On June 14, 1932, this Court, having under consideration a motion by defendant in error to strike from the record a motion for a new trial and a motion embraced in the same document to strike the bill of exceptions from the record, granted the former and denied the latter. Thereupon, on June 20, 1932, attorneys for the defendant in error caused to be filed a petition for a rehearing upon the order denying the motion to strike the bill of exceptions.
E. K. Lumpkin, the defendant in error, commenced his action in the Circuit Court for Dade County against Leo B. Ward and obtained a writ of garnishment against The Maule Ojus Rock Company, the plaintiff in error.
The action was upon a promissory note executed by Ward in favor of the Collins Company for $7,000.00 and by that Company assigned and transferred for value before maturity to Lumpkin. A payment was made upon the note after it came into the plaintiff's hands. The writ of garnishment required The Maul Ojus Rock Company to answer on May 3, 1926. Judgment was obtained against Ward in the sum of $7,186.25 on March 20, 1928, and against the garnishee in the sum of $7,939.55 on February 18, 1932.
The case on the issue between the plaintiff and garnishee came on to be tried by a jury on January 26, 1932. The verdict was rendered on the 28th of that month and *Page 269 the final judgment was rendered and entered on February 18, 1932.
A writ of error was taken by The Maule Ojus Rock Company to that judgment on February 19, 1932. On April 30, 1932, the plaintiff in error made up and tendered a bill of exceptions which was signed by the Judge on the same day.
It was argued by the defendant in error that as the verdict was rendered during the fall term of the court, which adjourned February 8th, and the judgment entered during the succeeding term of the court on the 18th of February, and as no motion for a new trial had been made within the time prescribed by law, which if it had been done might have continued the court's jurisdiction rather continued the term as to this particular case, the bill of exceptions was not presented and signed "during the term of the court at which the verdict is rendered or trial had unless by special order further time is allowed" as required by Rule 97 Circuit Court Law Rules.
Two special orders appear in the minutes as disclosed by the record relating to the time when a bill of exceptions should be settled. One order was dated March 5, 1932, fixing the "time for settling the bill of exceptions" at sixty days from the date of the final judgment. The other was made on the 18th day of April, 1928, which purported to extend the time for "settling the bill of exceptions" up to and including the 2nd day of May, 1932.
Those orders were made during the term following the term at which the verdict was rendered, but were made during the term at which the judgment was entered. The certificate of the Judge recites that the bill of exceptions was presented within the time allowed by the special orders above mentioned which were identified in the Judge's certificate by the dates which the orders bore.
A motion for a new trial is required to be made within *Page 270 four days after the verdict shall have been rendered and during the same term. Such motions operate as a supersedeas only when ordered by the court, but the entry of the motion does not prevent the entry of the judgment on the verdict. Section 4497 C. G. L. 1927.
The judge however, upon cause shown, may within the four days after verdict and during the same term by order extend the time for making and presenting such motions not to exceed fifteen days from the rendition of the verdict. In such cases a copy of the motion to be presented to the Judge shall be served on the opposite party or his attorney with the three days' notice of the time and place that the same shall be presented and heard. Sec. 4498 C. G. L. 1927.
The above statutory provisions were not strictly followed in this case nor was any effort made to do so, so the motion was stricken. Warner v. Goding,
In the case of Bunch v. John,
The same situation exists in this case. No motion for a new trial was in contemplation of law made, and the court was without jurisdiction to grant or deny the same. *Page 271 That being true it follows that the jurisdiction of the court was not retained nor the term continued for the purpose of disposing of the motion. Now the bill of exceptions in the Bunch case, supra, was settled and signed after the term of the court at which the verdict was rendered and at which the judgment also was entered, but as the settling and signing of the bill of exceptions was conditioned upon the consideration and overruling of a motion for a new trial to be presented to the judge as the statute required and the requirements of the statute were not complied with the bill of exceptions was also stricken from the record.
The case at bar and the Bunch case, supra, are alike in all respects except as to one feature so far as the question presented herein involved and that is the judgment was not entered in this case at the same term as that at which the verdict was rendered as in the Bunch case, supra, but the judgment was entered at the following term. May it be said that because the judgment was entered at a subsequent term to that at which the verdict was rendered the bill of exceptions was made up and signed "during the term of the court at which the verdict was (is) rendered or trial had?"
The bill of exceptions certainly was not made up and signed at the term at which the verdict was rendered. Was it at the term at which the "trial was had?"
A trial is a judicial examination of the issues between the parties whether they be issues of law or fact. See 38 Cyc. 1267.
It is the examination before a competent tribunal according to the laws of the land of the facts put in issue in a cause for the purpose of determining such issue. Bouvier Law Dictionary; Finn v. Spagnoli,
In its restricted sense the word means an investigation of the facts only. Mathews v. Clayton Co.,
A trial may be considered incomplete until final judgment has been entered. 21 Ency. Pl. Prac. 957.
If the language of the rule was transposed so as to read "during the term of the court at which the trial was had or verdict rendered" the terms would appear to be synonymous. Why are they not as in their position in the rule? A judgment is merely the result of a trial. 11 Ency. Pl. Prac. 809. It is the conclusion of law upon the facts found or admitted by the parties or upon their default in the course of the suit. 2 Blackstone's Com. 395; Blood v. Bates,
It does not depend upon the arbitrary caprice of the judge but on the settled or invariable principles of justice. In re Sedgeley Av., 88 Pa. St. 509, text 513. It is a final decision entered upon a record. It is the end of the law for which jurisdiction of a court is exercised. Fordyce v. Beecher,
The purpose of the rule was to prescribe an expeditious method for the review of causes tried in courts of competent jurisdiction. A judgment may be entered at any time after verdict. Months or years may elapse after the verdict or trial, in which case the signing of a bill of exceptions may be postponed for years if the entry of the judgment is considered as a part of the "trial" of the cause in the sense of that term as used in the rule. The making up of a bill of exceptions in no wise depends upon the entry of a judgment. It may be made up and signed after the trial, filed with the clerk and there await the entering of a judgment to which a writ of error may issue. *Page 273
Any other interpretation of the rule would make for delay and inaccuracy by the difficulty after the lapse of time of presenting the matters in pais which a bill of exceptions is designed to preserve. In this view of the case I am of the opinion that the bill of exceptions should be stricken from the record. It is so ordered.
BROWN, J., concurs.