Court Opinion

ID: 3549294
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:02:31.437984+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:56:10.929733
License: Public Domain

[EDITORS' NOTE:  THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 453 
Bill of exceptions does not contain certificate or stipulation required to make it part of record. Essential element that record contains substance of proceedings, rulings, and points involved is not present. Stats. 1923, 164, and acts of 1915 and 1919 are practically identical. Corcoran v. Dodge, 45 Nev. 406; Rickey v. Douglas, 45 Nev. 341; Capurro v. Christensen, 46 Nev. 249; Kingsbury v. Copren, 47 Nev. 466.
Bill of exceptions should be annexed to copy of judgment roll or order appealed from. Rev. Laws, 3344.
Objections to proposed findings of fact and rulings on such objections and memorandum of errors are not properly part of judgment roll. Rev. Laws, 5273. These documents and orders should be made part of bill of exceptions before being placed in record. Rev. Laws, 3344, designates of what record on appeal shall consist.
By stipulating that original bill of exceptions is correct, settled and allowed by parties, and for additional time for filing briefs on merits in this court, movant is estopped from objecting that bill of exceptions is incomplete and has waived right to move to strike and dismiss on ground that statement or transcript had not been served, even though record would otherwise be subject to motion. Henningsen v. R.R. Co., 32 Nev. 51.
 OPINION
On February 14, 1925, we filed an opinion in this case, and made an order therein directing that the appellant have 15 days within which to prepare, serve, and file a transcript on appeal in compliance with the rules of court and the statute, reserving to the respondent the right within five days thereafter to make such further motion as might be deemed proper. On March 2, 1925, there was filed what purports to be a transcript, to which is attached a document indorsed "Bill of Exceptions," which was filed with the clerk of the trial court *Page 454 
on September 3, 1924, and which purports to have been settled and allowed by the trial judge. On March 3, 1925, counsel for the respondent served, and on the 5th filed in this court, notice of a motion to strike the bill of exceptions, and to strike from the files the following documents and orders which are annexed to the judgment roll, viz., defendant's objections to the plaintiff's proposed findings of fact; the court's ruling on defendant's objections to proposed findings of fact, and the memorandum of error filed in the trial court as a basis for a motion for a new trial. This latter motion is based upon the ground that said documents and order are not a part of the judgment roll, and are not made a part of the record on appeal by an original bill of exceptions.
On March 7, 1925, the appellant served upon counsel for the respondent and thereafter filed his notice of motion for an order of this court to remand to the trial judge the record on appeal, and that said judge be authorized and directed to settle, allow, and certify said record according to the facts and truth, and that thereafter said record be returned to the files of this court.
The notice of motion recites that subsequent to the filing of the opinion and order hereinabove mentioned the appellant withdrew from the files of this court the record theretofore filed, and promptly "proceeded to supplement the same by obtaining and adding thereto the additional documents as indicated by the order of this court." It is further stated that a request was made upon counsel for respondent to stipulate "that such bill of exceptions and record was correct, contained the substance of the proceedings relating to the points involved," but that such request was denied; that there upon request was made of the trial judge that he certify that such bill of exceptions was correct, but that the said judge declined to do so upon the ground that he had lost jurisdiction of the matter. An affidavit is filed in support of the statements made in said notice of motion.
1. We will first consider the motion made by counsel for the respondent. In this connection we must bear in mind the terms of the order under which the record *Page 455 
was ordered returned for amendment. In that order we merely directed that the appellant have 15 days in which to prepare and file a transcript, etc. During September of last year the trial court purported to settle the bill of exceptions, and, whatever may be its faults or shortcomings, the time within which the court could settle a bill of exceptions has long since expired; hence the trial court had and has no jurisdiction to settle an additional or further bill of exceptions.
2. We are now brought to a consideration of the various motions made by counsel for the respondent. We will consider them in the order in which they are made. The first is to strike the bill of exceptions, for the reason that it was not settled as provided by law. Section 1, c. 97, Stats. 1923, p. 163, provides that a bill of exceptions "shall be settled and allowed by the judge or court, or by stipulation of the parties, by attaching thereto or inserting therein a certificate or stipulation to the effect that such bill of exceptions is correct, contains the substance of the proceedings relating to the point or points involved and has been settled and allowed, and when such bill of exceptions has been so settled and allowed it shall become a part of the record in such action or special proceeding." At the end of the purported bill of exceptions we find the following stipulation, and memorandum by the trial judge:
"It is hereby stipulated, and agreed between the parties above named, that the foregoing bill of exceptions is correct, and the same is hereby settled and allowed by the parties.
"I, the undersigned, judge of the above-entitled court, do hereby certify that the foregoing bill of exceptions is true and correct, and the same is hereby settled and allowed."
It is said by counsel for respondent that neither the stipulation nor the memorandum of the judge complies with the requirements of the statute, and hence there can be no bill of exceptions, and for that reason the purported bill of exceptions must be stricken. In opposition to the motion, it is said by counsel for appellant that counsel should be estopped from now questioning *Page 456 
the sufficiency of the settlement of the bill of exceptions. This contention is based upon two theories: (1) Because counsel cannot now in good faith urge the contentions, since the signing of the stipulation served to lull the appellant into a sense of security in the matter; and (2) because of certain stipulations entered into since the appeal was taken in this matter extending the time in which briefs might be filed. We may say that, at the time of the argument, we were inclined to the view that there was merit in the first contention, but upon a more serious consideration of the matter we have reached the contrary conclusion. The stipulation was signed by counsel for respondent as it was prepared by counsel for appellant, no doubt, but be that as it may, it could have no greater force and effect than the language in the stipulation expresses. In other words, counsel stipulated to nothing more than is signified by the language used. The stipulation and the order of the court are controlled by the case of Capurro v. Christensen, 46 Nev. 249, 209 P. 1045. That was a case wherein the court undertook to make an order settling a bill of exceptions, and it failed to certify to the matters required by the statute, and we held that the bill of exceptions could not be considered. There is no difference in substance between that case and the situation here presented, and neither the stipulation nor the certificate of the judge entitles the purported bill of exceptions to any consideration.
3. To support the second contention reliance is had upon the case of Henningsen v. Tonopah  Goldfield R.R. Co., 32 Nev. 51,104 P. 223. We do not think that case aids the appellant in the least. The motion to dismiss in that case was based upon the ground that a copy of a transcript had not been served. It did not go, as here, to a defect in the record or a total failure to incorporate certain alleged necessary papers in the record. We thing the rule here applicable is that stated in Kirman v. Johnson, 30 Nev. 146, 93 P. 500, 96 P. 1057, wherein it is said:
"While counsel by failing to interpose a proper objection to the record may waive all technical objections *Page 457 
thereto, they cannot waive the essentials of a record necessary to give this court jurisdiction, such as the entire absence of an order overruling a motion for new trial, if such order were ever made. Corbett v. Job, 5 Nev. 201; Irwin v. Sampson, 10 Nev. 282; Greeley v. Holland, 14 Nev. 320; Marx v. Lewis, 24 Nev. 306; Hart v. Spencer, 29 Nev. 286."
4, 5. The bill of exceptions, not being settled as provided by law, must be stricken. It is clear that the motion to strike the copy of the defendant's objections to the plaintiff's proposed findings of fact, the ruling thereon, and the memorandum of errors, must be sustained. They are not a part of the judgment roll, and are not embraced in a bill of exceptions.
It is ordered that appellant's motion be and the same is hereby denied. It is further ordered that the purported bill of exceptions, the defendant's objections to the plaintiff's proposed findings of fact, the ruling thereon, and the memorandum of errors be stricken from the files in the case.
                 ON MOTION TO STRIKE SUPPLEMENTAL BRIEF
October 20, 1925.                      239 P. 1000.