Court Opinion

ID: 3246323
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:18:22.498356+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:43:29.659282
License: Public Domain

Section 3019 of the Code of 1907 requires the presentation of a bill of exceptions to the trial judge within 90 days from the day on which the judgment is entered and not afterwards, and if correct must be signed by him within ninety days after said presentation. A compliance with the statute as to presentation is essential to the validity of the bill of exceptions. Smith v. State, 166 Ala. 24, 52 So. 396. The bill of exceptions was presented to the trial judge by mail at Biloxi, Miss., and was so noted by him, and the proof negatives any other presentation to him or the filing of same with the clerk within 90 days during the absence of the judge, as provided by Acts 1915, p. 816. While we have several authorities to the effect that the jurisdiction and powers of a circuit judge are coextensive with the boundaries of the state, and he can receive and approve a bill of exceptions in any county in the state, we have none holding that he can do so beyond the limits of the state. Bruce v. McMillan, 175 Ala. 416, 57 So. 486; Ex parte Nelson, 62 Ala. 376. Indeed it was not contemplated that a circuit judge could perform this or any other official act in another state, as Acts 1915, p. 816, makes provision for filing same with the clerk when the judge is out of the state. We are constrained to strike the bill of exceptions, which is accordingly done.
The suit was for a joint tort against the Southern Railway, a nonresident, and one Cameron, a resident of Alabama, and the defendant Southern Railway petitioned for a removal of the cause to the federal court, which said petition was denied and as to which the appellant does not insist upon error. After the conclusion of the evidence, however, the trial court, upon request, gave the affirmative charge for the defendant Cameron, whereupon the Southern Railway renewed its petition for removal upon the theory that Cameron had, in effect, been eliminated, leaving it, a nonresident, the sole defendant, and insistence is made that the trial court erred in denying the last petition for removal. This was a ruling on the merits and not a ruling on the question of jurisdiction. It was adverse to the plaintiff and without his assent, and the trial court rightly held that it did not operate to make the cause then removable and thereby to enable the other defendant to prevent plaintiff from taking a judgment against it. Whitcomb v. Smithson,175 U.S. 635, 20 Sup. Ct. 248, 44 L.Ed. 303.
It also is insisted that the complaint was subject to defendant's demurrer as for a misjoinder of the Director General of Railroads and the Southern Railway Company. Whether this was error or not we need not decide, for, conceding that it was, only for the purpose of deciding this case, it was rendered harmless by an amendment to the complaint striking out the Director General as a party defendant.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
SOMERVILLE, THOMAS, and BOULDIN, JJ., concur.