delivered the opinion of the court:
The jury having found a verdict against the defendant, judgment thereon was rendered against him at the same time, to-wit: on the 7th day of December, 1855, at a circuit court then being held for the county of Franklin. On the next day the defendant filed his grounds, and moved the court for a new trial. This motion was overruled on the 10th day of the same month, and during the same term. To the opinion of the court overruling the motion, an exception was taken, and time was given .by the court to the defendants, until the 23d day of January thereafter, to file their bill of exceptions, and at the same time the defendant prayed an appeal to this court. It is stated by the counsel of the plaintiffs that the 23d day of January, 1856, (the time to which the right of the defendants to file their bill of *607exceptions had been extended,) was fixed by the court for the commencement of a special term for the trial of criminal and chancery causes. But on this day no motion was made to file the bill of exceptions nor any notice taken of it in any way. On the 28th day of January, the Franklin circuit court being then in session for the trial of motions, &c., in behalf of the commonwealth, further time, until the 1st day of the ensuing March, was given to the defendants to tender their bill of exceptions.
1. The 364th section of the Civil Code should not be so construed as to allow bills of exceptions to be made up and filed in vacation. The provision which allows time to be given for that purpose, “not beyond the succeeding term,” is to be construed merely as authorizing time to be given to file the bill of exceptions at the succeeding term, but not to prepare and file it in vacation.*607The first day of March was not the time for holding a regular term of the Franklin circuit court, and no special term thereof appears to have been appointed on that day, and no notice of the bill of exceptions is taken on that day. On the 14th day of that month, however, the judge of the Franklin circuit court filed in the office thereof the following order:
“The bill of exceptions in this case is not complete, and it must be made so before signed, and time is extended to the 10th of April to complete it. March 1st, 1856.”
On the 11th day of April, the bill of exceptions, incorporated in the record, was filed in the clerk’s office. ■
The first question is, will this court revise a case presented with a bill of exceptions made out as was the one in this record? If this question bé answered in the negative, the merits of the case cannot be inquired into. And that it must be answered in the negative, can hardly admit of a doubt.
■ In section' 364 of the Civil Code, it is provided that, “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 succeeding term.” From this it seems to have been inferred by the circuit court, that the exceptions may be reduced to writing, even in vacation, provided the time given for so doing does not extend beyond the succeeding term. But we are of *608opinion that the foregoing section of the Code was not intended to allow, nor should be construed as allowing, a bill of exceptions to be made up and signed in vacation. We think the Code in using the language, “not beyond the succeeding term,” merely authorized time to be given for the filing of a bill of exceptions at the succeeding tern, but not to prepare and file it at any time in vacation, provided that time did not reach beyond the succeeding term. If the practice were allowed of preparing and filing bills of exception in vacation, they might be prepared and signed at any place within, and perhaps out of the circuit. Such a practice would be attended with great inconvenience to litigants, and might result in much mischief and injustice, especially to the successful party in the court below. When bills of exceptions are allowed to be filed in term time only, the parties will have an opportunity of having their attorneys present, who attended to the trial of the cause, and perhaps their witnesses also, who testified at the trial, as they generally reside within the vicinity of the court house. And a practice which would require a litigant, careful of his interests, to have the same attorney, and perhaps his witnesses, to attend at any place, and in vacation, would be unreasonable, inconvenient, expensive, and mischievous. The Code has relaxed and changed most of the former rules of practice, but has not gone so far as to allow bills of exceptions to be made up and filed in vacation. The Code has not altered the law requiring bills of exceptions to be filed in term time; and, in the case of Biggs vs. McIlvain’s Executrix, 3 Marshall, 360, it is decided that a bill of exceptions, allowed and signed by the judge in vacation, though copied into the record, is no part thereof, and cannot be noticed.
We have given a history of the course pursued in having the bill of exceptions prepared and signed in this case, and without noticing the different steps *609in detail, it is sufficient to say that the course pursued was irregular and improper.
2. Where time is given until a particular day to file a bill of exceptions, and it is not noticed on that day, it cannot be done afterwards— argu.It is proper to remark, in this connection, that it has been decided by this court, that where time has been given to file a bill of exceptions, and a day fixed for that purpose, and no notice bas been taken of it on that day, it will not be noticed at a subsequent day, and the opportunity for filing it is entirely lost. The opposite party may be expected to be in court on that day, and upon no other, unless the subject is called up on that day and postponed to another. The first day fixed for the filing of the bill of exceptions in this case was the 23d day of January, 1856, and no notice of it whatever was taken on that day; it was not called up until the 28th day of January— five days afterwards. In no point of view can the bill of exceptions be considered as properly forming, a part of the record.
Wherefore, the judgment is affirmed.