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Welch v. Kenney

Supreme Court of California
Jan 1, 1874
47 Cal. 414 (Cal. 1874)

Summary

In Welch v. Kenney, (1874) 47 Cal. 414, it was held that where the transcript was not on file at the time of service of notice to dismiss the appeal, the filing of the transcript before the hearing of the motion was not a sufficient answer, the court saying, "Circumstances, if any, going to excuse the apparent default, must, in such case, also be shown by the appellant, the sufficiency of which circumstances must be determined by the Court."

Summary of this case from Clinton v. Shaw

Opinion

         Appeal from the District Court of the Nineteenth Judicial District, City and County of San Francisco.

         The plaintiff recovered a judgment, from which the defendant appealed; and on motion of the plaintiff, the appeal was dismissed for failure to file the transcript within the time required by Rule 2 of the Supreme Court. The defendant subsequently moved to set aside the order dismissing the appeal, filing in support of the motion the affidavit referred to in the opinion.

         COUNSEL

          M. G. Cobb, for the motion.

         G. W. Tyler, contra.


         JUDGES: Wallace, C. J. Neither Mr. Justice Niles, nor Mr. Justice McKinstry, expressed an opinion.

         OPINION

          WALLACE, Judge

         On January 31st, 1874, notice was personally served upon the attorney for the appellant, that upon the fifth of February following, the counsel for respondent would move this Court to dismiss the appeal perfected on December 9th, 1873, on the ground that the transcript on appeal had not been filed here within the time limited by the second rule of practice. When the notice was served, the time prescribed by the rule for filing the transcript had expired in point of fact, and the transcript had not been filed. It was suggested at bar, at the hearing of the motion, however, that on the fourth of February next after the service of the notice, the appellant had deposited the transcript in the express office at San Francisco, for the purpose of its transmission to the clerk of this Court. The motion to dismiss the appeal was thereupon taken under advisement, and on the next day (February 6th) an order was entered here dismissing the appeal.

         It is settled here, under the third rule of practice, that when default of this character has occurred, and notice of motion to dismiss the appeal has been already actually served, the subsequent filing of the transcript here will not, of itself, cure the default, or bar the relief sought by the motion. Circumstances, if any, going to excuse the apparent default, must, in such case, also be shown by the appellant, the sufficiency of which circumstances must be determined by the Court.

         In this case, since the entry of the order dismissing the appeal, an affidavit, sworn to on the sixteenth day of February, has been placed before us by the appellant, which sets forth the circumstances which, in his opinion, excused the failure to file the transcript within the time required by the second rule referred to; and upon this affidavit we are now asked to set aside the order dismissing the appeal. But we cannot now consider the sufficiency of those circumstances in themselves to excuse the default of the appellant. The affidavit might have been pertinent enough had it been presented at the hearing of the original motion to dismiss the appeal, but it was not then presented. The counsel for the appellant had received personal notice that the motion would be made on the fifth of February, and, in failing to present the affidavit at that time, he has apparently committed a further default in the conduct of the cause, for the affidavit does not attempt to set forth any matter by which the counsel was prevented from presenting it at the hearing of the motion to dismiss the appeal.

         The motion to set aside the order dismissing the appeal must therefore be denied, and it is so ordered.


Summaries of

Welch v. Kenney

Supreme Court of California
Jan 1, 1874
47 Cal. 414 (Cal. 1874)

In Welch v. Kenney, (1874) 47 Cal. 414, it was held that where the transcript was not on file at the time of service of notice to dismiss the appeal, the filing of the transcript before the hearing of the motion was not a sufficient answer, the court saying, "Circumstances, if any, going to excuse the apparent default, must, in such case, also be shown by the appellant, the sufficiency of which circumstances must be determined by the Court."

Summary of this case from Clinton v. Shaw
Case details for

Welch v. Kenney

Case Details

Full title:JAMES WELCH v. MICHAEL KENNEY

Court:Supreme Court of California

Date published: Jan 1, 1874

Citations

47 Cal. 414 (Cal. 1874)

Citing Cases

Hill v. Finnigan

The time to file the transcript on the first appeal expired before the service of the notice to dismiss, and…

Clinton v. Shaw

While these cases do support the stand of appellants, there are reasons which impel us to give the rule the…