13 How. Pr. 402 | The Superior Court of New York City | 1856
The Code declares, that to render an appeal effectual for any purpose, a written undertaking must be executed on the part of the appellant, &c. (§ 334.) It also requires a copy of this undertaking to be served on the adverse party, with the notice of appeal, (§ 340,) and the original to be filed with the clerk with whom the order or judgment appealed from was entered. (§ 343.)
Sections 334 and 340, taken together, import that an appeal is ineffectual for any purpose unless the notice of appeal and a copy of the undertaking are served, at the same time, on the adverse party. Section 334 enacts that an appeal shall be of no force or effect whatever until the prescribed undertaking has been executed, &c. The execution of an undertaking imports and includes a delivery of it. Sections 340 and 334 prescribe what shall constitute a delivery of it. It is delivered by filing the original, and serving a copy of it: and § 340 is peremptory that the copy shall be served with the notice of appeal.
If the filing of an undertaking, and service of a copy of it, subsequent to the service of notice of appeal, would make the appeal effectual from the time a copy of the undertaking was
If a copy of the undertaking may be served six days after the notice of the appeal, it may be served twelve days thereafter, and after, it will be too late' to "except to the sufficiency of the sureties.
It is quite clear, that the proceedings taken by the appellant are not sufficient to effect a stay of proceedings upon the judgment appealed from. (The N. Y. Central Insurance Co. agt. The National Protection Insurance Co., 10 How. Pr. R. 344.)
The defendants do not ask an amendment of the proceedings taken on the appeal. There is nothing before the court, on this motion, authorizing the court to make any order to validate the proceedings. Section 327 would justify the court in amending, on an application showing that the proceedings taken were taken in good faith, and that the failure to comply with the Code resulted from mistake.
The plaintiff should not be required by the court to rely on this undertaking, and submit to a stay of proceedings, unless a motion to amend, is made with the consent of the sureties.
In a case like this, I doubt the propriety of even such an order. The undertaking, by its terms, is executed to enable an appeal to be taken subsequent to its date, and not to render an appeal effectual, the notice of which had been previously given. It is as easy to give a new notice of appeal and serve^ a copy of the undertaking with it, as to move for leave to amend. If the former course be pursued, the plaintiff will have a valid security in the undertaking. If the latter course be taken, although the security may be held to be valid under some order entered to" cure existing defects, yet it may require the delay and expense of a new litigation'to obtain such a judgment. There being ample time to serve a new notice of appeal, I think the appellant should be required to serve one, and to serve with it a copy of a proper undertaking.