17 S.D. 258 | S.D. | 1903
This is an action' by the plaintiff, widow of Michael Garrigan,. deceased, to recover of the defendants damages alleged to have been sustained by her by reason of
A motion has been made to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the notice of appeal purports to have been taken by all three of the defendants, and that the undertaking on appeal recites that the appeal is taken from the judgment entered against all the defendants, but that in fact one of the defendants, Gilbert Gilman, did not answer or appear in the action, and no verdict or judgment was taken against him. The respondent has filed an additional abstract setting forth the facts which he claims are shown by the record, but an examination of the original record discloses that the notice of appeal was signed by the attorneys for Samuel Kennedy and O. H. Smith, naming them. The respondent was therefore notified that the appeal was taken only by Kennedy and Smith, although the name of Gilman appeared in the title of the action. The undertaking must be construed with reference to the notice of appeal, and notwithstanding it recites that the appeal is taken from “a judgment entered against the above-named appellants, ’ ’ the recital must necessarily be limited to the appel-' lants appearing by the notice of appeal, and against whom the jury found its verdict and the court entered judgment. Retaining the title of the case, therefore, in the notice of appeal and undertaking, could not have misled the respondent, and, as the appeal was only by Kennedy and Smith, the undertaking is clearly valid and bidding upon them. The motion to dismiss the appeal must therefore be denied.
Upon the merits of the case it is sufficient to say that the case is similar to that of Mary Garrigan v. John T. Thompson