260 P. 290 | Cal. | 1927
THE COURT.
Motion to affirm judgment on the ground of the failure of appellant to print or set forth in his brief or any supplement thereto, in accordance with the requirements of section 953c of the Code of Civil Procedure, any part of the record herein sufficient to justify a reversal of said judgment. The action was instituted for the purpose of canceling two certain deeds of conveyance of real property whereby plaintiff purported to convey to defendant an undivided *296 one-half of three certain parcels of land and also for the purpose of canceling a judgment of partition based upon said deeds. By the terms of said judgment one of said tracts of land was awarded to defendant herein and the two other tracts were awarded to plaintiff herein subject to a lien thereon of $11,497.05 in favor of the defendant herein. In appellant's brief he claims "That by mutual mistakes of fact on the part of the attorneys for the respective parties in the partition suit, by the referees appointed by the court and by the court an erroneous estimate of values was made and considered and, based thereon, an erroneous judgment was entered in the partition proceedings to the detriment of appellant." [1] Yet appellant has not in his brief nor in any supplement thereto printed or set forth any of the pleadings in this action nor the findings nor judgment of the court herein, nor any of the evidence offered by plaintiff in support of his claim that said judgment in the partition action was erroneously rendered by reason of said mutual mistakes. The record before us, therefore, fails to show any error on the part of the trial court in rendering judgment against appellant upon the ground just stated.
Again, the appellant in his brief contends that the judgment in the partition suit was procured through the fraud of the attorneys in conspiring and colluding with the attorneys for respondent in said action to have the final decree of partition entered in the form in which it was entered without consultation with appellant, and that his said attorneys conspired and colluded with the attorneys of respondent to have said final decree become a finality by entering into a stipulation with respondent's attorneys without notice to appellant and without his knowledge or consent, whereby appellant's right to move for a new trial and his right to appeal from said judgment were waived. The appellant has not printed in his brief nor in any supplement thereto any evidence whatever in support of his contention that the decree of partition in the form in which it was entered was rendered through the connivance and collusion of his attorneys with those of the respondent. A brief skeleton of the evidence of appellant, as a witness in the case, tending to show that plaintiff's counsel in the partition action acted without appellant's knowledge or consent in *297
waiving his right to move for a new trial and to appeal appears in the printed brief. This is followed by a statement that an examination of the record discloses that neither of appellant's attorneys in the partition suit was called to the witness-stand to contradict the appellant. This "record," however, is not printed in appellant's brief nor in any supplement thereto, and is, therefore, not before us for our examination. We are unable to say, therefore, that any error was committed by the trial court in the rendition of said judgment. As was said by this court in the case of Scott v. Hollywood Park Co.,
We are reluctant to dismiss an appeal on any mere technical rule of procedure and thereby deny to appellant the right to have his case decided upon its merits, but the above cited section of the code has been in full force and effect since the year 1907, excepting during the years of 1919 to 1923. This court has repeatedly called the attention of the profession to the mandatory character of its provisions by affirming judgments appealed from when the appealing party has failed to comply with its requirements. It now seems that the rule of procedure thus enunciated has become so firmly established and so often reiterated by this court and the district courts of appeal that there is little excuse for anyone to fail to comply with its terms. In the very recent case of Jeffords v. Young,
[2] The belated offer of appellant, made at the hearing of this motion, to print in a supplemental brief and file herein certain portions of the record as this court might deem necessary to the proper presentation of his appeal does not, in our opinion, merit a denial of said motion. Such a procedure would cast upon this court the burden of a laborious examination of the typewritten transcript filed herein in order to enable us to determine the portions *299 thereof necessary to be printed in such supplement. This labor properly belongs to the appellant and should have been performed by him previous to the filing of his brief and the necessary portions of said record set forth therein. We are therefore of the opinion that the motion of the respondent should be granted.
The judgment appealed from is affirmed.
Rehearing denied.