The Comptroller cannot prescribe the length of capiases or bonds
or limit a clerk to a certain number of folios.
This was a petition by the Clerk of the Circuit Court of the
United States for the Eastern District of Tennessee for fees earned
between July 1, 1887, and December 23, 1889, which had been
disallowed in the settlement of the accounts rendered by him to the
Treasury Department. The court directed judgment to be entered in
his favor for $1,066, 45 F. 531, and the United States
appealed.
Page 147 U. S. 696
MR. JUSTICE BROWN, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
The government objected to the allowance by the court below of
the following items:
1. For taking acknowledgments in criminal cases of defendants
and their sureties to appeal bonds. It appears by the petition that
these acknowledgments were taken jointly, and under the case of
United States v. Ewing, 140 U. S. 142,
140 U. S. 146,
� 2, but one fee can be allowed for taking the
acknowledgment of a defendant and his sureties, at least unless it
be made to appear that it was necessary to take them separately.
See also United States v. Hall, ante at
147 U. S. 691.
2. For certificates of the clerk and seals to copies of orders
of the court directing the marshal to pay witnesses and jurors.
Charges for copies of orders and certificates thereto are
allowable, but the charge for seals is disallowed upon the
authority of
United States v. Van Duzee, 140 U.
S. 169,
140 U. S. 174,
� 6.
3. Filing orders from the district attorney discharging
witnesses from attendance at 10 cents each, $119.80. By Revised
Statutes § 877,
"witnesses who are required to attend any term of a circuit or
district court on the part of the United States shall be subpoenaed
to attend to testify generally on their behalf, and not to depart
the court without leave thereof, or of the district attorney."
While it is proper that the clerk should be informed officially
by the district attorney of the discharge of witnesses, it is
difficult to see why the discharge should be filed. It is a piece
of information for the clerk upon which he acts in computing
the
Page 147 U. S. 697
amount due the witnesses for mileage and attendance, and when
this is done, the discharge is
functus officio. It has
accomplished all that it was ever required to do, is not needed as
a voucher, and no advantage is gained by cumbering the files of the
court with it. The magnitude of this encumbrance may be judged by
the fact that the clerk charges for filing in less than 2 1/2 years
1,198 of these discharges (243 were filed in a single term), at a
useless expense of $119.80. In
United States v. King,
ante, 147 U. S. 676, the
clerk's charges for the payment of a witness aggregated $1.15, not
including the affidavit of the witness or this item for filing the
discharge. If these be added, it is made to cost the government
$1.40 in clerk's fees to pay off a witness -- a tax out of all
proportion to the service rendered or to the usual amount of the
witness' compensation. This practice of multiplying fees for the
simple service of paying a witness compensation, which may not
exceed the amount of a single day's attendance, should not be
permitted, and the item in question will be disallowed.
4. There is an additional claim in items 12 and 16 of $95.85 for
affidavits of witnesses as to their mileage and attendance. The
clerk is entitled to a fee of 10 cents for administering the oath
to witnesses respecting their mileage and attendance, but there is
no reason for preserving the affidavit as a part of the records of
the court. This item should be reduced accordingly. It is but just
to say that no charge is made for filing these affidavits.
5. Item 9 includes charges for papers entered by the clerk upon
the final record of the cases and disallowed by the Comptroller as
forming no proper part of the judgment record and unnecessarily
burdensome to the government. When the practice of a particular
state or district requires a judgment record to be made up in each
case, of course, the clerk is entitled to his fees for services
actually and necessarily performed in that connection,
United
States v. Van Duzee, 140 U. S. 169,
140 U. S. 176,
� 9, but as to what shall be incorporated in such record
there is no settled practice and some diversity of opinion.
Page 147 U. S. 698
A record is substantially a written history of the proceedings
from the beginning to the end of the case, but nothing which is not
properly matter of record can be made such by inserting it therein.
In several of the states, the matters properly incorporated in
judgment rolls are enumerated by statute. New York Code of Civil
Procedure § 1237; Wisconsin Code § 191; California
Civ.Code § 670.
In
Mandeville v. Perry, 6 Call, 78, the Court of
Appeals of Virginia, in answering the question "what this Court
will consider as constituting the record of which it is to take
notice in cases of common law," says:
"I answer, the writ for the purpose of amending by, if
necessary, the whole pleadings between the parties. Papers of which
a profert is made, or oyer demanded, and such as have been
specially submitted to the consideration of the court by a bill of
exceptions, a demurrer to evidence, or a special verdict, or are
inseparably connected with some paper or evidence so referred to.
These, with the several proceedings at the rules or in court, until
the rendition of the judgment, constitute the record in any common
law suits, and are to be noticed by the court, and no others."
Mr. Chitty, in his work upon Criminal Law, says (1 Chitty Cr.Law
720) that
"the record in case of felony states the session of oyer and
terminer, the commission of the judges, the presentment by the oath
of the grand jurymen by name, the indictment, the award of the
capias or process to bring in the offender, the delivery of the
indictment into court, the arraignment, the plea, the issue, the
award of the jury process, the verdict, the asking the prisoner why
sentence should not be passed on him, and judgment of death passed
by the judges."
Perhaps the most satisfactory definition of a common law record
in a criminal case under the American practice is found in
McKinney v. People, 7 Ill. 552, wherein it is said:
"In a criminal case, after the caption, stating the time and
place of holding the court, the record should consist of the
indictment, properly endorsed, as found by the grand jury, the
arraignment of the accused, his plea, the impaneling of the
traverse jury, their verdict, and the judgment of the court. This,
in general, is all
Page 147 U. S. 699
that the record need state."
And in
Dyson v. State, 26 Miss. 362, it is stated
that
"the record must affirmatively show those indispensable facts
without which the judgment would be void, such as the organization
of the court; its jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the
parties; that the cause was made up for trial; that it was
submitted to a jury sworn to try it (if it be a case proper for a
jury); that a verdict was rendered, and judgment awarded."
Mr. Freeman, in his work upon Judgments, section 79, thus
summarizes from the authorities: "the matters which are not (unless
made so by bill of exceptions, or by consent, or by order of the
court) matters of record," namely:
"Matters of evidence, written or oral, including note, bond, or
mortgage filed in the case, and upon which suit is brought; an
agreed statement of facts, not in nature of special verdict; all
motions, including motions to quash the writ, to amend the
pleadings, for extensions of time, for continuances of bonds, for
prosecution, for bills of particulars; pleas stricken from the
files; notices of motions; affidavits of claimants; bonds for trial
of rights of property; affidavits in relation to conduct of jurors;
all affidavits taken during the progress of the cause; memorandum
of costs; power of attorney to confess the judgment, and affidavit
in relation to the death of the maker thereof; report of judge of
proceedings at the trial; reasons for his opinion in rendering
judgment or in deciding application for a new trial; rulings of the
court upon the admission of evidence; the instructions to the jury;
statement of facts made by the judge for the purpose of taking the
advice of the appellate court, and the ruling of the court upon an
application to strike out a portion of the pleadings."
The extent to which a judgment record should go in its recital
of the proceedings depends largely upon the purpose for which it is
to be used. If it is designed for use in the review by the
appellate court of the rulings of the court below, upon the
introduction of testimony, or of the validity of the charge to the
jury, it must contain in a bill of exceptions so much of the
testimony or charge as is necessary to a clear understanding of the
questions involved. But if,
Page 147 U. S. 700
upon the other hand, it be designed only for the purpose of
preserving a record of the conviction
in perpetuam rei
memoriam, little more is necessary than to set forth the
process and return thereto, the pleadings, journal entries,
verdict, and judgment. All the authorities agree that in a criminal
case, it should show what the prisoner is charged with; that the
court had jurisdiction of the case; that the defendant was duly
convicted, and the sentence. It may be said, in general, that
anything which is not necessary to support the validity of the
judgment is, presumptively at least, no part of the record, however
material it may have been in the progress of the case. It is
entirely clear that it is unnecessary to set forth matters merely
incidental to the charge, and which had no immediate bearing upon
the result of the case, or of the validity of the judgment. Thus,
in
Inglee v.
Coolidge, 2 Wheat. 363, it was held by this Court
that the report of the judge who tried the case at
nisi
prius containing a statement of the facts is not to be
considered a part of the record. It was formerly held that even in
writs of error to a state court, the opinion of the court below was
not a part of the record,
Williams v.
Norris, 12 Wheat. 117,
25 U. S. 119;
Rector v.
Ashley, 6 Wall. 142;
Gibson v.
Chouteau, 8 Wall. 314, but the inconvenience of
this rule became so great that it was subsequently changed,
Murdock v.
Memphis, 20 Wall. 590, and finally the eighth rule
of this Court was so modified, in 1873, as to require a copy of the
opinion to be incorporated in the transcript. This Court has also
held, in
Suydam v.
Williamson, 20 How. 427, that the evidence and the
exceptions thereto constitute no part of the record unless
incorporated in a bill of exceptions signed and sealed by the
presiding judge.
See also Pomeroy v. Bank of
Indiana, 1 Wall. 592.
We have already held, in
United States v. King, ante,
147 U. S. 676,
that in the absence of a rule requiring them to be incorporated,
the proceedings before a commissioner form no part of the record,
and we think the same rule applies to affidavits,
England v.
Gebhardt, 112 U. S. 502,
warrants, subpoenas, capiases, except the one upon which the arrest
was made, but
Page 147 U. S. 701
that the other charges included in item 9, including the bonds
taken after indictment, captions of terms, and days upon which
journal entries were made, were properly allowed. We are also of
the opinion that the Comptroller cannot prescribe the length of
capiases or bonds or limit the clerk to a certain number of folios.
This is a matter to be determined by the practice of the court.
This disposes of all the questions raised upon the assignment of
errors, and the judgment of the court below is therefore
Reversed, and the case remanded for further proceedings in
conformity with this opinion.