Rulings of a circuit court at the trial of an action at law
without a jury when there had been no waiver of a jury by
stipulation in writing signed by the parties or their attorneys,
and filed with the clerk as required by § 649 Rev.Stat., are
not reviewable here.
Boogher v. Insurance Co., 103 U. S.
90, distinguished from this case.
Page 124 U. S. 158
Assumpsit. Trial by the court without a jury, and judgment for
plaintiff. Defendant sued out this writ of error. The case is
stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought by Ellis G. Hughes against the Dundee
Mortgage and Trust Investment Company to recover an amount claimed
to be due for professional services. After the pleadings were
complete and the issues joined, the following entry was made on the
minutes of the court:
"Now at this day comes the plaintiff, . . . by Mr. George H.
Williams, of counsel, and the defendant, by Mr. William H.
Effinger, of counsel, and by consent of parties it is ordered that
this cause be, and the same is hereby, referred to Mr. Wm. B.
Gilbert to take the testimony herein, pursuant to a stipulation to
be filed herein within three months from this date, to try said
cause, and to report to this Court his conclusions of fact and law
herein, and said Wm. B. Gilbert is hereby appointed referee for the
purpose aforesaid."
Under this order, the referee reported, May 5, 1884, that the
parties appeared before him January 16, 1884,
"and thereupon the testimony in said cause was taken before me,
and the same is herewith filed; that upon the conclusion of said
testimony, the said cause was argued before me by the respective
counsel of said parties; that upon consideration of the pleadings
and the testimony herein, I make the following"
"findings of fact" and "conclusions of law," which were then
stated.
To this report each party filed exceptions. These exceptions
were heard by the court, both parties appearing, and on
consideration, the findings of the referee were set aside and new
findings made by the court, on which a judgment was
Page 124 U. S. 159
rendered in favor of Hughes and against the company for
$8,407.61. From that judgment this writ of error was brought.
There is no bill of exceptions in the record, and it nowhere
appears that any exception whatever was taken to the action of the
court at the hearing, or in giving the judgment. The testimony
taken by the referee and by him reported to the court is not here.
The case stands on the pleadings; the order of reference made by
consent, which was not, so far as appears, in writing; the report
of the referee; the exceptions thereto; the rulings of the court
thereon, and the new findings by the court, and the judgment.
The errors assigned are, in substance
1. That the court erred in substituting its own findings of fact
for those of the referee and entering judgment upon its conclusions
of law founded thereon, and
2. That the conclusions of law are not supported by the facts
found.
Section 221, Code Civil Procedure of Oregon provides that "All
or any of the issues in the action, whether of fact or law, or
both, may be referred upon the written consent of the parties." A
trial by referee is to be conducted in the same manner as a trial
by the court (§ 226), and the report of the referee must state
the facts found, and when the order of reference includes an issue
of law, the conclusions of law separate from the facts (§
227). Section 229 is as follows:
"The court may affirm or set aside the report either in whole or
in part. If it affirm the report, it shall give judgment
accordingly. If the report shall be set aside either in whole or in
part, the court may make another order of reference, as to all or
so much of the report as may be set aside, to the original referees
or others, or it may find the facts and determine the law itself
and give judgment accordingly. Upon a motion to set aside the
report, the conclusions thereof shall be deemed and considered as
the verdict of a jury."
The argument in support of the first assignment of error is that
as no allusion is made to the Oregon Code in the order of
reference, and no written consent was filed, as required by
that
Page 124 U. S. 160
Code, the order was, in its legal effect, only a reference at
common law, and, such being the case, it was error, after rejecting
the report, to make the new findings. It is undoubtedly true that
under a common law reference, the court has no power to modify or
to vary the report of a referee as to matters of fact. Its only
authority is to confirm or reject, and if the report be set aside,
the cause stands for trial precisely the same as if it had never
been referred. As there was in this case no written consent to the
order for a trial by referee, it would have been error in the
court, if objection had been made, to proceed with a new trial of
the case, after the report was set aside, without a stipulation in
writing waiving a jury, as provided by § 649 of the revised
statutes, but no such objection was made, and the court proceeded,
evidently in accordance with the understanding of the parties, to
make new findings precisely as it would if the order of reference
had been actually under the Code upon a consent in writing. No
exception was taken to this proceeding in the court below, and it
is too late to make it here for the first time. Had the attention
of the court been called to the exact condition of the record, the
error would probably have been avoided by the filing of the
necessary stipulation in writing or in some other way. The case
therefore comes here upon the ruling at the trial by the circuit
court without a jury, when there had been no waiver of a jury, as
the statute requires, by stipulation in writing, signed by the
parties or their attorneys, and filed with the clerk. Rulings of a
circuit court made under such circumstances are not reviewable
here.
Bond v. Dustin, 112 U. S. 604, and
the cases there cited. The concession on both sides that there was
actually no consent in writing to the order of reference
distinguishes this case materially from
Boogher v. Insurance
Co., 103 U. S. 90, where
the existence of a stipulation in writing waiving a jury was
presumed under the circumstances which were there presented.
The judgment of the circuit court is
Affirmed.