Hunter v. Cleveland, C., C. & St. L. Ry. Co., 13923.

Decision Date30 December 1930
Docket NumberNo. 13923.,13923.
Citation174 N.E. 287,202 Ind. 328
PartiesHUNTER et al. v. CLEVELAND, C., C. & ST. L. RY. CO.
CourtIndiana Supreme Court

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Appeal from Marion Circuit Court; Harry O. Chamberlin, Judge.

Action between William R. Hunter and others and the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railway Company. William R. Hunter and others appealed to the Appellate Court, which purported to decide the case (171 N. E. 925), and overruled a petition for rehearing. On petition by appellants for transfer of case to Supreme Court and motion by appellee to dismiss the petition.

Motion to dismiss petition overruled. Petition to transfer dismissed.

Clinton H. Givan and Albert Bristor, both of Indianapolis, for appellant.

Frank L. Littleton and Forrest Chenoweth, both of Indianapolis (H. N. Quigley, S. W. Baxter, and C. P. Stewart, all of Cincinnati, Ohio, of counsel), for appellee.

MARTIN, J.

The Appellate Court of Indiana on May 21, 1930, 171 N. E. 925, purported to decide this case, its entry reading as follows: “Per Curiam. Affirmed.” The appellants, within sixty days thereafter, filed a petition for rehearing in which they requested the Appellate Court to state the reasons why it had affirmed the decision of the trial court, which petition was overruled, July 30.

On August 28, the appellants filed in this court a petition (application) for the transfer of the case to the Supreme Court. The appellee has filed a motion to dismiss this petition on the ground that, since the Appellate Court wrote no opinion when it affirmed the judgment, its opinion does not (1) contravene any ruling precedent of the Supreme Court or (2) decide any new question of law erroneously (which are the only grounds that can be relied upon in a petition for transfer under subdivision 2, § 1357, Burns' 1926).

A question thus arises, which we shall consider, viz.: Does a party to an appeal in the Appellate Court have a right guaranteed by the Constitution or provided by statute to have a written opinion or statement in writing of the material questions arising in the record thereof?

The Constitution of 1816 contained no provision requiring the Supreme Court to render any of its decisions or opinions in writing, but section 26, c. 1, of the Acts of 1816 provides that “the opinions and determinations of the Court shall be delivered in writing, except in cases and on subjects of an unimportant nature, which opinions and determinations shall be recorded by the clerk in a book kept for that purpose.” This provision was incorporated substantially in section 89, c. 37, Revised Statutes 1843, p. 639.

The debates of the Constitutional Convention of 1850 indicate (volume 2, p. 1862) that there was a continued disregard of this statute by the Supreme Court 1 which resulted in the adoption of section 5, art. 7, Const. 1851, section 172, Burns' 1926. This section reads as follows: “The Supreme Court shall, upon the decision of every case, give a statement in writing of each question arising in the record of such case and the decision of the court thereon.”

Six years later this court in Willets v. Ridgway (1857) 9 Ind. 367, said that such provision should receive a construction which would “obviate its inconvenience and objectionable character, as far as consistently can be done,” 2 and held that “a question arising in the record” (within the meaning of those words as used in the Constitution) must be a question, “the decision of which is necessary to the final determination of the cause, and which the record presents with a fullness and distinctness, rendering it possible for the Court to comprehend it in all its bearings.”

Section 15, c. 247, Acts 1901, section 1351, Burns' 1926 (a substantial re-enactment of section 12, c. 37, Acts 1891, the act creating the Appellate Court), provides that: “Appeals to the Appellate Court shall be taken in the same manner and with the same effect and subject to the same limitations and restrictions as are now or hereafter may be provided in case of appeals to the Supreme Court. *** The rules of court, pleadings, practice, and proceedings in cases assigned or transferred to said divisions [of the Appellate Court], shall be the same as provided by or for the Supreme Court.”

Section 17, c. 247, Acts 1901, section 1361, Burns' 1926 (a substantial re-enactment of section 13, c. 37, Acts 1891,3 the act creating the Appellate Court) provides that: “In every case reversed by a division of the Appellate Court, an opinion shall be given on the material questions therein in writing, and the appropriate judgment shall be entered, with directions to the lower court. ***”

[1][2][3] By the provisions of section 1351, Burns' 1926, supra (that appeals to the Appellate Court are subject to the same limitations, restrictions, rules, and proceedings as are appeals to the Supreme Court), the requirement of section 5, art. 7, Constitution 1851 (that a statement in writing be made in the decision of cases appealed to the Supreme Court), is, by statute, extended to the cases appealed to the Appellate Court.

In Houston v. Williams (1859) 13 Cal. 24, 73 Am. Dec. 565, it was held that a Legislature has no power to impose such a requirement on the courts. This question seems not to have been raised elsewhere (except in Speight v. People ex rel. [1877] 87 Ill. 595, and Vaughn v. Harp [1886] 49 Ark. 160, 4 S. W. 751), although statutory provisions (as well as Constitutional provisions) requiring written decisions or opinions are not uncommon.4

The requirement of our Constitution in this regard is onerous and burdensome, but it was placed in our basic law to cure an abuse that had occurred, and that is apt to occur when a court of appeal is not required to give reasons for its decisions, nor even to state what the questions are which are involved and its decision thereon.5 The Legislature may prescribe reasonable regulations and restrictions for the appeal of cases, and we cannot say that it is unreasonable to provide that the same rule shall govern the Appellate Court which is enjoined by the Constitution upon the Supreme Court..

In Craig v. Bennett (1901) 158 Ind. 9, 62 N. E. 273, 274, it was held that the requirement imposed by section 5, art. 7, Const. 1851, upon the Supreme Court does not control the Appellate Court, while section 1361, Burns' 1926, requires that in every case reversed by the Appellate Court an opinion in writing must be given on the material points. But the court there apparently failed to take notice of the provisions and effect of section 1351, Burns' 1926 (then section 1337- O, Burns' 1901). If section 1351 imposes upon the Appellate Court the duty of giving “a statement in writing of each question arising in the record of such case and the decision of the court thereon” in all cases, then section 1361, providing that “in every case reversed by a division of the Appellate Court, an opinion shall be given on the material questions therein in writing,” is not sufficient to relieve that court of the duty imposed by section 1351 (regarding all cases, which includes cases affirmed). It follows that the decision in Craig v. Bennett, on this point, must be overruled.

The clerk is directed to provide the Chief Judge of the Appellate Court of Indiana with a copy of this opinion, and the attention of that court is respectfully directed to the statements of law made herein.

In the case under consideration the judgment of the Appellate Court has not been certified to the lower court. It follows from what has been stated that the parties are entitled to a decision and judgment herein by the Appellate Court in the manner directed by section 5, art. 7, Const. 1851, section 172, Burns' 1926, and section 1351, Burns' 1926, that no such judgment has been rendered, and that the cause is still pending in the Appellate Court for a proper decision.

The appellee's motion to dismiss appellant's petition to transfer, being founded on the incorrect premise that a valid decision and judgment was rendered by the Appellate Court, is insufficient and is overruled.

[4] A petition to transfer being authorized only after a valid decision and judgment has been rendered, and a petition for rehearing of the same has been overruled, the appellant's petition is dismissed.

[5][6] In making the foregoing decision, the court is not unmindful of the fact that, in addition to overruling Craig v. Bennett, supra, it is in effect overruling its former uniform action in denying petitions to transfer in cases where the Appellate Court gave no written decision or opinion. Under the law as stated herein these former rulings on petitions to transfer are erroneous, but they must, of necessity, remain the law of those cases. Likewise in all disposed of cases in which the Appellate Court has entered judgments of affirmance without written opinions or decisions and such judgments have been certified to the lower court (after the expiration of the time in which they could be attacked) they must remain the law of such cases.

TRAVIS, J., dissents.

MYERS, C. J., concurs in the result.

1 Mr. Thomas W. Gibson of Clark County in offering this section said:“The object I have in view is to put an end to a species of dodging questions which has been practiced in our Supreme Court from its organization, and which has increased, from year to year, until it has become an intolerable evil.“You try a cause before the Circuit Court involving large interests, or perhaps, liberty or life. The various questions of law arising on the trial, and placed upon the record, and the losing party brings his case to the Supreme Court for the purpose of having those questions passed upon by the highest judicial tribunal of the State. The Supreme Court will, in some instances, affirm the judgment of the court below without giving any opinion in writing upon the questions involved; in other cases they will decide some one of the questions, reverse the case and leave the other points untouched....

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