Fernwood Mining Co. v. Pluna

Per Curiam:

The.appellee in each of these cases recovered judgment against appellants in the circuit court ■of,-Johnson County at the December term, 1917, for damages on account of personal injuries received by appellees.. Motions/ for new trial were filed and overruled in each case, and an order made extending the time for filing a bill of exceptions. Since the transcripts were lodged in this court, each of the appellees filed a motion to strike out the bill of exceptions and affirm the judgment oh the ground that the bills of exceptions were not filed within the time required by law.

' It is not contended that there is any error in the proceedings unless the bills of exceptions can be considered, and it, therefore, follows, if the bills of exception are stricken .out, the judgment in each case must be affirmed.

Appellants respond with the contention, not only that the bills of exceptions wore filed in apt time, but that the original judgment in each case was void" because the term of court had lapsed before these trials occurred. This contention of appellants is based upon the allegation that on a day before the trials occurred the circuit-judge was absent, and that the election of a special judge on that day.was void, and in consequence thereof the term lapsed, and that the subsequent appearance of the judge on an unauthorized date did not constitute a legally assembled 'court;1 The facts as shown in the record are as follows:

The regular term for the Johnson Circuit Court is fixed by statute to begin on Monday, December 3,. 1917, but Judge Priddy, the judge of that circuit, did not appear either.on that day or the next day, and on the morning of the second day, December 4, the clerk announced to the. attorneys assembled in the court room the fact of Judge Priddy’s- absence, and. an election of a special judge was held, which resulted in the election of the Hon. Jesse Reynolds. ; The'record recites that Judge Priddy “had failed to’appear, ’ ’ and that the clerk proceeded to hold an election by ballot to elect a special judge of and for said court J’ and-that the .Hon. Jesse. Reynolds received all the votes cast, and was duly sworn according to Jaw", and entered upon his duties as such special judge.' : Aií'drdér of adjournment was entered by Judge Reynolds on:that day over until Monday, December 10, on which day Judge Priddy appeared and opened the court and adjourned it over to Monday, January 14. The record shows that on the last-mentioned date Judge Priddy failed to appear to hold the court and the clerk held an election for the purpose of electing a special judge, and that the Hon. J. J. Montgomery was elected special judge, and he ordered an adjournment over to Monday, February 18th, on which date Judge Priddy appeared and opened the court and presided during the remainder of the term, including the respective days on which these cases were tried.

It is insisted in the first place that the election of Judge Reynolds was in effect for the full term of the court during the absence of Judge Priddy, and that the election of Judge Montgomery upon the failure of Judge Priddy to reappear was unauthorized and void. The governing provision of the Constitution on this subject reads as follows:

“Whenever the office of judge of the circuit court of any county is vacant at the commencement of a term of such court, or the judge of said court shall fail to attend, the regular practicing attorneys in attendance on said court may meet at ten o ’clock a. m., on the second day of the term, and elect a judge to preside at such court, or until the regular judge shall appear; and if the judge of said court shall become sick or die or unable to continue to hold such court after its term shall have commenced, or shall from any cause be disqualified from presiding at the trial of any cause then pending therein, then the regular practicing attorneys in attendance on said court may in like manner, on notice from the jndge or clerk of said court, elect a judge to preside at such court or to try said causes, and the attorney ¡so elected shall have the same power and authority in said court as the regular judge would have had if present and presiding; but this authority shall cease at the close of the term at which the election shall be made. The proceeding shall be entered at large upon the record. The special judge shall be learned in the law and a resident of the State.” Art. 7, Sec. 21.

The argument of counsel on this subject proceeds on the idea that the Constitution provides for two kinds of elections of special judges in the absence of a regular judge, one for the term and the other until the regular judge shall appear, and that the effect of the election in this instance was for the term, and that the appearance of the judge did not supersede the election so as to deprive the special judge thus elected of authority to serve at any .other time during the term that the regular judge should be absent.

This is an entirely erroneous construction of the language of the Constitution, which means that, in the absence of the judge for any of the causes named, a special judge shall be elected in the manner pointed out to serve for the remainder of the term, unless the regular judge appears. This construction necessarily follows from the decision of this court in the case of Hyllis v. State, 45 Ark. 478, where it was held, in substance, that the powers of a special judge of the circuit court elected during a vacancy in the office of circuit judge ceased upon the appearance of the regular judge appointed to fill the vacancy, and that .such special judge had no authority to preside thereafter in a case in which the regular judge was disqualified unless he was elected for that purpose. The same construction of the statute was, in part, the basis of the decision of this court in the more recent case of State v. Stevenson, 89 Ark. 31. This court now holds, following what it conceives to be the effect of those decisions, that when Judge Priddy appeared to hold the Johnson Circuit Court on December 10th, the authority of Judge Reynolds as special judge of the court entirely ceased, and that on the failure of Judge Priddy to reappear on the next adjourned date, January 14th, an election of another special judge to hold the court was authorized by law and was valid.

It is next contended that there was no real excuse for the absence of Judge Priddy, that he remained away merely for his own convenience, and that the election of a special judge in this instance was unauthorized and void. An attempt is made to establish that contention by proof adduced in this court. In some of the States the statutes authorizing the election of special judges expressly requires that the reasons be stated upon the record, and in those States it has been held that the election is void and all judgments rendered by a special judge are void unless the record shows affirmatively facts sufficient to justify ' the election. There is no such requirement in the Constitution or statutes of this State, and the rule established by the great weight of authority is that, in the absence of such express provision, the presumption will be indulged that the facts existed which made the election of a special judge necessary under the law, 23 Cyc. 609. Judge Works in his treatise on Jurisdiction of Courts (p. 389) states the prevailing rule as follows: “It is not necessary, in case of a collateral attack, that the existence of the causes shall appear on the face of the record. If the record is silent on the subject, and such an appointment could have been made, legally, under any circumstances, the authority for making the appointment, and that the grounds therefore existed, will be presumed. ’ ’ This court is already committed to that rule. In the case of Caldwell v. Bell & Graham, 3 Ark. 419, the court decided (quoting from the syllabus): “Where the record shows that the judge who presided upon the trial, was specially commissioned for that purpose, and nowhere contained any statement or presumption by which his power or authority can be questioned, the Superior Court is bound to presume that he had ample authority.” In another case of the same style that decision was followed. 6 Ark. 227. In the case of Sweeptzer v. Gaines, 19 Ark. 96, it was decided that, (quoting from the syllabus): “To present any question in the appellate court, as to the right of a special judge to preside in the trial of the cause, his power and authority must be questioned in the court below, and the grounds of the objection stated in the record.” The last cited case was followed and approved in the recent case of Blagg v. Fry, 105 Ark. 356.

It is essential to the orderly proceedings of courts, and it was manifestly contemplated by the framers of the Constitution, that a judge who absents himself from one of his courts must determine for himself the necessity for so doing, and his determination is conclusive, and where the record of the trial court shows that the regular judge was absent and a special judge elected in accordance with the requirements of the Constitution, that record is impervious to collateral attack or to attack on appeal unless the facts which would defeat the election are recited in the record itself. This disposes of the contention with reference to the alleged invalidity of the judgments on the ground that the term of court had lapsed before the day of trial.

On the question of the time for filing the bills of exception the facts are that the Johnson Circuit Court, on March 18th, with Judge Priddy, the regular judge, presiding, overruled the motion for new trial in each of these cases and gave appellants ninety days from that date within which to present and file the bills of exception. The bill of exceptions in one of the cases was filed on May 23, 1918, and in the other ease on May 27, 1918, both of which dates were within the time granted by the court, but after the adjournment of the Johnson Circuit Court for the May term, 1918. The statute provides that ‘ ‘ time may be given to reduce the exception to writing, but not beyond the succeeding term” of court (Kirby’s Digest, Sec. 6222) and any attempt on the part of the court to extend the time beyond the next term of court is void. Carroll v. Saunders, 38 Ark. 216; Carroll v. Pryor, 38 Ark. 283; St. L., I. M. & S. Ry. Co. v. Rapp, 39 Ark. 558; Southern Lumber Co. v. Lowe, 118 Ark. 355.

The record shows that the May term of court was adjourned on May 11,1918, and the bill of exceptions in each of these cases was signed and filed after that date. The record shows, however, that the final adjourning order was not signed by tbe presiding .judge, and counsel for appellant rely upon tbe statute wbicb requires tbe judge to sign tbe record at tbe final adjournment. Kirby’s Digest, Sec. 1519. Tbis court beld, however, in tbe early case of Ex parte Slocomb, Richards & Co., 9 Ark. 375, that “tbe omission of tbe judge to sign tbe record at tbe close of tbe term will not invalidate judgments of decrees of tbe term.” The statute is directory, and does not affect tbe validity of judgments and orders of tbe court, including tbe order of final adjournment. ' Tbe failure of tbe judge to sign tbe record after ordering an adjournment did not continue tbe session of tbe court beyond that date.

Tbe bills of exception in these cases were filed too late to become a part of the record, and there being no error on tbe face of tbe record, it follows that tbe judgment in each case must be affirmed, and it is so ordered.