Plaintiff and appellant brought this action against defendants and respondents for claimed wrongful arrest and imprisonment. On a former appeal from a judgment of dismissal after sustaining demurrers to the complaint without leave to amend, the judgment was reversed.
(Kaufman
v.
Brown,
The original notice to the clerk contained no statement of the points to be raised and there was no designation therein of the portions of the oral proceedings to be transcribed. There was no stipulation of the parties that any portion of the oral proceedings be not transcribed. The so-called amended notice to the clerk to prepare record on appeal, which sought a limited reporter’s transcript involving only the testimony of two witnesses and the court’s instructions to the jury, was not filed within 10 days after filing notice of appeal, as provided by rule 4, Rules on Appeal. The trial court was within its rights in refusing to certify the limited reporter’s transcript as prepared and in ordering a complete transcript of the testimony within a prescribed period. (Rule 4(a), Rules on Appeal;
Western Concrete Pipe Co.
v.
Grabovich,
Instead of preparing the entire record, as ordered, plaintiff subsequently, on June 26, 1951, applied to this court, under rule 12(a), Rules on Appeal, for permission to augment the record on appeal by transmitting to this court only the limited transcript prepared and which the trial court refused to certify. This application was denied.
After briefs were filed the action was regularly placed on the calendar on its merits. In the argument counsel for plaintiff suggested lack of funds precluded him from obtaining a full reporter’s transcript. This court ordered the appeal submitted on its merits. The record before us consists of the clerk’s transcript (including the judgment roll) as requested by plaintiff.
In Rucker v. Superior Court, supra, the court refused a writ of mandate to compel the court reporter to furnish a *689 transcript without the payment of the required fee. No just cause appears why the rule there adopted should be reversed. (See, also, rule 4(c), Rules on Appeal.)
It is respondents’ argument that the order of the court ordering plaintiff to prepare a full transcript of the testimony, instead of the portion transcribed, within two weeks from the date of the order, is not an appealable order. This contention must be sustained. (Code Civ. Proc., § 963.) In order that a special order made after final judgment, as contemplated by that section, be appealable, such order must affect the judgment in some manner or bear some relation to it either by way of enforcing it or by staying its execution.
(Lake
v.
Harris,
Mandate is a proper remedy to control questions dealing with the record on appeal.
(Darcy
v.
Moore,
The other questions presented in plaintiff’s brief are claimed error of the trial court (1) in granting a nonsuit as to certain defendants; (2) in receiving in evidence a certain ordinance ; and (3) in erroneously instructing the jury.
There is nothing before this court to consider except the clerk’s transcript. Plaintiff has not obtained a complete reporter’s transcript, as ordered by the court. The record does not support plaintiff’s claim that the trial court erred in respect to the questions presented.
Attempted appeal from the order to prepare complete transcript dismissed. Judgment affirmed.
Mussell, J., concurred.
