Egan v. Ohio & Mississippi Railway Co.

138 Ind. 274 | Ind. | 1894

Hackney, C. J.

On the 17th day of May 1894, the appeal herein was dismissed for the noncompliance, by the appellant, with rule 31 of this court, requiring the pages and lines of the transcript to be numbered and marginal references to be made in their appropriate places, indicating the several parts of the pleadings in the cause, the exhibits, orders of the court, and bills of exceptions. The appellant now moves the court to reinstate his appeal, and offers no excuse whatever for his ndncompliance with the rule before such dismissal, but shows that since the dismissal he has complied with the requirements of said rule. The importance of the rule, when complied with, to the interests of appellants, and its value to counsel in briefing and arguing causes, and its assistance to the court in considering the questions presented, will suggest, at once, the importance of the rule and the necessity for an enforcement of its requirements. No other index or reference is required to accompany the transcript, and, usually, no other is supplied.

*275Filed June 21, 1894.

These references the rule requires of appellants, and, as said in Smith v. State, ex rel., 137 Ind. 198, the requirements “are not merely directory, and may not be ignored or disregarded. It is not only the right, but the duty, of the court to enforce them.”

Having failed to comply with the important requirements of the rule, and the court having sustained the appellee’s motion to dismiss the appeal, the appellant asks us to consider a subsequent compliance sufficient cause to reinstate the appeal. To sustain the appellant’s motion would be little less than trifling with the rule, and instead of treating the rule as of so little consequence, we are inclined to enforce a more strict compliance with it than has been required in most instances in the past.

If the appellant had made a showing of excusable neglect, the motion would be entitled to greater consideration, but, to take the chances of dismissal for a noncompliance with the rule, and then to be rewarded by a reinstatement of the appeal, is to encourage the overthrow of the rule. The motion is less meritorious because of the fact that notice of the appellee’s motion to dismiss the appeal was served upon the appellant in sufficient time to have sought and procured permission to complete the record before the action of the court in sustaining said motion to dismiss.

The motion to reinstate is overruled.