Opening of Gold Street v. Newton

Moody, J.

The proceedings coming to this court with the above anomalous title were originally commenced before the board of county commissioners of Lawrence county. These proceedings seems to have been instituted lor the purpose of ascertaining and declaring a street in the town of Deadwood, known as Gold street, to be a public highway, and to direct the removal of obstructions therefrom.

From the order made by the board of county commissioners, the party above named, George H. Newton, conceiving himself aggrieved, appealed to the District Court of Lawrence county. In the District Court the cause was tried before the Court and a jury, and the verdict and judgment being an affirmance of the action of the board, Newton appeals to this court. . The order made by "the board, from which the appeal was taken, was as follows:

“ February 21st, 1878.
“ In the matter of opening the street known as Gold street, on the west side of Main street, taken up, and the following resolution was offered, and, on motion, adopted :
“Whereas, It appears to the satisfaction of this board, after due consideration of the evidence and arguments heard, and from plats and maps of Deadwood, that such street is, and was, a public highway. Now, therefore, be it
*153“ Resolved, That such be, and the same is, hereby declared a public highway on the west side of Main street. And it is further
Resolved and ordered, That the supervisor of Deadwood precinct be, and he is hereby authorized, to remove the building known as the Newton building, the same being an obstruction of such highway, and to give the parties occupying such building notice of such removal.”

The transcript brought to this court contains what purports to be the evidence adduced before the board of county commissioners, both documentary and oral, upon which the order was based, and also what purports to be the proceedings before the District Court. What purports to be the evidence before the board of county commissioners is in no way authenticated to this court, except by the certificate of the District Court clerk, in the usual form. Nor is any proper bill of exceptions brought here containing the proceedings before the District Court; but under date of July 12th, 1878, there appears a certificate of the then presiding Judge, certifying that “ inasmuch as the matters aforesaid do not appear of record, the counsel for the defendant presents the bill of exceptions, and prays that the same may be signed and • sealed by the Court and made a part of the record in said cause, and it is done accordingly.”

There is no heading or coriimencement to a bill of exceptions, and nothing to designate how much of the “ aforesaid matters ” are intended to be embraced in said certificate; and inasmuch as some proceedings were had long after the entry of judgment, and shortly before the date of such certificate, it is difficult to determine what was intended to be embraced by it. However in the view we have taken of this case, this difficult problem we are not obliged to resolve.

The first question which is presented for our determination, arises upon the motion, in this court, of the counsel appearing for the parties interested in sustaining the judgment, — to strike out and eliminate from the record all, except the order of the board appealed from, — the verdict, and judgment, and notice of , appeal, including whatever may be deemed a part of the alleged bill of exceptions, upon the ground that it forms no part properly of the record, and was not a proper part of the judgment roll.

It seems this cause was tried in the District Court at the March, *1541878 term, of that court; that after such, term, had adjourned without day, and more than thirty days after the entry of judgment, the counsel for Newton presented to the Judge, who presided at the trial, this bill of exceptions, if it may be thus denominated, and procured his signature thereto, and this without haying kept alive their right to have a bill of exceptions settled and signed, by any application to the Court, or Judge, by any order of the Court, or the Judge thereof, or by any stipulation procured from the opposite party, and so far as appears without any knowledge or consent, express or implied, on the part of the counsel, or parties interested, opposing them. This, under the uniform practice of the courts, is an irregularity for which this court is bound to disregard whatever may be considered as a part of the bill of exceptions, and to treat it as no part of the record.

Using the language of Chief Justice Waite in the case of Muller et al v. Ehlers, 1st Otto, 251: The power to reduce exceptions taken at the trial to form, and to have them signed and filed, is, under ordinary circumstances, confined to a time, not later than the term at wrhich the judgment was rendered. This, we think, is the true rule, and one to which there should be no exceptions without an express order of the Court, during the term, or consent of the parties, save under very extraordinary circumstances.”

Here we find no order of the Court, no consent of the parties, and no such circumstances, as will justify a departure from the rule. I am not unmindful of the rule of our Statute, allowing ten days after entry of judgment within which to juesent the bill of exceptions to the Judge and have it settled, but in this case it was over thirty days after entry of judgment before the bill was presented and settled.

All that portion of the record purporting to be the evidence adduced before the board of county commissioners, as has been said, is in no way authenticated; and if it was, we should have to disregard it and treat it as no part of the record. By the Statute all appeals taken to the District Court from decisions of the board of county commissioners are to be heard and determined de novo. Whatever evidence may have been introduced before the board to be available must again be offered in the District Court, and its *155being certified to by the county clerk makes it no part of the record. To preserve it for this court, it must be offered in the District Court and incorporated in the bill of exceptions, which was not done in this case. It follows the motion must be sustained. Nothing then remains for us to consider as a part of the record before us, save the order and decision appealed from, the verdict and judgment.

The proceedings relative to the opening of a public highway is a subject over which the county commissioners had ample jurisdiction. No organization of a municipality where this street is located existed to take the subject away from the board. AVe think the board had. jurisdiction to make the order; that the District Court had jurisdiction of the appeal from their decision; that the verdict is sufficient to support the judgment, and the judgment a valid one. Nothing appearing in the record to the contrary, every presumption is in favor of the regularity of the proceedings. This judgment is

Affirmed.

All the Justices concurring.