116 N.C. 125 | N.C. | 1895
In this action the plaintiffs, at January Term, 1894, of FranKlin Superior Court, obtained judgment against the defendant for the recovery of a tract of land, from which judgment the defendant gave notice of appeal to this Court. The appeal was not perfected and the defendant in apt time applied for a certiorari as a substitute for the a'ppeal, to bring the record up that the errors therein assigned might be examined into by this
I. That the affiant and N. Y. Gulley, Esq., as associate counsel, represented the defendant in the trial of the cause in the Court below.
II. That the defendant gave notice of appeal through his said counsel and had' an entry made on the minutes of “time allowed to file bond and prepare case on appeal.”
III. That before the -appeal had been perfected and before the time allowed had passed, thé affiant (W. M. Person) was taken sick and was for some time too unwell to attend to the duties of his office.
IY. That by agreement between himself and his associate counsel, N. Y. Gulley, the affiant was to attend to this matter, the said Gulley being engaged for a great portion of his time in work outside of the county; and that under these circumstances, through the misfortune and sickness of his counsel the defendant lost his right of appeal.
Y. That the defendant fully intended to perfect his appeal and so instructed his counsel and the failure to do so was due to no negligence of the defendant, but to the cause set forth.
An answer to the petition was filed by plaintiff, and in the affidavit of Messrs. E. W. Timberlake and E. S. Spruill, used in support of it, the following statements appear :
1. That when the defendant excepted and gave notice of appeal to the Supreme Court, notice was waived, bond fixed at $25, and twenty days given to serve statement of case and perfect appeal.
2. That to these affiants’ best knowledge and recollection Mr. Person did not absent himself from his office during the twenty days allowed for perfecting his appeal and that his associate, N. Y. Gulley, was well and strong, mentally and physically, during the entire period.
We do not find from the foregoing facts any ground for the interposition of this Court, nor any sufficient legal excuse for the failure of the defendant to perfect his appeal. The giving of the appeal bond is not one of the duties of an attorney and when an attorney assumes this duty he does it as agent, and his neglect is that of the principal. 92 N. C., 485. The agreement between the two attorneys in this case tha‘t Mr. Person should attend to this appeal was a matter personal between them. In law both were compelled to give the appeal their attention, and leaving out of consideration Mr. Person’s sickness, his associate, Mr. Gulley, was in perfect health the whole time allowed for perfecting the appeal. The motion for a certñora/ri is denied.
The following pi-oceedings were had in another branch of this case. Notice of a motion was given to the plaintiff on the 9th of May, 1894, that tire defendant would move before Hon. John Q-. Bynum, Judge holding the Courts of the Third Judicial District, at Henderson, on the 21st day of May, 1894, or as soon thereafter as practicable, for an order “ suspending the execution of said judgment in the Court below and to allow the defendant pay for the improvements made by Mm on the tract of land in controversy, the amount to be ascertained by a jury.” At the hearing the defendant filed his petition and affidavits and that portion of them deemed necessary for the settlement of this case is as follows :
1. That in the trial of the case the defendant set up no claim for betterments or taxes paid, although he had been
. Mes. S. H. BoyeR, et. al, v. C. A. Garner.
Received 27th February, 1894. H. C. Kearney, Sheriff. Writ of possession executed March 15, 1894, by putting the defendant 0. A. Garner out of the possession of the land described in the within writ of possession, and delivering the said possession by direction of the plaintiffs to H. R. Perry, as agent of the plaintiffs. H. C. KbarNey, Sheriff.
The $125 damages awarded by the jury in the trial of the original action had not been paid when the notice of betterment was given. The question for our determination is whether the said judgment had been executed by the Sheriff of Franklin County before notice for the motion for betterments was given to the plaintiff. The return of the Sheriff states that on March 15,1894, he put the defendant out of possession of the land and delivered possession of the land to the agent of the plaintiff. The notice of the motion for betterments was given nearly a month later.
There is no error in the ruling of His Honor and the judgment is affirmed. • Affirmed.