This is a petitory action, in which the plaintiffs have appealed from the judgment rejecting their demand. The appellees have moved to dismiss the appeal for the reason, first, that the warrantors of the defendant’s title for the land in dispute, who are the real defendants in the suit, were not cited to answer the appeal; and, second, that the appeal bond was not filed within the year allowed for taking an appeal.
The petition for appeal was filed two days before the expiration of the year after the judgment was signed; and, on the same day on which the petition was filed, the judge signed the order granting a devolutive appeal on condition that the plaintiffs should give bond for $200. A citation of appeal was served upon each of the defendants on the same day, that is to say, two days before the expiration of the year allowed for taking an appeal, but the citation was not served upon any of the warrantors. The appeal bond for $200, signed by a surety comp'any as surety, and conditioned according to law, was filed on the forty-fifth day after the expiration of the year allowed for taking an appeal. No bond had been filed or tendered by the plaintiffs within the year. It appears therefore that, although the order of appeal was obtained in time, the appeal bond was not filed until the year in which the plaintiffs had the right to appeal had expired.
The obtaining of an order of appeal within the time prescribed is not availing without the bond required by the order of appeal. It is not necessary that the citation to answer the appeal shall be served within the time prescribed by law for taking an appeal, but the order of appeal, being subject to the condition that the appellant shall furnish a bond for the amount either fixed in the order or required by law, remains in abeyance and without effect until the bond is filed. Therefore an appeal is not deemed taken within the time prescribed by law for taking an appeal unless the bond required by the order of appeal is filed within the time prescribed. Marigny v. Stanley,
The only doubt that the appeal in this ease should be dismissed arises from the fact that, after .the appellants had filed the transcript in this court and before the appellees filed their motion to dismiss the appeal, they filed a motion to have the case advanced to the summary docket and fixed for an early hearing, and on their motion the case was so fixed for hearing. Two months afterward, in their motion to dismiss the appeal, they averred that they had not discovered the facts or omissions on which they based their motion to dismiss until they undertook to write their brief, which was filed on the next day after the motion to dismiss was filed.
As a general rule, when an appellee asks for and obtains an assignment of the case for a hearing on its merits, he thereby waives any objection that he might have to
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the appellant’s right to prosecute the appeal. Creevy v. Breedlove,
The other objection, however, on which the appellees ask that the appeal be dismissed, is not subject to the general rule that, when an appellee appears in the appellate court and has the ease fixed for a hearing on its merits, he thereby waives his right to ask that the appeal be dismissed. In the case of Untereiner v. Miller et al.,
“This law is imperative, and it cannot be abrogated by the agreement of counsel to extend the delay for the taking of a suspensive appeal. No consent of parties can give this court jurisdiction or enlarge its powers. If, in any given case, ‘no appeal will lie,’ whether because of the amount in dispute, or because the time limited for an appeal has expired, the appellate court has no jurisdiction, and every court is bound, ex officio, to take notice of the want of jurisdiction patent on the face of the record, although the *391 parties may be willing and may consent not to rifise Hie question.
“The bond being for the amount fixed by the judge is sufficient.. Possibly the informality of an appeal by motion at the term succeeding that at which the judgment was rendered would be cured by the voluntary appearance of the appellee for any other purpose than to move for the dismissal on that ground, but as the right of appeal had ceased, become extinct, by the expiration of one year, this court is without jurisdiction, and must so decide without motion to that effect.”
It is not necessary in this case to extend the doctrine as far as it was extended in the opinión which we have quoted, because, in this case, the appellees did not intend to waive their right to have the appeal dismissed, and are not consenting that we exercise jurisdiction over the case. We have no doubt that the appellees were ignorant of the fact that the appeal had been taken too late when they filed their motion to have the case advanced to the summary docket. In Edenborn v. Kirkland,
“An agreement of the parties after plaintiff’s appeal had lapsed for failure to file his transcript in time, entered into in ignorance of such fact and when they thought the appeal still pending', and looking to a determination on the merits on appeal, was not a waiver of defendant’s right to dismiss the appeal or a consent to its reinstatement, since ‘waiver’ is matter of consent, and one cannot be said to have consented to a thing of which he was ignorant, though consent or waiver might have cured the situation.”
As we- have shown by reference to the numerous decisions to that effect, an order of appeal has no effect unless the appeal bond, required as a condition on-which the order is granted, is filed within the time allowed by law for taking the appeal. Therefore the ruling in Untereiner v. Miller et al. is in accord with the settled jurisprudence that, if there is no order of appeal from the court of original jurisdiction, the appellate court has no jurisdiction over the case and must dismiss the appeal on the court’s own
motion,
even if the appellee, waives his personal objection to a decision of the case on its merits. Batchelor v. His Creditors,
The ruling in Untereiner v. Miller et al.,
According to the ruling in Untereiner v. Miller et al.,
The appeal is dismissed, at appellants’ cost.
