173 P. 383 | Utah | 1918
The plaintiff applied to this court for an alternative writ of mandate to require the defendant Hon. George Christen
Defendants’ counsel invokes the familiar doctrine that appeals are statutory, and. that the statute granting the right and prescribing the requirements: of appeals must be complied with, and that in case the conditions imposed by the statute are not complied with the appeal cannot prevail. While we agree to the general rule insisted on by defendants’ counsel, yet we cannot ignore the fact that not all requirements of the statute are jurisdictional, and hence certain defects may always be cured by amendment when application is seasonably made. Two questions are therefore presented: (1) What are the requirements of our statute respecting appeals from a justice court to the district court? (2) Has the plaintiff complied with such requirements?
Comp. Laws 1907, section 3744, provides that the aggrieved party may appeal to the district court within thirty days after the rendition of a final judgment by the justice of the peace. That section further provides:
“The appeal shall be taken by filing a notice thereof with the justice, or in the clerk’s office of the district court to which said appeal is taken, and serving a copy on the adverse party. The notice shall show on its face the title of the court in which it is so filed. In case the appeal is taken by filing a notice in*257 the district court, and upon the perfection of such appeal, the clerk of said court shall notify the justice thereof. ’ ’
Section 3747, in substance, provides that within five days after filing the notice of appeal an undertaking shall be filed with the justice, etc. The undertaking here referred to is what is termed an undertaking on appeal. That section, however, also provides for a “bond” or an undertaking to “stay execution.” It is further provided in that section:
“When a bond is given to stay execution, it must be approved by the justice or by the clerk or judge of the district court to which said appeal is taken.”
The section, therefore, clearly implies that an undertaking may be filed with the clerk of the district court. Section 3748 provides that an undertaking must be accompanied by the affidavits of the sureties, etc., and, further, that the appellant may deposit an amount equal to the judgment and costs with the justice or with the clerk of the district court in lieu of the undertaking on appeal. In case the money is deposited with the justice he must transmit the same to the clerk of the district court. Section 3750 provides:
“No failure to comply with any provision of law relating to appeals from justice’s court to the district court, except a failure to serve and file a notice of appeal, shall defeat the jurisdiction of the district court over the case attempted to be appealed.”
That section also provides that an appeal may be dismissed: (1) If the papers are not filed in the district court and the fees are not paid within thirty days after the transcript was received by the clerk; (2) “that the undertaking was not filed within five days after the filing of notice of appeal”; and (3) “that appellant failed to file a new and sufficient undertaking when so ordered by the court.” Those are the only grounds upon which an appeal may be dismissed. There is another section, namely, section 3319, which is material here. It reads:
“When a party shall in good faith give notice of appeal, and shall omit, through mistake or accident, to do any other act necessary to perfect the appeal or make it effectual, or to stay*258 proceedings, the court from which the appeal is taken, or the judge thereof, or the Supreme Court or one of the justices thereof, may permit an amendment or the proper act to be done, on such terms as may be just.”
, The statute also provides that the adverse party may except to the sureties in the undertaking within a specified time, and, in case such exception is made within the time required, the sureties, or others in their stead must justify showing their qualifications as sureties.
While the foregoing is but a mere synopsis of the different sections of the statutes affecting appeals, yet, in our judgment, the controlling provisions governing appeals from justice courts to the district courts are sufficiently outlined.
From the conceded facts it will thus be seen that the plaintiff did serve a notice of appeal within the time required by' the statute; that he filed such notice with the clerk of the district court, and at the same time also filed his undertaking with said clerk. While it is true that an undertaking
It is, however, insisted that the undertaking was not filed in the justice court, where the statute required it to be filed. We have, however, seen by section 3747 the bond or undertaking to stay execution may be filed in the district court, and may be approved either by the clerk or the judge of the district court.
Defendants’ counsel, however, also insist that it does not appear that the undertaking was filed in any court. The allegation in the application, however, is that the undertaking was filed with the clerk of the district court wherein the notice of appeal was filed, and the allegation is admitted
This brings us to the last objection of defendants’ counsel, namely, that the statute requires that the notice of appeal "shall show on its face the title of the court in which it is filed,” and that the notice here in question is entitled in the justice court from which the appeal was taken,
Prom what has been said, therefore, this case comes within the rule announced in Hoffman v. Lewis, 31 Utah, 179, 87 Pac. 167, where it was held that when, as here, there is no appeal from a judgment of the district court, and where, as here, that court refuses to take jurisdiction of the appeal upon the mistaken ground that it is without jurisdiction as a matter of law, this court will require that court to assume jurisdiction of the appeal in case the record shows all the jurisdictional facts.
It is also held in State ex rel. v. District Court, 36 Utah, 267, 103 Pac. 261, that if in fact service of notice of appeal was made, the defect of lack of proof of service may be supplied in the district court in the manner there stated. Plaintiff’s counsel in the case at bar attempted to comply
The district court, therefore, should have permitted counsel to make and file proof of service of notice of appeal and undertaking, and in view that it refused permission upon the sole ground that it had no jurisdiction to do so as a matter of law, its refusal, like in the Hoffman Case, supra, amounted to an unauthorized refusal to assume jurisdiction. It is therefore ordered that a peremptory writ of mandate issue, requiring the district court of Emery county to grant plaintiff’s counsel leave to make proof of service of the notice of appeal and of the undertaking, and to file the same with the clerk of the district court, and, in case such proof is made and filed, to assume jurisdiction of the appeal, and to hear and dispose of the same upon the merits. It is further ordered that the issuance of the peremptory writ is suspended if the district court will proceed, without such writ being served upon him, upon the service of a copy of this opinion upon him. If he, however, refuses to proceed without the service of the peremptory writ, the same will then issue and be served as in other cases.
In view that the defendants George and Kanakis Ritzakis have resisted this application, costs are awarded to the plaintiff, to be taxed against said George and Kanakis Ritzakis.