105 Ky. 811 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1899
delivered ti-ie opinion of the court.
In each of these two cases the judgment appealed from was rendered January 21, 1896, and the appeal was granted by the clerk of the Court of Appeals, upon application of appellant, January 21, 1898. In each case the plea of limitation is filed, and motion made to dismiss the appeal, under section 745 of the Civil Code, which provides: “An "appeal shall not be granted, except within two years next after the right to appeal first accrued.”
In Smith v. Cassity, 9 B. Mon., 192, [48 Am. Dec., 420], where the decree was rendered on the 25th day of September, 1845, and the writ of error sued out on the 25th day of September, 1848, it was held that the then-existing period of limitation of three years had not expired, the court using the following" language: “The universal rule of com'» puting time from one day to another is to exclude one and include the other.”
But in Chiles v. Smith’s Heirs, 13 B. Mon., 460, the final decree was rendered on October 18, 1848, and the writ of error sued out October 18, 1851. The statute was, in language, similár to the existing statute, and provided that no writ of error should be sued out, “except in three years next after the judgment or final decree, and not thereafter.” The court, in a very carefully considered opinion by
But it is urged that section 681 of the Code of Practice has changed the rule. That section reads as follows: “If a certain number of days be required to intervene between two acts, the day of one -only of the acts may be counted.”
After a careful reconsideration of the question here presented, we are unable to see that the Code section just quoted applies to the question before us.
It was intended to apply to cases like the one presented in Fehler v. Gosnell, 18 Ky. Law Rep., 238, [35 S. W., 1125], where the statute under construction provided that fourteen days must elapse between the passage of an ordinance by the board of council and by the board of aldermen of the city of Louisville.
Moreover, the law embodied in section 681 appears to> have been first adopted in 1854, and to have been continued from that time down to the present, notwithstanding which the rule of construction announced in the case of Chiles v. Smith’s Heirs has been repeatedly reaffirmed by this court, down almost to the present day.
Counsel for appellant called attention to the fact that in that case it was held (page 519) that the part o'f the statute which directs the sheriff to deposit the poll-books within two days next after the election had effect to exclude the day of the election. This, however, was done upon the peculiar phraseology of the statute, the court holding that the two days next after the election meant the two next or following days.
In Mallory v. Hiles, 1 Metc., (Ky.), 53, decided in 1862, the Chiles case was referred to with approval.
In Long v. Hughes, 1 Duv., 387, decided in 1861, in considering the section (371) of the Civil Code which required the application for new trial to be made within three days after the verdict or decision was rendered, it was said, through Judge Williams: “Doubtless, the day on which a verdict or judgment is rendered should be computed; for, as said in Chiles v. Smith’s Heirs, 13 B. Mon., 160, ‘when the computation is to be made from an act done, the day in which the act w<as done must be included/ ” And this has always been the construction placed upon the provision as to new trials.
In White v. Crutcher, 1 Bush, 172, decided in 1866, the rule laid down by Judge Simpson was again applied to section 371 of the Civil Code, providing when motions for new trial might be made.
In Wood v. Com., 11 Bush, 220, decided in 1875, the rule was again approved; and again in Handley v. Cunning
It is urged by counsel that the right to appeal by suing out the appeal in the office of the clerk of this court does not accrue until after the end of the term at which the judgment is rendered. But we are clearly of opinion that the language used was intended to refer to the first accrual of the right of appeal; for the question of whether the appeal can be obtained from the lower court or from the office of the clerk of the Court of Appeals is one merely of precedure, and not of right.
It is further objected that, having once acted upon the motion to dismiss by overruling it, the court should not now reconsider the question (which had been determined by interlocutory order) upon a petition for rehearing. But we are clearly of opinion that the court has power over such orders, within the term; and, so far as that is concerned, the petition for rehearing might be treated as a renewal of the motion.
For the reasons given, the former opinion herein is withdrawn, and both appeals are dismissed. The whole court considered this case.