29 Neb. 207 | Neb. | 1890
This’case is submitted to the court on a motion to dismiss the appeal for the reason that the same was not filed in this court within six months after the rendition of the judgment. The failure to file the transcript in this court within six months from the time the judgment was rendered is admitted, but as an excuse for such failure the appellants allege that without fault on their part the bill was mislaid, and that as soon as the same was discovered it wras filed in this court.
A large number of affidavits are filed in the case, from which it appears that the bill of exceptions was duly prepared and presented to the judge before whom the case was tried, and as no objections or amendments were offered to the proposed bill, and as he was about to go to Aurora, Hamilton county,'to hold court, he carried the proposed bill with him, and on arriving at Aurora signed the same and left it on the lawyer’s table in the court room. After-wards, when one of the appellant’s attorneys came into the court room the judge called his attention to the fact that he had signed the bill and that it was then lying on the table. The appellant’s attorney, however, denies that he understood the language of the judge or that he knew that the bill had been signed and returned. How the table spoken of is connected with the clerk’s desk is not shown, but it is apparent from some of the affidavits before us that on one end of this table papers in certain cases were kept, and perhaps records. In some way that does not appear, but probably through the action of the sheriff or clerk, the bill in question was moved to that end of the table devoted to papers and records and the bill there seems to have been partially or wholly covered up by other cases, the clerk apparently not being aware that the bill was in his possession. After considerable delay and correspondence in regard to the bill, the clerk made a thor
Motion overruled.