— This is an action for damages for slander, in which, upon a trial, plaintiff recovered judgment for $1,350. Defendant promptly moved for a new trial; but his motion was overruled, May 4,1892. On that day the court made an order giving him leave “to file his bill of exceptions herein ninety days from this date.”
. He appealed at once, on the same day, to the St. Louis court of appeals; and the March term of the trial court closed, July 20, 1892.
The bill of exceptions was signed by the judge in vacation, August 3, 1892, and it was filed that day.
After the case was submitted to the court of appeals, it was transferred to the supreme court for reasons indicated in the report, 53 Mo. App. 151.
The plaintiff (respondent) now contends that the alleged errors charged to exist in the proceedings at the trial are not properly reviewable, because the bill of exceptions was neither signed nor filed within the *296time prescribed by the order permitting the filing thereof in vacation.
We find this point well taken.
Ninety days’ time, from May 4, was granted to file the bill. That time expired with Wednesday, the second day of August, 1892. R. S. 1889, sec. 6570; State v. Harris (1894), 121 Mo. 445 (26 S. W. Rep. 558.)
The bill was out of time when presented to the judge the next day. B. S. 1889, sec. 2168. No extension of time for the bill was made by the judge.
Nor is there in the record any written consent of counsel to such an extension.
Under repeated rulings of the supreme court, and of each division, the statute on this subject must be regarded as an imperative demand that exceptions be filed within the time the law prescribes. State v. Mayor (1889), 99 Mo. 602; Burdoin v. Trenton (1893), 116 Mo. 358; Dorman v. Coon (1893), 119 Mo. 68.
It is our duty to enforce this law.
The case at bar affords no room for any other construction of the statute than that the bill was unauthorized (so far as the record shows), when the judge signed it in vacation, after the lapse of the time allowed for that purpose.
No assignment of any error is submitted by the defendant referring to any part of the proceedings in the circuit court other than those at the trial.
2. But defendant seeks to avoid the legal consequences flowing from the state of facts above described by insisting on certain other facts brought before the court by affidavits filed here since this cause was sub" mitted.
It is very doubtful, to say the least, whether, under the decision of the first division in Wilson v. Taylor (1894), 119 Mo. 626, and earlier cases, such affidavits *297can be considered to eke out the record on which defendant has brought the case up.
But laying that question aside, we think the showing in the affidavits is insufficient to change the result to which the record, as it stands, leads.
The substance of that showing is, that the bill of exceptions was submitted to counsel for plaintiff long before the date for filing the same; that it was retained by him until the day the bill was signed, and that it was marked “O. K.” by the counsel for plaintiff before being submitted to the trial judge.
It further appears that plaintiff’s counsel held the bill in order to have time to communicate with other counsel on the same side, and that the former declared that the time might be extended (should it become necessary) to save the bill.
When the bill was signed, August 3, 1892, all the parties supposed it was in time. That did not make it so, however.
There is nothing tending to show that defendant’s counsel refused to give up the bill at any time upon request.
The trial judge had the undoubted power, under •section 2168 (R. S. 1889), to extend the time for the bill while the original period was current. He, no doubt, would have done so, 'on such a showing as is now made. But we think he was the'proper authority to act in that matter on these facts. He did not do so, and was not asked to do so.
That plaintiff’s counsel marked the bill “0. K.” (which we take to be the equivalent for “correct”) did not amount to an extension of time beyond that first granted by the court. It is a customary manner of approving the contents of a bill; but, standing alone, it has-no relevancy to the subject of fixing or extending the time prescribed for filing the exceptions.
*298Express written consent, after the time had expired, would amount to nothing. Dorman v. Coon (1893), 119 Mo. 68.
It is not shown that any actual agreement, verbal or written, to extend the time, was concluded between counsel, before the required period elapsed.
We see nothing in the facts to prevent the enforcement of the rule prescribed by section 2168; and we do not feel at liberty to depart from a law so plainly laid down, even to relieve against any supposed hardship in its application.
3. It is next insisted by defendant that as the case reached this court by transfer from the St. Louis court of appeals on a division of opinion, and no objection was made in that court to a consideration ofdhe merits of the case, the point now raised, as to the bill of exceptions, should be held thereby waived.
When a cause comes to the supreme court from one of the courts of appeals (in compliance with the law on that subject), the constitution declares that “thereupon the supreme court must rehear and determine said cause and proceeding, as in ease of jurisdiction obtained by ordinary appellate process.” Const. Amendment, 1884, sec. 6.
In view of that language we are of opinion that the plaintiff, respondent, may, upon the hearing of the appeal in this court, -avail himself of any point that the record properly presents at that time.
The court of appeals is not necessarily on trial in cases that come to the supreme court by that route. Our jurisdiction is merely substituted for that of the former court in certain exceptional cases; but the final hearing may properly embrace all the subjects comprehended in the record. Under the constitution, the appeal in this court can not lawfully be limited to a *299mere reconsideration of the points discussed in the court of appeals.
We consider, therefore, that plaintiff has not waived his right to insist on the point of practice mentioned, though he may never have raised it in the court of appeals.
From these rulings it results that the judgment of the circuit court should be affirmed.
4. Plaintiff has asked that ten per cent, damages be awarded to him upon the affirmance. The court has power to make such an award if it be deemed just. R. S. 1889, .sec. 2305.
But that power should be exercised with a due regard to the facts exhibited in the particular case. To warrant an award of such damages it is not always enough that the judgment be affirmed for want of a bill of exceptions.
In the appeal at bar the failure of the defendant to present the merits of the controversy to this court seems due rather to a mistake in calculating the time given to file his bill than from any desire to avoid a. review of the substance of the case.
The course of the proceedings in the court of appeals, as reported, indicates very plainly that, upon the substantial merits, could they, properly be reached, defendant’s appeal involves some very interesting and debatable propositions, to say the least. That he now finds himself confronted by a fatal objection to his record, precluding an investigation of those propositions, we think does not furnish a sufficient reason for j charging further ' damages against him as for a frivolous or vexatious appeal.
In affirming the judgment, therefore, we deny the plaintiff’s request for an enlargement of it here.
Black, C. J., and Brace and Macearlane, JJ., concur.