Court Opinion

ID: 3235489
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:10:09.567225+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:40:22.490908
License: Public Domain

Statutory ejectment, instituted by appellee against appellant. The plaintiff prevailed in a judgment entered March 1, 1920; but, the bill of exceptions not being presented to the trial judge within the 90 days prescribed by law (Code, § 3019), it cannot be considered for purposes of review of the main trial. A motion for new trial was filed on or before March 4, 1920, and the court overruled the motion on March 27, 1920.
Over the signature of the trial judge, this appears as indorsed on or appended to the bill of exceptions, the signature and approval of the bill being set in above at the end of the bill:
"This bill of exceptions, without the motion for new trial and the ruling thereon, was presented to me on June 1, 1920, more than 90 *Page 583 
days after the case was tried; the motion for a new trial and the ruling thereon was added to the bill and as amended the bill was presented on June 24, 1920.
  "Filed in my office Dec. 4, 1920. "C. W. Young, Clerk."
It is manifest that the matter set out over the signature of the presiding judge is the recital of a past fact or act; not the memorial of indorsement required by the statute (section 3019) as the exclusive means for evidencing the fact and the date of presentation contemplated by the statute. Box v. Sou. Ry. Co., 184 Ala. 598, 64 So. 69. The motion to strike, to entirely eliminate, what purports to be a bill of exceptions in this transcript, must be, and it is, granted. If the bill of exceptions, as the basis for review of the motion for new trial (not the main trial), had been indorsed by the presiding judge as presented on June 24, 1920, it would then have served the purposes for a review of the action of the court in overruling the motion for new trial which action was taken March 27, 1920, within 90 days before June 24, 1920. There is, in short, no indorsement of presentation on June 24, 1920, or on any other date that was within 90 days of the date of overruling the motion for new trial.
The complaint was not defective in its description of the land — an island in the Tennessee river — sued for, nor was the verdict void in referring the subject of the recovery awarded to the land described in the complaint. Lessley v. Prater, 200 Ala. 43-45, 75 So. 355, citing previous rulings supporting the conclusion here announced.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SOMERVILLE and THOMAS, JJ., concur.