"Letter-of-the-law pecksniffery” is a juridical sin. Such charge is often aimed at appellate judges who regretfully find themselves by mandate of the law required to dismiss an appeal without consideration of the merits.
In every matter coming to this court we are required to examine the record to make certain we possess jurisdiction. "[I]t is the duty of this court to raise the question of its jurisdiction in all cases in which there may be any doubt as to the existence of such jurisdiction.”
Stephenson v. Futch,
Unless a judgment is final this court does not have the power to rule upon an appeal in the absence of a certificate from the trial
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judge stating that "such order, decision or judgment is of such importance to the case that immediate review should be had.” Code Ann. § 6-701 (a) (2). "A judgment which is not final, and not among those specified [in § 6-701], is appealable only where the trial judge within ten days of its entry certifies it for immediate review.”
International Paper Co. v. Kight,
During appellant’s effective oral argument, it was pointed out that this appeal was from a dismissal of appellant’s counterclaim. Thereupon it became our bounden duty to ascertain if the requisite review certificate had been obtained from the trial court to give us jurisdiction. We have scrupulously scrutinized, scanned, and searched, followed by additional efforts in which we relentlessly reviewed, retrospected, re-examined and recapitulated the 121 pages of record. 1 All our efforts were to no avail. We found twelve orders in the record. But the sine qua non, the statutory immediate review certificate, that would enable us to consider the validity of the dismissal of the counterclaim was nowhere to be found.
This court is naturally reluctant to dismiss any appeal. Such hesitance is increased where we have to deal with an instance such as that sub judice which represents many hours of labor on the part of any attorney. We can take solace in the fact that our dismissal does not constitute a decision upon the merits. In fact, we anticipate at some date in futuro the matter of the correctness of the dismissal of the counterclaim will be used as an enumeration of error whenever another appeal is brought to this court from a final judgment. The present appeal must stand dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.
Notes
All authorities abhor an alliteration addiction which the writer himself admits to be symptomatic of that judicial disease known as "Legal Logorrhea.”
