After the term at which a trial took place has expired without
the court's control over the case being reserved by standing rule
or special order, and especially after a writ of error has been
entered in this Court, the court below cannot allow a bill of
exceptions then first presented, or amend a bill of exceptions
already allowed and filed.
Under the Code of Wisconsin, an express denial, upon information
and belief, that the plaintiff was at or since the commencement of
the action, or is now, a corporation, puts in issue the existence
of the corporation.
The conversion of a state bank into a national bank, with a
change of name, under the National Banking Act, does not affect its
identity or its right to sue upon liabilities incurred to it by its
former name.
Page 143 U. S. 294
If the whole evidence introduced by the defendant upon one issue
is incompetent to support it and is admitted and considered against
the plaintiff's exception, and the judge, by ruling that this
evidence is decisive against the plaintiff's right to recover,
without regard to another issue in the case, induces the plaintiff
not to put in evidence on the other issue, the plaintiff is
entitled to a new trial although he has not also excepted to a
direction to return a verdict for the defendant.
This was an action by the Michigan Insurance Bank, a corporation
created and organized under the laws of the State of Michigan,
against a citizen of Wisconsin upon a judgment recovered by the
plaintiff against him on May 13, 1862, in an inferior court of
Michigan, for the sum of $4,211.56. In the present action, the writ
was dated May 11, 1872, and appeared by the marshal's return
thereon to have been served on June 3, 1882. The defendant
originally pleaded the statute of limitations of ten years, and on
that issue obtained a verdict, the judgment on which was reversed
by this Court at October term, 1888, because evidence introduced by
the plaintiff that within the ten years, the summons had been
delivered to the marshal for service had not been properly
submitted to the jury.
130 U. S. 130 U.S.
693.
The defendant thereupon obtained leave from the circuit court to
amend his answer by adding, as a distinct defense, the
following:
"Said defendant denies, upon information and belief, that at the
time of the commencement of this action the said plaintiff was, or
is now, a corporation created or organized under the laws of the
State of Michigan, or under the laws of any other state, territory,
or government, and said defendant further specifically denies, upon
information and belief, that said plaintiff at the time of the
commencement of this action was, or at any time since then has
been, or is now, a corporation."
On June 24, 1891, the case came on again for trial before the
circuit judge, when the plaintiff put in evidence its articles of
incorporation under the laws of Michigan, and the record of the
judgment sued on, and rested its case.
To support the defense of the statute of limitations, the
defendant put in evidence the writ and the officer's return.
Page 143 U. S. 295
In support of the other defense, the defendant offered in
evidence duly certified copies of the following documents, all in
accordance with the National Banking Act of June 3, 1864, c. 106:
1st, articles of association, dated June 26, 1865, executed by the
plaintiff's directors, by authority of two-thirds of its
stockholders, changing and converting it into a national bank, by
the name of the "National Insurance Bank of Detroit;" 2d, the
organization certificate of the same date, executed by the
plaintiff's directors, under the same authority; 3d, instruments
signed by such stockholders, conferring such authority; 4th, a
certificate, dated July 13, 1865, of the Comptroller of the
Currency that the association had complied with the provisions of
law, and was authorized to commence business; 5th, a certificate of
liquidation made by the cashier of the association to the
Comptroller of the Currency, dated March 1, 1869.
The plaintiff objected to the admission of these documents
"because, if received in evidence, they do not show that the
plaintiff does not exist as a corporation; they simply show the
organization of a corporation called the 'National Insurance Bank
of Detroit,' and also 'because the incorporation of the plaintiff
is not affirmatively and specifically denied in the answer, but
denied on information and belief.'"
The objections were overruled, and the documents admitted in
evidence, and the plaintiff excepted to the ruling.
The defendant then rested, and the plaintiff moved "that all of
the defendant's evidence be stricken out for the reason, if it be
assumed to be correct, it has not made out any case." The judge
said:
"I think on the record as it now stands -- on the proof as it
now stands -- the Michigan Insurance Bank became defunct and ceased
to exist in 1865, when the national bank was organized,"
and refused to grant the motion, and the plaintiff excepted to
the refusal.
The subsequent part of the bill of exceptions contained no
further exception of the plaintiff, but consisted (except the
formal conclusion) of a stenographer's notes of a desultory
conversation between the presiding judge and the plaintiff's
counsel upon the question whether the plaintiff should
introduce
Page 143 U. S. 296
evidence, which he said he had, to show that the statute of
limitations had not run, and ending as follows:
The judge said, "Even if the right of action was not barred, you
cannot recover." The plaintiff's counsel repeated that the
defendant had offered in evidence the writ and the officer's return
to prove that the action was barred by the statute of limitations,
and that the plaintiff had evidence that the summons was placed in
the marshal's hands for service within ten years after the cause of
action accrued, but there would be no use in putting in that
evidence if, regardless of it, the court would charge the jury to
bring in a verdict for the defendant. Thereupon the judge said, "I
think I will, " and instructed the jury to return a verdict for the
defendant, and they did so.
The bill of exceptions was signed by the judge on June 24, and
filed on June 25, 1891, before the adjournment of January term,
1891. This writ of error was sued out on June 25, and was entered
in this Court on July 22, 1891.
At the present term of this Court, the case was advanced for
hearing, on motion of the defendant in error under Rule 26, clause
4, because it had been once adjudged by this Court on the
merits.
On January 26, 1892, the plaintiff in error moved for a writ of
certiorari to bring up the record of the following proceeding at
January term, 1892, of the circuit court,
On January 16, the circuit judge, on the application of the
plaintiff's attorneys and upon its appearing to his satisfaction
"from the stenographer's report of the testimony and trial that the
plaintiff omitted, in the bill of exceptions heretofore signed,"
two exceptions which were taken at the trial, ordered, against the
objection and exception of the defendant, that the original bill of
exceptions be amended by inserting, after the judge's words, "I
think I will" the words "to which ruling the plaintiff duly
excepted," and, after the instruction to return a verdict for the
defendant, the words "to which the plaintiff duly excepted." On
January 18, after the bill of exceptions had been amended
accordingly, the judge signed it
nunc pro tunc as of June
24, 1891, and ordered it to be filed
Page 143 U. S. 297
nunc pro tunc as of June 25, 1891, being the days when
the original bill of exceptions was signed and filed.
By direction of this Court, the question whether the writ of
certiorari prayed for should issue was argued with the merits of
the case.
Page 143 U. S. 298
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, after stating the facts as above, delivered
the opinion of the Court.
By the uniform course of decision, no exceptions to rulings at a
trial can be considered by this Court unless they were taken at the
trial and were also embodied in a formal bill of exceptions
presented to the judge at the same term, or within a further time
allowed by order entered at that term, or by standing rule of
court, or by consent of parties, and, save under very extraordinary
circumstances, they must be allowed by the judge and filed with the
clerk during the same term. After the term has expired, without the
court's control over the case being reserved by standing rule or
special order, and especially after a writ of error has been
entered in this Court, all authority of the court below to allow a
bill of exceptions then first presented, or to alter or amend a
bill of exceptions already allowed and filed, is at end.
United States v.
Breitling, 20 How. 252;
Muller v. Ehlers,
91 U. S. 249;
Jones v. Grover &
Baker, Co., 131 U.S.App. 150;
Hunnicutt v.
Peyton, 102 U. S. 333;
Davis v. Patrick, 122 U. S. 138;
In re Chateaugay Co., 128 U. S. 544.
The duty of seasonably drawing up and tendering a bill of
exceptions, stating distinctly the rulings complained of, and the
exceptions taken to them, belongs to the excepting party, and not
to the court. The trial court has only to consider whether the bill
tendered by the party is in due time, in legal form, and
conformable to the truth, and the duty of the court of error is
limited to determining the validity of exceptions duly tendered
Page 143 U. S. 299
and allowed.
Hanna v. Maas, 122 U. S.
24. Any fault or omission in framing or tendering a bill
of exceptions, being the act of the party, and not of the court,
cannot be amended at a subsequent term, as a misprision of the
clerk, in recording inaccurately or omitting to record an order of
the court, might be.
In re Wight, 134 U.
S. 136.
The writ of certiorari prayed for must therefore be denied, and
the case must be determined upon the original bill of
exceptions.
By that bill of exceptions it appears that before the last trial
the defendant, by leave of court, amended its answer by adding, as
a distinct defense, that
"said defendant denies, upon information and belief, that at the
time of the commencement of this action, the said plaintiff was, or
is now, a corporation created or organized under the laws of the
State of Michigan or under the laws of any other state, territory,
or government, and said defendant further specifically denies, upon
information and belief, that said plaintiff at the time of the
commencement of this action was or at any time since then has been,
or is now, a corporation."
Section 4199 of the Code of Wisconsin provides that
"In actions by or against any corporation it shall not be
necessary to prove on the trial the existence of such corporation,
unless the defendant, by his answer duly verified, shall have
specifically denied that the plaintiff or defendant, as the case
may be, is a corporation."
The scope of this section is shown by comparing it with the
general provisions of section 2655 of the same Code, that the
answer of the defendant must contain
"a general or specific denial of each material allegation of the
complaint controverted by the defendant, or of any knowledge or
information thereof sufficient to form a belief."
A denial of the fact that the plaintiff is a corporation must be
specific, and not general, and a denial of any knowledge or
information thereof sufficient to form a belief is not enough.
Crane Co. v. Morse, 49 Wis. 368;
Concordia Savings
Association v. Read, 93 N.Y. 474. But an express denial that
the plaintiff is a corporation is not the less specific because
made upon information
Page 143 U. S. 300
and belief, and such a denial puts in issue the existence of the
corporation. The plaintiff's objection to the form of the answer
cannot be sustained.
The defense in question is in terms and effect a denial that the
plaintiff at or since the time of the commencement of this action
was or is now a corporation. This was not merely
misnomer,
properly pleadable in abatement only. It was, in substance,
nul
tiel corporation, which is a good plea in bar, although it
would have been waived by the first answer to the merits of the
case, but for the leave, expressly granted by the court, to plead
it afterwards.
Baltimore & Potomac Railroad v. Fifth
Baptist Church, 137 U. S. 568,
137 U. S. 572;
Society for Propagation of the
Gospel v. Pawlet, 4 Pet. 480,
29 U. S. 501;
Jones v. Foster, 67 Wis. 296.
The evidence offered by the defendant on this point wholly
failed to support this defense, and at most only proved that the
plaintiff sued by the wrong name. It showed no more than that the
plaintiff corporation, having been originally created by the laws
of Michigan, had, in accordance with the National Banking Act,
become a national bank, and its name been changed accordingly,
without affecting its identity or its right to sue upon obligations
or liabilities incurred to it by its former name. Act June 3, 1864,
c. 106, § 44; 13 Stat. 112; Rev.Stat. § 5154;
Metropolitan Bank
v. Claggett, 141 U. S. 520;
Atlantic Bank v. Harris, 118 Mass. 147;
City Bank v.
Phelps, 86 N.Y. 484, 97 N.Y. 44.
The admission of this evidence was objected to by the plaintiff
upon the very ground that it did not prove the nonexistence of the
plaintiff as a corporation, and an exception to its admission was
duly taken and noted, and embodied in the bill of exceptions.
The plaintiff afterwards renewed the objection by moving "that
all of the defendant's evidence be stricken out, for the reason, if
it be assumed to be correct, it has not made out any case." The
reason assigned by the judge for refusing to grant this motion was
his erroneous opinion that on the proof as it stood, "the Michigan
Insurance Bank became defunct and ceased to exist in 1865, when the
national bank
Page 143 U. S. 301
was organized," and the plaintiff again excepted in due
form.
Although the subsequent proceedings had at the trial, and stated
in the original bill of exceptions, do not appear on this record to
have been excepted to, yet those proceedings may properly be
considered for the purpose of showing, as they do beyond doubt,
that the judge's rulings in favor of the defendant proceeded solely
upon the incompetent evidence to the admission and consideration of
which the plaintiff had persistently excepted, and that it was only
by the judge's statements that that evidence was decisive against
the plaintiff's right to recover, even if the action was not
barred, and that he should instruct the jury accordingly, that the
plaintiff was induced not to put in any testimony upon the issue of
the statute of limitations. If the plaintiff had put in its
testimony on that issue, the case would have stood just as it did
when before this Court at a former stage, and, as was then
adjudged, a direction to return a verdict, without submitting that
issue to the jury, would have been erroneous and would have
entitled the plaintiff to a new trial. 130 U.S.
130 U. S. 693.
The admission of the incompetent evidence on the issue of
nul tiel corporation having thus clearly prejudiced the
plaintiff, the order must be:
Judgment reversed and case remanded with directions to set
aside the verdict and to order a new trial.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER dissented.