Court Opinion

ID: 3379412
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 18:25:22.284953+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:36:26.950164
License: Public Domain

It appears from the transcript of the record that the verdict and judgment herein were rendered on October 31, 1924. A motion for new trial was made November 3, 1924, within four days after the date of the verdict and during the term of the court. Apparently the motion for new trial was not disposed of during the same term of court. The bill of exceptions signed by the judge states that "the said motion coming on to be heard on the 28th day of May, A.D. 1925, at a subsequent term, the court, upon consideration of said motion, on the 2nd day of June, A.D. 1925, denied the same, to which ruling the defendant then and there excepted." This statement in the signed bill of exceptions indicated that the motion for new trial was "heard" and "denied" "at a subsequent term"; and this was not overcome by a mere motion to strike the bill of exceptions on the ground that "the motion for new trial came on for hearing in vacation" and was overruled, but at that time no bill of exceptions was tendered and no order was made extending the time for presenting a bill of exceptions. If the motion for new trial duly made at the Fall term was not disposed of at that time, but was heard "at a subsequent term," the bill of exceptions could be presented for authentication by the judge at any time during such "subsequent term" without a special order, and there was no showing that the term of the court had ended when the bill of exceptions was presented on July 27, 1925, or when *Page 574 
the same was signed by the judge July 29, 1925. As the burden was on the movant to establish the grounds of his motion when predicated upon matters not contained in the record, and as it did not appear by the record that the motion for new trial was in fact heard and overruled in vacation, the statement over the signature of the judge that the motion for new trial was heard and denied "at a subsequent term" was properly taken to mean that a term of court was in session when the motion for new trial was disposed of, and nothing to the contrary appearing in the record, it was assumed that the bill of exceptions was presented to and signed by the judge during the term in which the motion for new trial was denied. On the showing made the motion to strike the bill of exceptions was properly denied.
A petition for rehearing is predicated upon the assumption that the motion for new trial was in fact heard and denied in vacation, and that the bill of exceptions was not authenticated at the time the motion was denied, and that no order was then made extending the time for presenting a bill of exceptions. This court has had certified to it the order of the Circuit Court for Polk county adjourning for the term on June 11, 1925, and the order made on the original motion on May 28, 1925, denying the motion for new trial, noting an exception thereto and granting an extension of time to prepare and present bill of exceptions, and the order as entered "in Minute Book 'E,' page 26." The orders as certified are as follows:
"M. ELLEN FORD, Plaintiff,
v.                               Ejectment.
LILLIE SIKES WORRELL, Defendant.
"After argument on this 28th day of May, 1925, the foregoing Motion is hereby denied.
"Done and ordered at Chambers in Lakeland, Florida, *Page 575 
this June 2d 1925. Defendant excepts. Defendant granted 60 days to prepare and present Bill of Exceptions.
H. C. Petteway, Judge."
"M. Ellen Ford, Plaintiff, v. Lillie Sikes Worrell, Defendant. — In Ejectment Motion for New Trial.
"Filed Motion for New Trial November 3rd, 1924.
"After argument on the 28th day of May, 1925, the foregoing motion is hereby denied.
"Done and ordered at Chambers in Lakeland, Florida, this June 2d 1925.
"Defendant given 60 days to prepare and present Bill of Exceptions.
H. C. Petteway, Judge."
"In the Circuit Court of the Tenth Judicial Circuit of the State of Florida, in and for Polk County.
"There being no further business before the Court, ready for trial, it is ordered that all Causes, Informations, Recognizances, Motions, Deferred Sentences stand Continued, until the next Term of said Court, and that the Court do now stand adjourned Sine Die. This 11th day of June, A.D. 1925.
H. C. Petteway,
Judge of the Circuit Court Polk County, Florida."
This shows that the statement in the motion to strike the Bill of Exceptions that "no order was entered on the minutes of said court extending the time for the presentation of the bill of exceptions, is without foundation in fact. The bill of exceptions states that the motion for new trial was "at a subsequent term" denied on June 2, 1925, and that the defendant excepted to the ruling.
The sixty days allowed for presenting a bill of exceptions, not being otherwise limited, means sixty days from the end of the term. Lewis v. Meginnis, 25 Fla. 589, 6 South. Rep. 169; Rehfield v. Moore, 76 Fla. 378, 80 South. Rep. 52.
As the bill of exceptions was, pursuant to an order entered in the minutes of the court, presented to the trial judge for authentication on July 27, 1925, less than sixty *Page 576 
days from the final adjournment of the court on June 11, 1925, the motion to strike the bill of exceptions is not well made.
Rehearing denied.
BROWN, C. J., AND ELLIS, TERRELL, STRUM AND BUFORD, J. J., concur.