Court Opinion

ID: 3839864
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 08:08:55.355958+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:20:24.425567
License: Public Domain

There is called in question here the validity of the proceedings for a second appeal of this case. The action was to recover on a policy of insurance issued by the defendant and insuring a number of automobiles against loss by fire. The plaintiff recovered a judgment against the defendant which was reversed by an opinion of Mr. Chief Justice McBRIDE, reported in114 Or. 545 (236 P. 267), on the ground that the proofs of loss contained untrue statements as to the number of cars insured and that the plaintiff was allowed to prove, without pleading estoppel, that the challenged statements were inserted in the proofs *Page 193 
by the defendant's agent, and further that there was error in allowing the attorney fee in an action begun less than eight months after proof of loss.
On a second trial a judgment was again rendered for the plaintiff on June 11, 1925. The defendant filed its notice of appeal and undertaking August 5, 1925. There being no objections to the surety, the appeal became perfect August 10, 1925. A copy of the notice of appeal with service thereof annexed and of the undertaking and judgment were filed in this court September 8, 1925. For convenience this collection of post-judgment documents will be referred to as the "short transcript." The pleadings and some other original papers were filed here October 13, 1926. The next term of this court following the perfection of the appeal was the October term held at Salem, beginning the first Monday in October, or October 5, 1925, and ending on February 28, 1926. The bill of exceptions was filed June 24, 1926, more than a year after the rendition of the judgment appealed from and nearly three months after the expiration of the term of this court next following the appeal.
The case is before us now on the motion of the plaintiff to strike from the files and records of this court the bill of exceptions, together with the appellant's abstract of record, for the reason that the bill of exceptions was not filed as a part of the transcript on appeal or within the time required by law to be filed in this court. The respondent further moves for an order affirming the judgment of the Circuit Court of Jackson County and for an order dismissing the appellant's appeal because the court has no jurisdiction to consider any of the records *Page 194 
and files for any other purpose than that of affirming the judgment of the lower court.
Before proceeding to discuss in detail the question involved, let it be premised that:
"The supreme court shall have jurisdiction only to revise the final decisions of the circuit courts; * *." Or. Const., Art. VII, § 6.
According to the 1910 amendment of this article of the Constitution, Section 2b:
"The courts, jurisdiction, and judicial system of Oregon, except so far as expressly changed by this amendment, shall remain as at present constituted until otherwise provided by law. But the supreme court may, in its own discretion, take original jurisdiction in mandamus, quo warranto and habeas corpus
proceedings."
It should be remembered also that a respondent is quite as much interested as an appellant in the judgment of the Circuit Court and that his rights should be protected with the same fidelity as those of the appellant. There has been a great variety of opinion rendered at different times on the subject of appeals and the procedure to be observed therein. Every species and shade of thought have been reflected in our own decisions. The result has been that the apostles of judicial reform, the press and the people, have cried out against the law's delays in the Supreme Court. Business in this tribunal is in a state of acute congestion so that it has become to the advantage of appellants to crowd the record with allegations of error and take advantage of the delay consequent upon involved proceedings.
The right of appeal is not inherent, natural or inalienable. It depends entirely upon statute and he who would appeal any case must comply with the enactments *Page 195 
governing the same, for this court is one of limited jurisdiction with power only to revise the decisions of the Circuit Court. Appeals are not designed to enable an appellant to wear out the respondent by a Fabian policy of attrition, so that in the end the decision will go to the litigant with the longest purse and the greater capability of inventing questions of error for the consideration of the courts. In view of the state of judicial business and the general demand for reform in procedure, it is important that the courts themselves should work out needed betterments consonant with the statutes in force and map a course calculated to improve court practice when divested of old errors.
That appeals and appellate procedure are purely statutory in their nature is established by Section 1 of Article VII of the state Constitution, declaring that the Supreme, Circuit and County Courts are courts of record "having general jurisdiction, to be defined, limited, and regulated by law, in accordance with the constitution." Resorting then to the statute concerning appeals, we find Section 548, Or. L., opening with the declaration that:
"A judgment or decree may be reviewed as prescribed in this chapter, and not otherwise. * *"
The matter of perfecting an appeal is prescribed by Section 550, Or. L., which says that:
"An appeal shall be taken and perfected in a manner prescribed in this section and not otherwise: * *."
After delineating how notice may be given, either orally at the time of the rendition of the judgment or by written notice thereafter, the section requires the appellant within ten days from the giving of notice or service of notice of appeal to serve on the *Page 196 
adverse party or his attorney an undertaking on appeal which must be filed with proof of service within said ten days. The adverse party has five days after service of the undertaking within which to except to the sufficiency of the sureties in the undertaking or be deemed to have waived his right thereto.
"From the expiration of the time allowed to except to the sureties in the undertaking, or from the justification thereof if excepted to, the appeal shall be deemed perfected." Section 550, Or. L.
The time within which an appeal may be taken is limited to sixty days from the entry of the judgment appealed from to the Supreme Court or thirty days if it is to the Circuit Court. The contention here involved centers around the proper construction to be placed upon Sections 554 and 554 — 1, Or. L., which are here set down in full:
"Upon the appeal being perfected the appellant shall, within thirty days thereafter, file with the clerk of the appellate court a transcript or such an abstract as the law or the rules of the appellate court may require of so much of the record as may be necessary to intelligibly present the question to be decided by the appellate tribunal, together with a copy of the judgment or decree appealed from, the notice of appeal and proof of service thereof, and of the undertaking on appeal; if the cause is one on appeal to the supreme court, which it is provided by law or rules of the court shall be submitted at Pendleton, the transcript and abstract shall be filed within the time and in the manner herein provided with the deputy clerk of the court at Pendleton; otherwise with the clerk of the court at Salem; and after compliance with the provisions hereof the appellate court shall have jurisdiction of the cause, but not otherwise:
"1. If the appeal is from a decree and the cause is to be tried anew on the testimony, the clerk shall *Page 197 
attach together the testimony, depositions and other papers on file in his office containing the evidence heard or offered on trial in the court below, and deliver the same to the appellant, taking therefor his receipt in duplicate, one of which receipts he shall file in his office and the other deliver to the respondent when so requested. Such evidence shall be deemed a part of the transcript or abstract and shall be filed therewith.
"2. If the transcript or abstract is not filed with the clerk of the appellate court within the time provided, the appeal shall be deemed abandoned, and the effect thereof terminated, but the trial court or the judge thereof, or the supreme court or a justice thereof, may, upon such terms as may be just, by order enlarge the time for filing the same; but such order shall be made within the time allowed to file transcript, and shall not extend it beyond the term of the appellate court next following the appeal.
"3. If the appeal be abandoned as provided in subdivision 2 of this section, thereupon the judgment or decree, so far as it is for the recovery of money, may, by the appellate court, be enforced against the sureties in the undertaking for a stay of proceedings, as if they were parties to such judgment or decree."
"When an appeal is perfected the original pleadings and the original bill of exceptions shall be sent by the clerk, or other proper officer of the trial court, to the clerk of the supreme court or appellate court, and shall be a part of the transcript in the supreme court or appellate court so long as it may be needed there, and if the said papers are later required for use in the trial court, said papers shall be returned to the trial court and kept of record therein, the object being to require one original record to answer the purpose in each court, and the supreme court or appellate court is instructed to promulgate the necessary rules for the custody of the original record to accomplish this purpose." *Page 198 
Section 555, Or. L., reads thus in part:
"When it appears by affidavit to the satisfaction of the court that the transcript is incomplete in any particular substantially affecting the merits of the judgment or decree appealed from, on motion of the respondent the court shall make a rule upon the clerk of the court below, requiring him to certify as to such alleged omission, and if true, to transmit to the appellate court a certified copy of the pleading, entry, order, or other paper omitted in the transcript; or, in such case, the respondent may move to dismiss the appeal, and the court shall allow such motion unless, on the cross-motion of the appellant, it makes a rule upon the clerk concerning such omission, as provided in this section, upon such terms as may be just."
It is laid down in Section 556, Or. L., that:
"Upon an appeal from a judgment, the same shall only be reviewed as to questions of law appearing upon the transcript, and shall only be reversed or modified for errors substantially affecting the rights of the appellant; * * and upon an appeal from a decree given in any court the suit shall be tried anew upon the transcript and evidence accompanying it."
Recurring to Section 554, we find that within thirty days after the perfection of the appeal, the appellant is required in mandatory language to "file with the clerk of the appellate court a transcript" or an abstract of what? The answer is in the very language of the section "of so much of the record as may be necessary to intelligibly present the question to be decided by the appellate tribunal." What is the reason for any appeal? It is to correct the alleged errors of the Circuit Court. These are the questions to be decided by this court. How can we derive any information about the mistakes of the trial court from a notice of appeal or undertaking or even from *Page 199 
the judgment? The errors occurring happened before the rendition of the judgment and are not discernible from an inspection of the final deliverance of the court alone.
Respecting the function and value of the "short transcript," the following excerpts are instructive:
"The service and filing of the notice of appeal, and the execution and service of the undertaking thereon, does not of itself deprive the lower court of jurisdiction or confer jurisdiction on this court; that is accomplished by filing within 30 days thereafter the transcript in the case with the clerk of this court." Harding v. Oregon-Idaho Co., 57 Or. 34, 37
(110 P. 412).
"In case of an abandoned appeal, it has been the practice sinceHadley v. Heatherly, 2 Or. 117, for respondent to bring into this court certain portions of the record, and have the judgment affirmed pro forma, and out of this practice has grown what is now Rule 14, but it has never been supposed that by such a proceeding it acquired jurisdiction to hear and determine the cause or any question at issue therein. This practice simply provides a means by which respondent may have the fact that an appeal has been abandoned made a matter of record, but it cannot be used for the purpose of determining any controverted questions in the case." Henrichsen v. Smith, 29 Or. 475, 477
(42 P. 486).
Moreover, it is said in Section 556, Or. L., that:
"Upon an appeal from a judgment, the same shall only be reviewed as to questions of law appearing upon the transcript, and shall only be reversed or modified for errors substantially affecting the rights of the appellant. * *"
In any ordinary case, especially in this case, it is impossible to discover any questions of law in the "short transcript." There is in that brief compilation of notice, undertaking and copy of judgment, no *Page 200 
trace of "error substantially affecting the rights of the appellant." If the appellant would show error it must be otherwise than by the "short transcript." If that alone gives this court jurisdiction, why all these applications for more time to construct a bill of exceptions? If the "short transcript" meets the jurisdictional requirement of the statute "of so much of the record as may be necessary to intelligibly present the question to be decided by the appellate tribunal," then the appellant needs nothing more for purposes of its appeal. Its argument is refuted by its own efforts to augment the record.
These sections of the Code demonstrate by positive and mandatory language that there must be a transcript and that it is composed of the records of the Circuit Court including the bill of exceptions. Of course, the primary significance of the term "transcript" is a word for word copy of the documents in question. By virtue, however, of the enactment of Section 554 — 1, the term has acquired a conventional meaning so that the original pleadings and bill of exceptions themselves when transmitted to the Supreme Court become the "transcript," so called. Originally, when clerks were paid fees by the folio for making up transcripts, including the entire judgment-roll, the term had its ordinary and natural meaning; but with the abolishment of copying fees and the establishment of salaries for the clerks came the legislation of sending up the original pleadings and bill of exceptions, all of which the statute says are part of the transcript. The matter is explained in the preface to the current edition of the Rules of the Supreme Court as follows:
"An appeal is heard upon the record made in the trial court. In the language of section 556, Or. L., *Page 201 
a judgment in an action at law is reviewed `upon the transcript,' and an appeal from a decree in a suit in equity is tried upon `the transcript and evidence accompanying it.' The term `transcript' was originally used in its literal sense, when the code was adopted in 1862, for the word was then employed to mean a copy of the entire judgment roll. While the term `transcript' is retained in the code it does not now always mean the same thing as it did at first, for now the originals of pleadings and bills of exceptions, instead of copies thereof, may be filed and when thus brought into this court they `shall be a part of the transcript.' In actions at law the statutory provision always has been that the only means by which the evidence can be brought into this Court is a bill of exceptions, and that is part of the judgment roll (Or. L., section 208); and hence whatever evidence is stated in the bill of exceptions necessarily appeared in a transcript or copy of the judgment roll. The original bill of exceptions, instead of a copy, is now sent to the Supreme Court. The evidence in a suit in equity is delivered to the appellant and such evidence is filed with and `shall be deemed a part of the transcript or abstract.'
"Turning now to section 554, Or. L., it will be seen that the appellant must file a `transcript or such an abstract as the law or the rules of the appellate court may require, of so much of the record as may be necessary to intelligibly present the question to be decided by the appellate tribunal, together with a copy of the judgment or decree appealed from, the notice of appeal and proof of service thereof, and of the undertaking on appeal.' Formerly in civil cases an appellant was required to file a certified copy of the entire judgment roll; but now the appellant is required to furnish only such part of the judgment roll as is necessary intelligibly to present the question to be decided. At first the copy of the judgment roll was certified by the clerk, while the statute now permits the Court to make rules allowing printed abstracts. However, in actions and in suits there must be a certified copy of the judgment *Page 202 
or decree appealed from, the notice of appeal and proof of service thereof, and of the undertaking on appeal. In this connection it is proper to call attention to section 554 — 1, Or. L., where it is provided that `when an appeal is perfected the original pleadings and the original bill of exceptions shall be sent by the clerk, or other proper officer of the trial court, to the clerk of the Supreme Court or appellate court, and shall be a part of the transcript in the Supreme Court or appellate court so long as it may be needed there * *.'"
Remembering, therefore, that the object of an appeal is to correct alleged errors in the procedure of the Circuit Court and that it is impossible to discover such errors by mere inspection of the notice of appeal, as at present required, or the undertaking on appeal, or even from the final judgment of the Circuit Court, the reason and necessity of a transcript which will disclose those errors become apparent. Under the very words of the statute that transcript is found in the original pleadings and bill of exceptions. These are an integral and essential part of the record. Of course, in the language of Section 554, this transcript is required "together with a copy of the judgment or decree appealed from, the notice of appeal and proof of service thereof, and of the undertaking on appeal." If the word "transcript," whether in its original meaning or in the statutory signification imparted to it by Section 554 — 1, is to be satisfied by an exemplification called the "short transcript," why did the legislature see fit to put into the law the words "of so much of the record as may be necessary to intelligibly present the question to be decided by the appellate tribunal"? If the advocates of the doctrine that the copy of the judgment, undertaking and notice are correct in calling that the transcript, why *Page 203 
the necessity of inserting the words last above quoted? What do they mean? Why would it not have been sufficient to leave them out entirely and say definitely that all that is necessary to give the court jurisdiction is to present the "short transcript"? Under the plainest rules of statutory construction, we cannot ignore the language requiring the appellant to point out by the record what he is complaining about. Serving and filing a "short transcript" are acts of the appellant and not of the trial court. All the errors of which complaint can be made have happened long before the creation of such documents. They disclose nothing to this court. They do not invoke jurisdiction for any purpose of the appeal on the merits of any case.
Discussing these matters in Backhaus v. Buells, 43 Or. 558
(72 P. 976), Mr. Justice WOLVERTON wrote thus, speaking of Section 554:
"* * The transcript, as defined by subdivision 1, was to be a copy of the judgment roll or final record, etc. In its present or amended form it merely provides that the appellant may file a transcript or such an abstract as the rules of the appellate court may require of so much of the record as may be necessary to present intelligently the questions to be decided. So that the term `transcript' as it relates to the appeal, has been given a modified or different signification from that which originally obtained. Instead of being a copy of the judgment roll or final record it is now a certified copy of so much of the record as may be necessary to present intelligently the questions to be decided, which, as well as the abstract, must be accompanied with a copy of the judgment or decree appealed from, notice of appeal, etc. So that section 554 must now be interpreted with a view to its application to the new act relating to the transcript. The transcript and abstract are now, in substance, the same. The former, *Page 204 
however, comes under a certificate of the clerk of the court, while the latter is prepared from the record by the party appealing. If a transcript has been adopted for effectuating the appeal, and it appears that it is incomplete in any particular affecting the merits of the judgment or decree appealed from, the respondent may have the motion to dismiss, as employed in the present case. But, if the appellant has brought here such a transcript as is required by the preceding section, nothing more can be exacted of him, and the respondent should supply the missing record, if it is desired to present other questions upon his part in defense of the appeal."
Thus it is that taken in connection with the duty of the clerk of the trial court to forward to the appellate court "when the appeal is perfected" the original pleadings and bill of exceptions, a transcript is provided in every case, consisting of what the clerk of the Circuit Court is required to send to the Supreme Court, which must be accompanied by copies of the judgment, notice and undertaking as subordinate and not paramount documents.
So far discussion of the term "abstract" as used in the statute has been purposely omitted. The abstract is nothing more or less than an abbreviation of that same transcript and must contain what these statutes say it must contain, namely, so much thereof as may be necessary to intelligibly present the question to be decided by the appellate tribunal. Matter relating to abstracts appeared for the first time in the rules adopted August 2, 1894, declared effective October 1st of that year. As interpreted byFleischner v. Bank of McMinnville, 36 Or. 553 (54 P. 884, 60 P. 603, 61 P. 345), the question as then presented was:
"Not jurisdictional, and the abstract being required in certain form, and containing certain matter for the benefit and assistance of the court, and to relieve *Page 205 
it as much as possible from the labor of searching in many instances through cumbersome records, and to enable it to ascertain at a glance the errors relied upon, it may, under certain contingencies, be excused entirely, or the court may dismiss the cause for nonobservance of requirements touching it."
Those rules had certain requirements respecting every transcript. Under the legislation enacted up to that time and until the act approved February 22, 1899, jurisdiction was acquired solely on a transcript and not an abstract. Until 1899, abstracts were not jurisdictional. Indeed, the rules of October 1, 1894, had certain requirements about transcripts, about their printing and indexing, and the like, beginning first with the complaint, followed by the summons, demurrer or motion, order respecting the same, answer, reply, verdict of the jury and judgment and likewise a bill of exceptions, requiring also an insertion in the transcript of the notice of appeal and a certificate of the clerk of the filing of the undertaking. Then came the rule about printing and service of abstracts to the effect that within twenty days after the transcript is filed the appellant shall serve upon the attorney for each respondent a printed abstract, prepared as by the rule provided, containing a copy of so much of the record as may be necessary to a full understanding of the questions presented for decision. As stated in Fleischner v. Bank of McMinnville, supra, this was simply for the convenience of the justices of this court. Litigation had increased to such an extent that it was a necessity that there should be some condensed form to which the judges could resort in considering the questions to be decided. Abstracts appeared as a statutory creation for the first time in the act of February 22, 1899. They were thus given legislative significance *Page 206 
but, as required for the original transcript, they included so much of the record as may be necessary intelligibly to present the questions to be decided by the appellate tribunal and not only that, but they must be accompanied by a copy of the judgment or decree appealed from, the notice of appeal and undertaking on appeal. All these ingredients were essential to the jurisdiction of the court, for the statute in plain words says:
"and thereafter the appellate court shall have jurisdiction of the cause and not otherwise."
To make the jurisdiction of the court depend solely upon transactions occurring after the final judgment of the Circuit Court is illogical and does not subserve the object for which an appellate court is constituted. As well might we say that a Circuit Court would acquire jurisdiction if a plaintiff issued and served only a summons without filing or serving a copy of the complaint.
In the apparent desire to do everything to aid an appellant and practically to ignore the rights of a respondent to enforce his judgment, the idea seems to have grown up that the time for sending a bill of exceptions may be extended indefinitely. Section 208, Or. L., reads thus:
"After docketing the judgment, and before the next regular term of the court, the clerk shall prepare and file in his office the judgment roll as provided in this section:
"1. If the complaint has not been answered by any defendant, he shall attach together in the order of their filing, issuing, and entry, the complaint, summons, and proof of service, and a copy of the entry of judgment;
"2. In all other cases, he shall attach together in like manner the summons and proof of service, the pleadings, bill of exceptions, all orders relating to a *Page 207 
change of parties, together with a copy of the entry of judgment, and all other journal entries or orders in any way involving the merits, and necessarily affecting the judgment;
"3. In all cases, the clerk shall attach upon the outside of the judgment roll, a blank sheet of paper, upon which he shall indorse the name of the court, the term at which judgment was given, the names of the parties to the action, and the title thereof, for whom judgment was given, and the amount or nature thereof, and the date of its entry and docketing."
The language of the section is plain that all this must be done before the next regular term of the court, including the framing of a bill of exceptions, else how can the clerk, as required by that section, "before the next regular term of the court" prepare the judgment-roll?
In Jackson County, where this litigation was initiated and heard, the Circuit Court is held on the fourth Monday in February, the fourth Monday in May and the fourth Monday in October. The judgment in this case was rendered June 11, 1925, evidently at the May term of the court in that year. Properly to make up the judgment-roll, the bill of exceptions was required to be filed before the next term of the Circuit Court held on the fourth Monday in October. The notice of appeal and undertaking were filed in the Circuit Court August 5, 1925. There being no objections to the sufficiency of the sureties on the undertaking, the appeal was perfected in five days thereafter or August 10, 1925. Section 554 — 1 requires that the original pleadings and original bill of exceptions shall be sent to this court by the clerk of the Circuit Court "when an appeal is perfected"; not at some other time in the discretion or convenience of the appellant but at the definite date of the perfection of the appeal. If the statute *Page 208 
is observed as it is written, the data was all present in the Supreme Court for the formation of abstracts under the original rule. The pleadings and bill of exceptions would disclose all the errors apparent in the record. Whereas, before the act of February 22, 1899, the filing of an abstract was not jurisdictional but solely for the convenience of the justices in examining the question in dispute, by that act, it was made an elective essential of giving this court jurisdiction to hear the case on the actual transcript or on a condensation thereof called an abstract. It is believed that this court has never made a rule respecting abstracts, as such, designed to comply with the Code on that subject. Rule 11 of the current rules, setting forth the contents of an abstract, remains substantially as it was before abstracts were known to the statute. That rule requires the appellant to "append to the abstract of each paper a reference to the page of the transcript on which it will be found." How that can be done without the actual presence in this court of the original pleadings and original bill of exceptions provided for in Section 554 — 1 is beyond comprehension. Much stress has been placed upon a single clause in the preface to the rules now in force, where it is said that the appellant must:
"1. File a certified copy of the judgment or decree appealed from, the notice of appeal and proof of service thereof, and of the undertaking on appeal."
Then follows the citadel of those who contend that these papers constitute the transcript:
"* * This is jurisdictional and hence indispensable." *Page 209 
The part of the preface already quoted is entirely ignored by the champions of "short transcripts." It is taken as a matter of course, in that instrument, that the transcript or abstract shall contain matter disclosing the questions to be decided on appeal. For instance, this language:
"The statutory provision always has been that the only means by which the evidence can be brought into this court is a bill of exceptions, and that is part of the judgment roll. (Or. L., § 208): and hence whatever evidence is stated in the bill of exceptions necessarily appeared in a transcript or copy of the judgment roll."
Whoever wrote the preface did not intend to and did not in fact ignore the part of the statute requiring either a transcript or an abstract as well as a copy of the notice, proof of service and undertaking together with a copy of the judgment or decree appealed from. Naturally one would think that the papers, the examination of which would disclose the errors complained of would be the only ones required to confer jurisdiction, but having in mind that the appeals are entirely statutory, the author of the preface has said that these latter papers are jurisdictional and hence indispensable, but neither the preface nor the Code has ever said that the transcript or abstract thereof is not jurisdictional as well as the other conventional requirements.
In conferring upon the appellate court the authority to make rules on the subject of abstracts, the legislative power did not confer upon it the authority to dispense with any of the requisites of the statute, either as to time or subject matter. It expressly requires that the abstract authorized by those rules shall be of so much of the record as may be necessary intelligibly *Page 210 
to present the question to be decided by the appellate tribunal. No court has any authority under this statute, or any other, to ignore the plain requirements of a statute. Where rules and statutes conflict, so much the worse for the rules. An examination of the rules shows that the effort has been toward condensation, omitting all unnecessary matter, but they have not anywhere declared that a transcript shall consist only of a copy of the judgment, notice of appeal and undertaking.
We turn now to the statute to inquire what relaxation from the strictness of the rule is permitted. The precept embodied in Section 554, Or. L., read in connection with Section 554 — 1, Or. L., is that the appellant shall within thirty days at least after the perfection of the appeal file a transcript or an abbreviation thereof called an abstract with the appellate court and these must be accompanied by a copy of the judgment, the notice of appeal with proof of service thereof and the undertaking on appeal. The only relief for this is found in subdivision 2 of Section 554 to the effect that the trial court or judge thereof, or the Supreme Court or a justice thereof, may, upon such terms as may be just, by order enlarge the time for filing the transcript or abstract, but even that clemency requires that the order to that effect must be made within time allowed to file the transcript and shall not extend it beyond the term of the appellate court next following the appeal. The language could not be plainer in putting an insuperable limit upon the indulgence which may be granted to tardy appellants. No court or judge has any authority under this statute to extend the time for filing the desired matter beyond the term of the appellate court next following the appeal. Such a course is expressly *Page 211 
forbidden. The limits of indulgence are plainly prescribed and we ought not to disregard them.
As stated, the record shows that the judgment was entered June 11, 1925. At the same time there was an order giving thirty days to file motion of new trial and bill of exceptions. This would extend it to and including July 11, 1925. The next order was not made until July 23, 1925, when an extension of time of sixty days was granted in which to file a bill of exceptions. There was, therefore, a lapse of at least ten days in which there was no authority extant for extending the time, in which to file the bill. The statute expressly says that the order must be made within the time allowed to file the transcript. By construction this has been held to be subject to extension provided there is no lapse but when the periods of time fail to connect and there is an interim jurisdiction is lost. Moreover, we find, going on further, that under no circumstances can the time be extended beyond the term of the appellate court next following the appeal. As stated, the appeal was perfected August 10, 1925, yet after the lapse above indicated and after the expiration of the term of this court next following the appeal, namely, as late as February 18, 1926, we find an order extending the time to file the abstract to any time prior to March 1, 1926, and afterward to file additional assignments of error. As a matter of fact, the so-called bill of exceptions was not filed until June 24, 1926. With the lapse already noted and the attempt to file the bill of exceptions, long after the expiration of the term of the appellate court next following the appeal, there is clearly a failure of jurisdiction. As already stated, the original pleadings were not filed in this court until October 13, 1926, although they are expressly made a part of the transcript by Section *Page 212 
554 — 1. Plainly, this court has no jurisdiction not only because there was an interim between the periods of extension but also because the transcript was not filed until long after the expiration of the term of this court next succeeding the appeal.
Much is said in argument about the tardiness of the reporter in getting out a transcript of the testimony. So far as that is concerned the jurisdiction of this court does not depend upon and ought not to be enlarged on account of the slothfulness or inability of any stenographer. If the design was to pile up an extended record with a view of overwhelming the plaintiff, the defendant has overplayed its hand and is in no position to ask further indulgence of the court. A transcript of the testimony is not absolutely essential to a bill of exceptions. It is permissible and in all cases a necessary part only where the question to be decided is that of nonsuit or directed verdict. The rule, yet permissible, in making up a bill of exceptions is that the objections shall be stated with as much evidence or other matters as is necessary to explain it, but no more. It is yet competent to make a concise bill of exceptions and it is not the intention of the legislature for a party to pile up a garrulous and extended record when it is not necessary. If there is to be reform in judicial procedure there is ample field for such betterment within the limits of the statute.
The fallacy that has hitherto characterized the arguments and decisions tending to encourage appeals and favor appellants at the expense of respondents is to confine the term "transcript" exclusively to the copies of the notice of appeal, undertaking and judgment. Those who uphold that theory contend that the pleadings and bill of exceptions are not component parts of the transcript, but Section 554 — 1, *Page 213 
Or. L., with authority paramount over any rule or opinion, expressly says they "shall be a part of the transcript in the Supreme Court." In the true sense of the words, "transcript" and "abstract" as used in Section 554, Or. L., no rule of this court has undertaken to contradict the succeeding section and no opinion can rightly enter upon a like undertaking.
"Transcript" is a full word for word duplicate of the original documents composing the record of the Circuit Court. "Abstract" is merely an abbreviation of the same matter. For the purposes of appeal, they are equivalent. Each of them must contain "so much of the record as may be necessary to intelligibly present the question to be decided, together with," not separately, from the pseudo "short transcript." The Code does not speak of or deal with either transcripts or abstracts by piecemeal but requires a complete record: Wolf v. Smith, 6 Or. 73; Close v. Close,28 Or. 109 (42 P. 128). It is not analogous to an instance of atonic labor where no one can say whether the case is in the Circuit Court or the Supreme Court. It must belong to one or the other and not to both at once.
No one pretends that the determination of whether jurisdiction attaches in a particular case or not is other than a judicial question to be decided by the courts. So far as that is concerned, every court in every case it considers either impliedly or expressly decides that it has or has not jurisdiction. But the legislative branch of the government has the power to prescribe, subject to constitutional restrictions, general rules by which the jurisdiction of this court is to be determined, and has established controlling limitations on appellate jurisdiction of this court, both as to the contents of the record on appeal and *Page 214 
as to the time within which such record must be filed. In any case where jurisdiction is drawn in question on the record on appeal, the court will inspect the documents proffered in support of the appeal and if, on such examination, the court, applying the canon prescribed by the legislature, determines that those instruments coincide with the statutory standard, it will assume jurisdiction. Otherwise, it will disclaim it and dismiss the appeal. This is all that is held in Oxman v. Baker County,115 Or. 436 (234 P. 799, 236 P. 1040); Western Land  Irr.Co. v. Humfield, 118 Or. 416 (247 P. 143); Sitton v.Goodwin, 119 Or. 74 (248 P. 163, 249 P. 362), and other cases involving jurisdiction.
In the instant case, whether we call the data which the appealing defendant has brought here transcript, abstract or original papers, they do not comply with the statutory rules either as to subject matter or time of filing so as to give this court jurisdiction to hear the case on the merits. Hence, determining a judicial question and exercising our jurisdiction to decide that we have no jurisdiction on the merits, the appeal should be dismissed.
It being thus an instance of an abandoned appeal, a judgment should be entered not only dismissing the appeal but also affirming the judgment of the Circuit Court as against the defendant as well as against its sureties on appeal: Henrichsen
v. Smith, 29 Or. 475 (42 P. 486, 44 P. 496); Section 554, Or. L., subd. 3.
For the foregoing reasons, I concur in the result of the opinion of Mr. Justice RAND. *Page 215