Bailer v. Dowd

Decision Date23 March 1942
Docket Number27626.
Citation40 N.E.2d 325,219 Ind. 624
PartiesBAILER v. DOWD.
CourtIndiana Supreme Court

Appeal from LaPorte Circuit Court; Wirt Worden Judge.

Hubert R. McClenahan, of Decatur, for appellant.

George N. Beamer, Atty. Gen., and Norman E. Duke, Dep. Atty. Gen for appellee.

RICHMAN Judge.

This is a collateral attack on a judgment of the Allen Circuit Court by a petition for a writ of habeas corpus filed in the LaPorte Circuit Court. Appellant claims that the judgment upon which he was committed was void because the entry thereof was not signed by the judge. The trial court thought otherwise and quashed the petition. It is conceded that if the lack of the judge's signature is merely an irregularity the principle stated in State ex rel. O'Leary v. Smith, Regular Judge, 1941 Ind.Sup., 37 N.E.2d 60, State ex rel. Kunkel et al. v Circuit Court of LaPorte County, 1936, 209 Ind. 682, 200 N.E. 614; Swain v. Dowd, Warden, 1939, 215 Ind. 256, 18 N.E.2d 928, and other similar cases, is applicable and the judgment should be affirmed.

Appellant was committed to the state prison in 1926 before the last amendment of § 4-324, Burns' 1933, § 1413, Baldwin's 1934, but that amendment is immaterial to this inquiry. The statute presently reads: 'It shall be the duty of the clerk of the circuit court to draw up each day's proceedings at full length in the proper order-book of said court, and the judge of said court shall thereupon sign the same, and no process shall issue upon any judgment or decree of court until it shall have been so signed by the judge.'

This statute does not limit the power or jurisdiction of the court to render a judgment but merely prescribes the manner in which it shall be recorded. Such statutes are usually held to be directory. See 2 Lewis' Sutherland, Stat.Constr., Ch. XVI, beginning at p. 1114. All the later decisions of this and the Appellate Court so treat this statute. The exact contention herein made was before this court in Brant et al. v. Lincoln National Life Ins. Co. of Ft. Wayne, 1935, 209 Ind. 268, 270, 198 N.E. 785, and it was therein correctly held that an unsigned judgment was not void and that a sale made pursuant to the process issued thereon was not void so as to be subject to collateral attack. The following cases also support this conclusion: Jones v. Carnahan, 1878, 63 Ind. 229; Beitman v. Hopkins, 1887, 109 Ind. 177, 9 N.E. 720; Owen v. Harriott, 1911, 47 Ind.App. 359, 370, 94 N.E. 591, 595; Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Johnson, 1911, 49 Ind.App. 126, 132, 93 N.E. 683, 686, 95 N.E. 610; Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Johnson, 1912, 52 Ind.App. 457, 99 N.E. 508; Cadwell v. Teaney, 1927, 199 Ind. 634, 640, 157 N.E. 51, 54; Laiskomis v. Federal Land Bank of Louisville, 1936, 210 Ind. 577, 4 N.E.2d 204. See, also, Catterlin et al. v. City of Frankfort, 1882, 87 Ind. 45, 56; Griffith v. State, 1871, 36 Ind. 406, 408; Kent et al. v. Fullenlove et al., 1872, 38 Ind. 522, 525; Johnson v. Bd. of Com'rs of Wells Co., 1886, 107 Ind. 15, 22, 8 N.E. 1, 4; Martin et al. v. Pifer, 1884, 96 Ind. 245, 251.

This rule is based upon the premise, not always stated in the opinions, that rendition of the judgment is the act of the judge, judicial, but the entry thereof the act of the clerk, ministerial, and the judge's signature is likewise a ministerial attestation to the correctness of the clerk's transcription of a judgment complete in itself when pronounced by the judge. This distinction is recognized by those cases which hold that the time for appeal runs from the date of rendition of the judgment not the date of its entry. Anderson, Adm'x, v. Mitchell et al., 1877, 58 Ind. 592; Reading v. Brown, 1898, 19 Ind.App. 90, 49 N.E. 41; Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Johnson, supra.

The rule above stated and reasons therefor have not always been recognized by this court, as indicated by the following cases: Ringle v. Weston, 1864, 23 Ind. 588; Hougland et al. v. State ex rel. McCool, 1873, 43 Ind. 537, 543; Emery v. Royal, 1889, 117 Ind. 299 20 N.E. 150, all of which involve proceedings in justice of the peace courts; Galbraith et al. v. Sidener, 1867, 28 Ind. 142, 150, where a judgment of a court of common pleas was held void; Passwater v. Edwards, 1873, 44 Ind. 343; Mitchell v. St. John, 1884, 98 Ind. 598, and a few other cases unnecessary to notice. It would serve no good purpose to examine them in detail. The justice of the peace cases deal with another statute. They may be explained, if not distinguished, by the reluctance of the court to permit a layman operating a one-man court to deviate from the simple but necessary forms prescribed by the Legislature. The Galbraith case was based on Ringle v. Weston which did not state that the judgment was void but merely that a transcript of the judgment showing no signature was not admissible in evidence. This is not the rule as to transcripts of judgments of circuit courts. Ferris v. Udell et al., 1894, 139 Ind. 579, 592, 38 N.E. 180, 184. In th...

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