59 S.E. 876 | N.C. | 1907
(The necessity of these rules discussed by HOKE, J., showing that such are necessary for an understanding of the case on appeal and the administration of justice among the parties.) There were a large number of exceptions to the report and to the rulings on questions of evidence by both parties, and on the hearing some of them were sustained, some overruled, and others modified; and thereupon the court gave judgment that defendants go without day and recover costs, and plaintiffs appealed.
In apt time and proper form defendants moved to dismiss plaintiffs' appeal, assigning causes, among others, as follows:
"(1) The exceptions are not `briefly and clearly stated and numbered,' as required by the statute (Revisal, sec. 591, and Rule 27 of this Court).
"(2) The errors alleged are not stated `separately in articles numbered,' as required by the statute (Revisal, sec. 591).
"(3) The exceptions relied on are not grouped and numbered immediately after the end of the case on appeal, as required by Rules 19 (2) and 21 (
"(4) Appellants did not file their exceptions in the office of (362) the clerk of the court below within ten days after the end of the term at which the judgment appealed from was rendered." For the reasons above stated, the Court is of opinion that the plaintiffs' appeal should be dismissed, and it is so ordered.
These rules, published in
There is no doubt of the power of the Court to establish the rules in question, and in numbers of decisions we have expressed an opinion both of their necessity and binding force. Thus, in Walker v. Scott,
The rules, as they now stand, have been formulated for more than two years. For more than eighteen months they have been published in our reports (140 N.C.) and in several decisions, notably in Davis v. Wall,
There could not well be a case that better illustrates the necessity of the rule we are discussing than the one now before us. The action was commenced in 1898, and the record, including the case on appeal, contains 177 pages of printed matter. In 1902 a reference was (365) had, and, after an appeal to the Supreme Court, the order was proceeded with and an account was taken and report made. The report, containing forty-two findings of fact and forty-four conclusions of law, was heard by the judge on numerous exceptions filed by both of the parties, and on the hearing, as stated, many of these exceptions were overruled, some sustained, and others modified, and final judgment was *266 entered that defendants go without day. In the case on appeal, containing 79 pages, the court, at the instance of plaintiffs, and as required to present their objections, embodies a large amount of the testimony taken before the referee, and throughout this testimony appear many objections to the rulings of the referee on questions of evidence. It is well-nigh impossible to gather from the record and case on appeal the questions which the parties regarded as material or important. Certainly it could only be done, if at all, as the result of much labor and an amount of time that would seriously interfere with the proper consideration of other causes that demand and are entitled to consideration.
We are of opinion, as stated, that the motion to dismiss should be allowed, and it is so ordered.
Appeal dismissed.
Cited: Burnett v. Kuykendall, post, 597; Thompson v. R. R.,
(366)