Benson v. Fitzgerald

Mr. Justice Freeman

delivered the opinion of the court.

In this action appellee recovered damages for assault. The issues were submitted to a jury, who returned a verdict of $500 against appellant, and judgment was entered accordingly. Appellant urges that the verdict and judgment are against the evidence and that the damages are excessive.

Appellee has moved to strike the bill of exceptions from the record, upon the ground that it was not filed within the time allowed by the Circuit Court. It appears that defendant, appellant herein, prayed an appeal, which was allowed “upon filing herein an appeal bond in the penal sum of seven hundred and fifty dollars to be approved by the court, together with his bill of exceptions, within sixty days from this date.” The order was entered February 23, 1907. The bill of exceptions was filed May 7, 1907, and therefore not within the sixty days allowed. It is claimed in behalf of appellant that the bill of exceptions was “furnished” within the sixty days allowed, was then examined and approved by the opposing attorney, was signed and sealed by the court and was filed “a few days later.” It is contended that it became a part of the record notwithstanding the fact that it was not filed until after the expiration of the sixty days allowed. In Hill v. City of Chicago, 218 Ill. 178-180, it is said: “The same rule has been applied to the bond and the bill of exceptions and it has been held that the time allowed may be extended where the court has not lost jurisdiction ; but if the time fixed in the order as made or extended has expired, the jurisdiction is lost and the act of the court in approving the bond or settling and signing the bill of exceptions is a nullity.” See also Pieser v. Minkota Milling Co., 124 Ill. App. 280-282. In the case at bar the bill of exceptions, although approved by the plaintiff’s attorney April 22, 1907, and signed by the judge, was not filed until May 7th following, at which time the sixty days allowed for fifing had already expired several days before. The time allowed having expired, the subsequent filing of the bill of exceptions was a nullity. There is, therefore, no valid bill of exceptions in the record. In Hall v. Royal Neighbors, 231 Ill. 185-190-191, in the order allowing the appeal it was provided that appellant should file the bill of exceptions on or before the expiration of a fixed number of days, and the bill was signed and sealed by the judge of the court at least a week before the expiration of the time allowed, so that the failure to file it was not due to any neglect or delay of the judge in signing or sealing the bill. The court in that case declines to give its assent to a proposition so absurd as “that a bill of exceptions is filed when it is not filed,” merely because it has been signed and sealed in apt time. In the case before us, as in that case, it would make no difference “if a bill of exceptions becomes a part of the record without being filed, for the reason that the appeal was granted on condition that the bill of exceptions should be filed within the time limited.” But referring to the statute which provides that a bill of exceptions allowed, signed and sealed by the judge “shall thereupon become a part of the record of such cause,” the court says (p. 191): “It was never understood that a bill of exceptions, although signed and sealed in open court during the progress of the trial, became a part of the record without being left in the office of the clerk where the other papers and proceedings in the trial were deposited.”

It is, however, urged that appellee’s attorney is estopped to object that the bill of exceptions in this case was not filed in time. It was stipulated on the bill of exceptions as follows: “It is stipulated by and between the parties hereto, by their respective attorneys, that this original bill of exceptions may be incorporated in the transcript of the record hereof by the clerk, instead of a copy thereof.” This stipulation is signed by the attorneys of both parties to the suit, but it was apparently made before the expiration of the sixty days’ time allowed for filing. In Lederbrand v. Pickrell, 167 Ill. 624-625, it was held that where a like stipulation was made, "after the expiration of the sixty days ’ ’ the counsel moving to strike had recognized the validity of the certificate of evidence in spite of the fact that the clerk did not put his file mark upon it within sixty days; and that having afterward stipulated that the original certificate might go into the record in lieu of a copy, they were estopped from objecting that it was not filed in time. In Porter v. The People, 182 Ill. 516-520, cited by appellant’s attorney, there was no order of court fixing the time of filing, but thirty days were allowed in which “to present and settle a bill of exceptions.” This was done within the time fixed. Afterward there was a stipulation for filing it, signed by the opposing counsel on both sides, and it was filed within the time stipulated. The motion to strike was overruled. In Berz v. Mecartney, 115 Ill. App. 66-70, the facts were like those in Lederbrand v. Pickrell, supra—that is, the stipulation that the original bill of exceptions might be used in lieu of a copy, the bill itself having been signed and sealed, not within the time allowed, but subsequently, was made after the bill of exceptions had been so signed and sealed by the judge, and after the time for doing so had expired. Having so stipulated after the expiration of the time allowed, the presumption would be that the appellee intended to waive the default. In the case at bar we are of opinion that the stipulation to incorporate in the transcript the original bill of exceptions in lieu of a copy having been made before the expiration of the time allowed for filing it, should be deemed to have been made in the expectation that the bill of exceptions would be filed within the time fixed, was not a waiver of compliance by appellant with the order fixing the time within which it should be filed and does not estop appellee from moving to strike the bill from the record. The motion to strike must therefore be allowed.

There being no bill of exceptions in the record, the judgment of the Circuit Court must be affirmed.

Affirmed.