Jarvis v. State

Decision Date19 April 1934
Citation156 So. 310,115 Fla. 320
PartiesJARVIS v. STATE.
CourtFlorida Supreme Court

Rehearing Denied July 18, 1934.

Error to Circuit Court, Sarasota County; Paul C. Albritton, Judge.

Martin F. Jarvis was convicted for murder in the first degree, and he brings error.

Affirmed.

On Petition for Rehearing.

COUNSEL J. Irvin Walden, Sidney R. Perry, and J. D Gill, all of Sarasota, for plaintiff in error.

Cary D Landis, Atty. Gen., and Dewey A. Dye, State's Atty., of Bradenton, for the State.

OPINION

ELLIS Justice.

Martin F. Jarvis was indicted, tried, and convicted for the murder in the first degree on March 12, 1933, of Lacy Bell Dyel. The indictment was presented on May 3, 1933, and on the 11th day of the same month he was arraigned and pleaded not guilty. The transcript of the record contains a statement to the effect that the 'Court ascertained that the defendant was insolvent and unable to employ Counsel,' whereupon the court appointed three members of the bar to defend the accused and the cause was then set for trial at 9 o'clock a. m. on May 15th, four days after the plea of not guilty was entered.

There was a motion for a continuance but it is not contained in a bill of exceptions, nor is there any certificate of authenticity attached to it as chapter 12019, Laws 1927 (sections 4610-4612, C. G. L.) requires. This irregularity in the making up of the transcript, however, was by order of the court permitted to be corrected so that the motion for a continuance appears in the bill of exceptions.

The document referred to as the bill of exceptions was not made up in accordance with rule 103 nor special rule 3 of the rules of circuit courts in law actions. It consists of the official court reporter's transcription of the testimony taken at the trial, and notes made apparently by him of the persons present, the remark made by defendant's counsel that he did not feel that he had had ample time in which to prepare the defense, the judge's reply thereto, the judge's charge to the jury, and a note of an incident occurring after the jury had retired, all over the signature of the official court reporter by way of authentication; the assignment of errors and the signature of the judge at the end of a form of certificate prescribed by the rule to be attached to a bill of exceptions. It seems as if the stenographer's transcription of his notes made at the trial, the judge's charge to the jury, and the assignment of errors were just sandwiched in between the caption and formal certificate of a bill of exceptions.

We do not say that such apparently unconcerned achievement may not be technically named a bill of exceptions. However, under a motion by attorneys for the plaintiff in error to be permitted to amend the assignment of errors which was granted and the amendment made, we are treating the document as complete and considering all the questions presented by the brief. The court certified that the document contained all the evidence introduced at the trial and all the charges given by the judge.

Chapter 12019, Acts 1927 (sections 4610-4612, C. G. L.), does not cure defects in a transcript of the record which is designed to present to this court in an orderly and correct manner the record of a judgment for review. It is essential to the complete exercise of appellate jurisdiction that the errors complained of as having been committed by the trial court should be presented to this court by a properly authenticated transcript of the record. A transaction occurring at the trial should be presented by a duly certified bill of exceptions which under the statute when filed becomes part of the record. But when an attorney will not observe this requirement and seeks to present matters in pais by incorporating them in a transcript of the record proper, he should see to it that such matters are duly and properly authenticated by a certificate of the trial judge that such matters occurred at the trial. If a motion for a continuance or a motion for a new trial is made, as an illustration those motions should appear in the bill of exceptions so that they may be duly authenticated by the judge who signs the bill of exceptions. If pretended copies of such motions are placed in the transcript of the record proper without any authentication by the trial judge that such motions were presented as appear in the transcript, the appellate court has no means of being correctly informed whether the motions as copied were in fact made or whether the trial judge considered the same. See Great American Ins. Co. v. Suarez, 107 Fla. 705, 146 So. 644; Mungin v. State (Fla.) 147 So. 577; Branch v State, 96 Fla. 307, 118 So. 13.

It is the duty of the plaintiff in error to make the alleged error of which he complains clearly to appear to the appellate court to which he applies for a reversal of the judgment against him. If he fails to do so the presumption of regularity of the proceedings and the correctness of the judgment obtains and this court has no power under the Constitution and laws to do otherwise than affirm the judgment. State v. Call, 1 Fla. 92; Hoodless v. Jernigan, 46 Fla. 213, 35 So. 656; Akin v. Morgan, 50 Fla. 173, 39 So. 534; Thomas v. Price, 56 Fla. 694, 48 So. 17; Burk v. Clark, 8 Fla. 9; Colson v. State, 51 Fla. 19, 40 So. 183; Lewis v. State, 55 Fla. 54, 45 So. 998.

No power exists in this court to substitute its judgment for that of the trial court upon a carelessly prepared and unauthenticated transcript of alleged proceedings in a duly organized constitutional tribunal of justice, nor has the Legislature the constitutional power to vest such authority in this court if indeed it attempted to do so by the statute to which reference is made.

The necessity for the observance of rules both in the trial of causes as well as in their presentation to this court on appeal is apparent to all persons who advocate and realize the necessity for preserving a judicial system disigned to produce efficiency, celerity, accuracy, and economy in the transaction of judicial business. The criticisms by the laity of our judicial system as an antiquated, cumbersome, and inefficient method for the administration of justice is not because of innate weakness in the system, or lack of ability or character in the judges who labor to the best of their ability with the means and tools at hand to administer justice, but much of the criticism proceeds from an abuse or too careless use of the rules of procedure by litigants or their representatives in the presentation of their cases to the courts.

According to the brief of counsel for plaintiff in error, questions are sought to be presented which could only be brought to this court by a duly prepared and authenticated bill of exceptions. One of the questions is the propriety of the court's ruling on a motion for a continuance or postponement of the trial to the 18th day of May. The court ordered the cause to be postponed until May 16th. The motion was made on the 15th of May. Counsel were appointed to defend the accused on the 12th of May. The day before the court had set the trial for the 15th. Counsel waited until the hour set for the beginning of the trial on the 15th of May and then made the motion. It is alleged that sufficient time had not been given them to 'interview the defendant's witnesses and therefore have not been able to prepare an affidavit of insolvency in order to have defendant's witnesses subpoenaed at the expense of the County'; also that the 'attorneys for the defendant have not had sufficient time to adequately prepare his defense.' There is no affidavit in support of the motion; no facts averred from which it might appear that counsel were handicapped by lack of time to prepare the defense. In fact, no effort whatsoever was made to comply with the rule prescribed by authority of law as a protection against abuse of court procedure to obtain the postponement.

The counsel seem to rest their proposition solely upon the fact that two months and four days from the date on which a person kills another, or shoots him down in that intent, is too short a time in which to prepare himself against the day when he may be called to the bar of justice to answer for his assault; or that thirteen days from the date of the indictment is too short a time for a citizen who has killed another in which to prepare his defense, or that when he neglects to engage counsel and is dependent upon the goodness and accommodation of members of the bar to volunteer their services in his behalf or act upon the suggestion of the court that four days is too short a time for them to prepare themselves.

There is no authority in law for such a proposition. The Constitution secures to an accused person the right to a speedy and public trial by an impartial jury in the county where the crime was committed and to be heard by himself or counsel or both, etc. Section 11, Declaration of Rights, Const. 1885.

None of those rights were taken from the accused, nor was an impediment to their full and free enjoyment by the accused placed in his way. Counsel's mere statement in their motion that they did not have time to prepare the defense is not sufficient. No facts are given on which to base such a statement, nothing is said as to the character of defense and the complex nature of it that would require more time, nor is anything said about witnesses and what was expected to be established by them, nor that the accused himself depended upon any named witnesses not within the jurisdiction of the court by whom he expected to prove the character of the act by which the life of the woman was taken.

The case is of a serious character because the offense involved is a capital one, and though this court has...

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    ...427; (Same day.) People v. Scigliano, 194 Ill.App. 345; (Fourteen days.) Polite v. State, 78 Ga. 347; (Thirteen days.) Jarvis v. State, 115 Fla. 320, 156 So. 310, error denied 118 Fla. 577, 160 So. 366; (Twelve days.) Milligan v. State, 208 Ala. 223, 94 So. 169; (Nine days.) Commonwealth v.......
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    ...defendant if a new trial was granted. The defendant was allowed six days in which to prepare his defense. In the case of Jarvis v. State, 115 Fla. 320, 156 So. 310, a capital case, defendant was adjudged insolvent and attorneys were appointed on May 15, 1933, by the court to defend him. Cou......
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