Court Opinion

ID: 6483410
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-26 23:07:12.907872+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:14.303420
License: Public Domain

OPINION OP THE COURT BY
JUDD, C.J.
Ob the 25th May, 1894, the defendants in error obtained a verdict against plaintiff in error for $500. Judgment was entered thereon three days later. The plaintiff in error took cer*2tain exceptions to this Court which were heard at the last September term and decided adversely to him, October 15th. On the 17th December a writ of error was sued out, which came on for hearing at this term. The defendants in error moved that the writ be quashed on various grounds, the first one being that the petition for the writ does not contain an allegation that the judgment was not fully satisfied. The plaintiff in error asked this Court to allow him to amend his petition by inserting this allegation, it being admitted that the judgment was not in fact satisfied. We held in Bowler v. McIntyre, 9 Haw. 306, that “it should be alleged in the petition that the judgment' was not fully satisfied, this being a statutory prerequisite for the issuance of the writ.” In that case we refused to dismiss the writ on the ground of the omission of such an allegation because issue had been joined on the merits, though we would have dismissed the writ if the record showed that the judgment had been satisfied. In the case before us we think the amendment should be allowed. Under the general power of this Court to grant amendments in matters where we have original jurisdiction, we allow it because it will not prejudice the defendants in error — the object of the amendment being to have the petition correspond with the facts.
The third ground for quashing the writ is that “the writ was not issued within six months from the rendition of the judgment complained of.” The petition does not contain an allegation that the writ was brought within the six months. Counsel for plaintiff in error shows as follows: A demurrer was interposed by him January 20, 1894-, before the trial in the Circuit Court, he having discontinued his answer of the day previous. The demurrer was substantially a plea of misjoinder of the defendant in error’s husband. It was argued on the 25th May and overruled and the case proceeded immediately to trial. (It should be stated here that defendant in error filed' a plea of general issue on the 22d May.) "When the exceptions were argued before us the plaintiff in error asked us to consider the *3misjoinder of the husband of defendant in error. We found, October 15th (see Iaukea v. Cummings, 9 Haw. 558) that the question was not cognizable before us because the record did not show that any exception was taken or allowed to the overriding the demurrer on that ground and was not sent up in the bill of exceptions. Thereupon the plaintiff in error, on the 6th December, upon motion and notice to opposing counsel, obtained an order of the Circuit Judge presiding at the trial that an amendment be made on the clerk’s minutes as of May 25, 1894, (the day of the trial) to wit, “The demurrer having been argued by the respective counsel, and overruled by the Court, the defendant noted exceptions to the Court’s ruling.” The counsel for plaintiff in error contends that as the cause was still on the clerk’s docket the judgment was not final and therefore the statutory period of limitation of six months had not run. We fail to appreciate the soundness of this proposition. The judgment on the verdict was entered May 25, 1894; exceptions had been overruled and there was nothing left to be done to perfect the judgment. The writ of error Avas sued out on the 17th December, nearly seven months after the judgment Avas entered. The failure to enter on the minutes the fact that the demurrer Avas overruled and that exceptions Avere noted had no effect to suspend or postpone the judgment. This failure Avas the reason ivhy the Circuit Judge disallowed an exception to his overruling the demurrer and why it Avas not incorporated in the bill of exceptions. But the exceptor could have availed himself then and there, when this ground of exception was refused, of the proofs that he thereafter on the 6th December presented to the Judge, that an exception had been in fact noted and that the clerk had omitted it from his minutes by inadvertence. If the question of the alleged misjoinder had been sent up to us in the bill of exceptions we would have considered it, and if the Circuit Court had refused to alloiv the correction, the exception could have been proved before us on evidence sustaining the allegation. See Sec. 74, Judiciary Act.
W. 0. Achi, for plaintiff in error.
E. Johnson and J. L. Katdulcou, for defendants in error.
But, even if no exception Rad in fact been taken to tke overruling of tke demurrer, or if tke demurrer kad not been interposed at all, a writ of. error on the point of tke alleged misjoinder could kave been sued out within six months from tke rendition of judgment if tke judgment kad not been satisfied. .
Tke counsel for tke plaintiff in error is under tke impression that in order to avail himself of a writ of error he must kave raised the point in tke Court below and perfected his exceptions, if not sustained. This is not tke law. “Any error appearing on tke record, either of law or fact, or any cause which might be assigned as error at Common Law,” may be corrected by writ of error. Sec. 3, Chap. 95, Laws of 1892. Undoubtedly if tke ground of error in tke cause kad been made matter of exception and kad been decided in tke Supreme Court, error would not lie — because tke question would be res adjudicaba. But tke statute now makes a writ of error and a bill of exceptions concurrent methods for tke correcting of errors made in lower courts — the conditions and limitations in each method being different.
It was competent for plaintiff in error to kave petitioned for his writ, within the statutory time, even though he had demurred, and even if he kad not demurred and tke record did not state that the' demurrer kad been argued and decided against him and that he kad excepted to tke ruling. If it was essential to his case on tke writ of error to show that tke record was incomplete, he could, before joining in error, suggest a diminution of the record or procure a writ of certiorari.
We have been thus minute in our discussion of this case, as tke Act of 1892 is new and tke practice under it is not fully settled. Tke writ is quashed on the ground that it was not sued out within six months after rendition of judgment.