14 Mont. 62 | Mont. | 1894
The respondent moves to dismiss the appeal. The appeal is from an order denying defendants’ motion for a change of venue. The ground of the motion to dismiss the appeal is, that it does not appear that any bill of exceptions or statement was ever signed by the judge to authorize the appeal.
But this is an appeal from an order, and may be brought up without a bill of exceptions or a statement. Section 438, Code of Civil Procedure, provides that “on appeal .... from an order the appellant shall furnish the court with a copy of the notice of appeal, undertaking, or undertakings on appeal, the judgment or order appealed from, and a copy of the papers used on the hearing in the court below, such copies to be certified in like manner to be correct.”
The motion in the case at bar was made “on the demand and affidavit of merits, and on the pleadings and papers on file in said action.” Therefore, if the papers on which the motion was made are certified to us by the clerk, that is sufficient. (Granite Mt. Min. Co. v. Weinstein, 7 Mont. 346; Barber v. Briscoe, 8 Mont. 214; Arnold v. Sinclair, 12 Mont. 260.)
The clerk certifies that the transcript, consisting of (enumerating all the papers), is a full, true, and correct copy of all
The motion to dismiss the appeal must therefore be denied, and it is so ordered.