This is an appeal from an order made by the district court for the Northern district of California on the 14th day of May, 1898, denying the petition of the assignee of the (¡state of John Bensley, a bankrupt, for the expunging from the Isles of the estate the claim of one E. W. Chapman. 87 Fed. 86. On the part of the appellee it is contended, among other things, that the appeal should be dismissed, or the decree affirmed, for the reason that the only assignment of errors embodied in the record presented to the court and relied upon in the brief of the appellant is a so-culled “¡Second Amended Specification and Assignment of Errors,” filed in the
“The requirement of rule 11 (11 C. C. A. cii., 47 Fed. vi.), that the assignment of errors shall he filed ‘with the clerk of the court below, with the petition for the writ of error or appeal,’ was designed to bring into the record at that time a separate and particular statement ‘of each error asserted and intended to be urged’; and to a large extent the rule is a nullity if, under general and indefinite specifications like those quoted, the appellant may be able afterwards to bring forward objections to the decree or judgment, which, when error was assigned, had not been thought of.”
In Dufour v. Lang, 4 C. C. A. 663, 54 Fed. 913, the court said:
“The purpose of the rule is two-fold, — to advise the adversary as to what he is to defend, and to aid the appellate court in reviewing the case.”
In the case last cited the court showed that rule 11 of the circuit courts of appeal is based on the provisions of sections 997 and 1012 of the Bevised Statutes, the first of which declares “there shall be annexed to and returned with any writ of error for the removal of a cause, at the day and place.therein mentioned, an authenticated transcript of the record, an assignment of errors, and a prayer for reversal, with a citation to the adverse party”; and the second of which provides that “appeals from the circuit courts and district courts acting as circuit courts, and from district courts in prize causes, shall be subject to the same rules, regulations, and restrictions as are or may be prescribed in law in cases of writs of error.”
The assignment of errors, being, as thus seen, essential to the allowance of an appeal or the granting of a writ of error, becomes an im
Upon the ground that the record does not contain, and the brief of the appellant does not rely upon, any assignment of errors filed in the court below at the time, of the allowance of the appeal, the judgment is affirmed.