State ex rel. Morton v. Dickinson

Sullivan, J.

This is an original application for a writ of mandamus to require the respondent, one of the judges of the district court of Douglas county, to settle, allow, and sign a bill of exceptions. The case of the Western Seed & Irrigation Co. against Robert B. Morton and others was tried before the respondent during the September, 1897, term of said court and resulted in a verdict for defendants. The plaintiff moved for a new trial, and its motion was *252sustained on January 6, 1898. On the 15th of the same month the September term was adjourned sine die. A second'trial of the action, at the May, 1898, term, resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff. On June 18 a motion for a new trial was overruled and judgment rendered on the verdict. On the same day the term was adjourned sine die. Afterwards, and within the time limited by the court at the May term for that purpose, the draft of a bill of exceptions was served by the defendants and presented to the respondent for allowance. This draft embraced the evidence .taken on the first trial, and its substantial correctness is conceded. Was it the duty of the judge to allow the bill with this evidence included? That is the question for decision.

Prior to 1895, section 311 of the Code of Civil Procedure, so far as it is material to this inquiry, was as follows: “When the decision is not entered on the record, or the grounds of objection do not sufficiently appear in the entry, the party excepting must reduce his exceptions to writing within fifteen (15) days, or in such time as the court may direct, not exceeding forty (40) days from the adjournment sine die, and submit the-same to the adverse party or his attorney of record for examination and amendment if desired.” There was much diversity of opinion among the members of the bar as to whether the time limited in this section for the settlement of a bill of exceptions commenced to run from the adjournment of the term at which the trial was had or from the adjournment of the term at which the result of the trial was judicially declared and entered of record. The construction of the law by the district judges was not uniform 'and the decisions of this court left the matter in some doubt. After an exhaustive review of our cases bearing upon this question Mr. Commissioner Irvine in State v. Ambrose, 47 Neb. 235, stated the conclusion of the court in the following language: “Where a trial has been had and a motion for a new trial sustained, the time for preparing a bill of exceptions em*253bodying tlie evidence on that trial is fixed at the latest by the term at which the motion for a new trial was sustained, and not by the term at which final judgment was rendered, or at which a new trial was had, or a new trial after such second trial denied.” Owing to the broad discretion vested in the district court to grant new trials,, as well as to the fact that this court has rarely disapproved the action of the district court in the exercise of that discretion, the practice of preserving the evidence supporting a verdict which has been set aside on motion of the losing party has never been much in vogue. The contention of the bar was that a party ought not to be put to the expense of procuring a bill of exceptions until the result of the trial was known. It was not claimed, so far as we know, that, under the statute as it existed prior to 1895, a bill of exceptions could be allowed covering anything more than the evidence which was the basis of the decision objected to. In State v. Ambrose, supra, after showing that the reporter’s notes are not a conclusive record of what transpired at the trial, it is said: “Therefore, the policy of the law requires that the bill of exceptions should be settled within such reasonable time fixed by statute after the taking of the evidence sought to be preserved, that the parties and the judge may bring to their aid their own recollections.” Considering then the general policy of the law as shown by the foregoing excerpt, and bearing in mind the mischief resulting from the diverse constructions given by the courts to the old section, we experience m? difficulty in reaching the conclusion that the purpose of the amendment of 1895 was to render certain what was previously in doubt,, and to settle definitely the right of suitors to have a bill of exceptions allowed within a limited period after the adjournment of the term at which the result of the hearing or trial is formally announced. It was not. intended that such bill of exceptions should reach back and take in the evidence adduced on former trials. The language of the amended section is that “the party ex*254cepting moist reduce his exceptions to writing within fifteen (15) days, or in such time as the court may direct, not exceeding forty (40) days from the adjournment sine die of the term of court at which judgment is rendered or at which the motion for a new trial is ruled on.” (Code of Civil Procedure, 1895, sec. 311.) The amendment was merely the insertion of a prepositional phrase defining and limiting the meaning of the word “court” as it stood in the original section. In law cases the decision on the motion to vacate the verdict is the action of the court that finally determines the result of the trial. When the motion is denied, the unsuccessful litigant' is reliably informed of the necessity of securing the settlement and allowance of a bill of exceptions if he desires a review of errors of law occurring at the trial. In suits in equity the announcement of the findings and the rendition of judgment are nearly always concurrent acts, and if there be no motion for a. new trial the bill of exceptions is to be settled within the statutory period following the adjournment of the term. The motion for a new trial mentioned in the statute is not necessarily the motion immediately preceding the judgment. It means in every case the motion following the particular trial, the events of which it is sought to make authentic history. The writ is

Denied.