Briggs v. Kinzer
Decision Date | 29 May 1916 |
Docket Number | Case Number: 4787 |
Citation | 59 Okla. 49,1916 OK 590,158 P. 447 |
Parties | BRIGGS v. KINZER. |
Court | Oklahoma Supreme Court |
¶0 1. Appeal and Error--Settlement of Case-Made--Notice--Waiver by Stipulation.
Where counsel by stipulation, waive the right to suggest amendments, and agree that the case may be settled immediately and without notice, such stipulation constitutes a waiver of all notice of the settlement of the case-made.
2. Same--Case-Made--Cure of Defects.
Where a case-made does not contain a positive averment by way of a recital that it contains all the evidence introduced or submitted on the trial of the case, the same will be insufficient and without force, and it is not cured by the certificate of the court clerk or the stipulations of counsel.
Error from District Court, Tillman County; Frank Matthews, Judge.
Action by Henry Kinzer against Charles Briggs. Judgment for plaintiff, and defendant brings error. Dismissed.
Wilson & Roe for plaintiff in error.
Mounts & Davis for defendant in error.
¶1 For convenience the plaintiff in error will be referred to as defendant, and the defendant in error as plaintiff, as they appeared in the trial court. Plaintiff moves for the dismissal of the appeal upon two grounds, viz: (1) That there was no notice of the settlement of the case-made; (2) that the case-made contains no recital that all the evidence is contained therein.
¶2 In passing upon the first ground of the motion we think it sufficient to say that the stipulation of counsel at page 75 of the record, which reads as follows: "And the said plaintiff waives the right to suggest amendments to said case-made, and hereby consents that the same may be settled immediately and without notice"-- constitutes a waiver of notice, and the defendant was under no obligation thereafter to serve him with further notice.
¶3 The second ground appears to be more serious. There is nothing by way of a recital in the case-made which purports to show the case-made contains all the evidence produced at the trial, except the stipulations of counsel, and this has been held to be fatal where the only questions for review depend upon an examination of the evidence for their determination. Baldwin Lumber Co. v. Sanders, 39 Okla. 142, 134 P. 387, and cases therein cited.
¶4 It is true that the case-made contains a certificate of counsel for plaintiff and defendant that the case-made contains "all the evidence offered and introduced." Record, p. 75. But this does not cure the lack of averment by way of a recital in the case-made. Mr. Justice Williams, in the case of Gaffney v. Stanard, 31 Okla. 541, 122 P. 510, says:
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