178 Ind. 459 | Ind. | 1912
This is an application by Stephen W. Brady el al. for leave to file a transcript and an assignment of errors, and to prosecute an appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Tippecanoe County, rendered March 30, 1912, establishing a drain under the drainage law of 1907 (Acts 1907 p. 508, §6140 et seq. Burns 1908).
At the time said judgment was rendered, on March 30, 1912, the applicants prayed an appeal, which was granted, on filing an appeal bond within thirty days, and sixty days were given within which to file a bill of exceptions. The appeal bond was filed April 27, 1912, but the appeal was not perfected within sixty days after filing the appeal bond, but on the day after the expiration of the time the record, with an assignment of errors indorsed thereon, was presented to the clerk of this court, who refused to file the same, because it was not presented within the time provided by law. This, then, is a case where the petitioners have failed to perfect their appeal within the time limited by positive law.
It is not claimed that the parties in whose favor said judgment was rendered have been guilty of any violence or fraud which has prevented the applicants from perfecting said appeal, nor is any mistake of fact or excusable mistake set forth in the application.
The magnitude of the record is no excuse for not perfecting the appeal. The magnitude of the record was known to all the parties to the cause, or could have been knoAvn when the judgment was rendered. It will be observed that the oral order for the transcript was not made until twenty-seven days after the judgment was rendei’ed, and that the written precipe for the same, as provided for in §667 Burns 1908, Acts 1903 p. 338, Avas not filed with the clerk of the trial court until fifty-seven days after the judgment was rendered.
Under such circumstances, it cannot be said that applicants were free from negligence, for there is nothing to shoAV that if the transcript had been ordered at an earlier date the appeal could not have been perfected Avithin the time limited by statute.
It is not necessary to decide whether an order for a transcript can be shown in any other manner than by the written precipe provided for in §667, supra, for the reason that if it can, the applicants have not brought themselves within the rule declared in this State, permitting an appeal after the expiration of the time allowed by law.
The application is, therefore, denied, and leave to file said transcript and prosecute said appeal is refused.
Note.—Reported in 99 N. E. 738. See, also, under (1) 14 Cyc. 1046; (2) 2 Cyc. 789; (3) 2 Cyc. 801.