the other hand such statute is strongly at variance, with many státutory provisions touching the practice in criminal procedure.
We can not assume that the Legislature intended by the language used to allow a delay of at least a year in criminal prosecutions, and thus entail upon the public the expenses incident thereto. If such were, the im tention, it should have been expressed in more direct and specific terms.
For the foregoing reasons, the motion of the ap-pellee to dismiss the appeal herein, and to affirm the judgment and sentence of the court below, is granted. And it is so ordered.
By the court, William J. Mills, Chief Justice.