Court Opinion

ID: 7366849
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-27 23:52:29.486626+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:20:47.572384
License: Public Domain

MAYFIELD, J.
(dissenting). — -I deem it proper to express the reasons for my dissent in this case.
I concur in that part of the opinion of Brother Anderson, in which he says that this court will not, on certiorari to the Court of Appeals, review “findings of facts” by that court, hut I do not agree to that part of the opinion or decision, which holds that we will not, on such hearings, review the decision of the Court of Appeals on “the application of the facts to the law.” Nor do I agree to that part of Brother Anderson’s opinion in which he says: “The holding of the Court of Appeals that the record failed to disclose an exception to the ruling of the trial court in overruling objections as to certain parts of the evidence of Tom Dye was a finding upon the facts, and is a ruling which we will not revise.” In the first place, what is above called a “holding” of the Court of Appeals is not a holding of that court; it is nothing more than a recital, in the opinion, of the reason assigned to justify the decision and judgment of affirmance rendered by the court. In the next place, if it could he said to be a “holding” of the Court of Appeals, it could not, in any sense, he a “finding of facts” by that court. A “finding of facts” which appellate courts will not review has almost as well-known and exact a meaning as a “special verdict,” or a “special finding as to facts.” In fact the three terms or phrases are often confused because of their striking similarity in meaning, though there is, of course, a material and substantial difference, which has been often pointed out by this and other courts.
But I do not think that it was ever before declared that a recital, in the opinion of a court, that a record failed to disclose an exception to the ruling of the trial court was a “finding of facts,” within the meaning of that phrase as used in appellate procedure. The only *14purpose of, or excuse for, a certiorari from a superior to an inferior court is that the latter may send up the record and proceedings in a given case for the inspection of the former, that it may be seen if there be any error in the decision, judgment, or decree rendered which will warrant the superior court in revising. How the superior court can intelligently determine this matter, without examining the record or a transcript thereof I am unable to understand. The opinion of the Court of Appeals, of which Justice Anderson speaks, is no part of the record which is to be sent up to the superior court, though it might -be required, or, if sent up, might be looked to, in aid of a proper and thorough examination of the record. The opinion is very proper, but not at all necessary, and not at all binding on the revising or reviewing court. The opinion of the Court of Appeals, in a case reviewed by us, is exactly like the opinion of the chancellor, where we review a case from the chancery court, or like the opinion of this court in a case which is reviewed by the Supreme Court of the United States. It is the decision, the judgment, the decree, of the inferior court which is reviewed and not the opinion. The opinion may be all right, and the decision, judgment, or decree all wrong, or vice versa. The opinion may aid the review; but it is not the thing reviewed or revised.
In this particular case, as appears from Justice Anderson-’s opinion the record sent up has not been re-’ viewed — nothing but the opinion of the Court of Appeals has been looked to or reviewed. The petitioner for the certiorari, in his application, says that the decision and judgment is wrong, and asks us to review and revise it. We are not asked, nor have we any right, to revise the opinions of the Court of Appeals; but we have *15the right and the power to revise the judgments, decrees, and decisions of that court.
This court declines to inspect the record, to see if the recitals in the opinion are borne out and justified by the record sent up,- and justifies its declination upon the ground that the recital in the opinion is a finding of facts not reviewable on certiorari. Such a practice I conceive to be erroneous, and to practically deny a revision, by this court, of proceedings in the appellate court, whenever it is said in the opinion of that court that the record does not contain matter to support any other judgment than the one rendered.
To say that a court of last resort, on certiorari, will not review the application of the facts to the law by an inferior court, nor revise a misapplication of the fact's to the law, or of the law to the facts, by such court, is to my mind the most novel doctrine lately announced by a court of last resort. The gravest, the most serious, error ever committed by courts (illustrated by the decision of this court in this particular case), resulted-from a misapplication of the facts to the law. This court in this case decides that on certiorari it will not review a “finding of facts” by the Court of Appeals. This is correct and undoubted law; but the court misapplies this very principle of law which it announces. There was “no finding of facts” by the Court of Appeals. That court did not make, and could not make, a finding of facts in the case sought to be reviewed. I submit without doubt, or fear of contradiction, that the entire record sought to be reviewed in this proceeding does not show a solitary “finding of facts” by either the trial court or the Court of Appeals. More than this, the record sought to be reviewed in this case shows, further, that neither the trial court nor the Court of Appeals was authorized to make any “finding of facts” as to any matter. The *16record, therefore, not only shows that there was no “finding of facts” by any court, but that there could not possibly be any authorized finding of facts by the Court of Appeals.
The matter which this court now decides was a “finding of facts” by the Court of Appeals is a matter de hors the record sought to be reviewed. The opinion of the Court of. Appeals is no part of the record sought to be reviewed. While it may be sent up with the record to aid this court to better understand the judgment or decision sought to be reviewed, it is not the thing to be reviewed, nor even a part of it.