In the consideration of the appeal, the fact questions are determinative. We are confronted with a motion by the appellee to strike the evidence contained in appellant’s abstract, and to affirm on the ground that the evidence was not properly preserved and made of record, as required by the statute. The facts put forth in support of such motion are undisputed. The case came on for trial in the district court on April 29, 1915. At the conclusion of the taking of evidence, the record shows the following entry: “Evidence closed by agreement of counsel.” A future date was set for argument, May 12, 1915. On the latter date, the following entry appears of record:
“The parties have leave to take further evidence as to *101tbe property claimed by Valina Keith and submit the same to the coftrt as a part oí the evidence in this case on final submission.”
Pursuant to such order, the parties took the additional testimony of two witnesses. Such testimony, however, was not taken by the regular shorthand reporter of the district court, but, by agreement of both parties, was taken by one Chambers, a stenographer. The evidence so taken was duly transcribed, and was introduced in evidence at the final submission of the case. The final submission was had on December 17, 1915, on which date the decree was entered. The shorthand notes taken by the regular court reporter in April were duly certified by the reporter and judge, and duly filed. A certified transcript thereof was also filed within the statutory time. The final certificate from the trial judge, certifying to all the evidence, including the transcript of the regular reporter and of the notes taken by Chambers, was duly signed by the trial judge, June 17, 1916. This certification of the trial judge and transcript of Chambers to which it was attached, were not 'jileé until June 2S, 1916. This was after six months from the date of the decree. There had been no previous certification or filing of the shorthand notes of Chambers.' Under Section 3652, Code Supplement, 1913, and under our previous decisions construing the same, it was essential to the preservation of the evidence as a part of the record that the same should be certified, either in shorthand or transcript, within six months, and that the certification should be filed with the clerk within six months from the entry of decree. Yetzer v. Wiles, 91 Iowa 478; Calef v. Cole, 93 Iowa 679; First Nat. Bank v. Redhead N. L. & Co., 103 Iowa 421; Smith v. Wellslager, 105 Iowa 140.
In resistance to this motion, the appellants dispute no fact or date set forth. Their contention is that the actual identity of the evidence in the lower court is accomplished. *102by the practical agreement of the parties. By way of resistance to the motion to strike and affirm, the appellants admit that the testimony of the two witnesses in question was precisely as and what the appellee claims it to be. It appears, also, that there was a proceeding in the trial court seeking a correction of the record. In such proceeding the appellee set forth a transcript of the testimony of the two witnesses in question. The appellants admitted the same fully, and admit the same herein. It is urged, therefore, that the testimony is as completely preserved and identified by this agreement as it could be so done by the certification and filing of the transcript within six months. The argument has its plausibility. But the statutory method of preserving the evidence of record is necessarily exclusive. There is no other method. If the certification of the evidence be not both made and filed within six months from the entry of the decree, then the evidence, in a sense, dies, and loses its identity as a part of the record. A right arises to the appellee to have the finding of facts of the trial court henceforth deemed a verity. Assuming that the appellee could waive such right, by agreement or otherwise, or that he could estop himself by conduct from asserting such right, no question of that kind is presented by this record.
The simple fact before us is that the certificate- of the trial judge to all evidence, which was made within six months, and which was attached to the Chambers transcript, was not in fact filed until after the expiration of six months. The evidence as a whole, therefore, was not preserved, and a trial de novo here cannot be had.
It can, of course, be plausibly argued that a certification filed within six months and ten days is as credible and satisfactory as one filed within six months, and that a holding to the contrary is purely technical. But the technicality is only such as inheres in all statutes of fixed time and *103date. Unless such statutes are applied according to their terms, they have no function whatever. It would be idle, for instance, to provide by statute that a litigant may appeal within six months, if the courts would still hold that an appeal within six months and a day would be entertained.
We see no escape for the appellants upon this record. The motion to strike must be sustained. No question is presented which would not involve a consideration of the evidence. The judgment below must, therefore, be — Affirmed.
Ladd, C. J., Preston and Salinger, JJ., concur.