28 Cal. 162 | Cal. | 1865
By the Court,
This is an appeal from an order discharging an order requiring the respondent to show cause why an attachment should not issue against him for a contempt of Court, within the provisions of an Act passed April 8, 1862, entitled “An Act for the punishment of contempts and trespasses.”
There is a statement annexed to the record of the order appealed from and all the errors complained of arise upon the statement.
The respondent insists that there is no sufficient specification in the statement of the grounds upon which the appellant intended to rely in this Court, and that for the want of such specifications the order should be affirmed. The appellant, in reply to this objection, insists, in the first place, that in a case like the present, no specification of the grounds intended to be relied on is necessary; and in the second place, if mistaken in the first position, that the record shows a specification, and one as precise in its terms as the law requires. •
First—We consider that a specification was necessary to entitle the plaintiff to a hearing upon the statement. True, section three hundred and forty-three of the Practice Act provides : “ That the last five preceding sections (338, 339, 340, 341, 342) shall not apply to appeals taken from an order made upon affidavits filed, but such affidavits shall be annexed to the order in place of the statement mentioned in those sec
The record in this case contains a specification in the following language : “ To which order and decision the said plaintiffs then and there duly excepted, and assign as error that said order and decision are against law.” This specification is too general to subserve any useful purpose and might as well have been omitted. The objects intended to be secured by section three hundred and thirty-eight of the Practice Act are distinctly set forth in Hutton v. Reed and in the case of Barrett v. Tewksbury, and require no restatement here. This case is clearly within the rule established by those. decisions. In Barrett v. Tewksbury the Court announced that it would forbear to apply the rule to cases then pending, but as to the future, parties and attorneys were distinctly told that the rule would be rigidly enforced; and this monition was reiterated, in effect, in Hutton v. Reed. The respondent does not waive the benefit of the rule, but claims that it should be enforced in hi? favor.
The order appealed from is affirmed.