51 P. 459 | Idaho | 1897
Lead Opinion
The respondent moved to dismiss this appeal, which is brought here from a judgment in favor of the respondent (plaintiff below), and against the appellant, Edna G. Ward, and Mary E. Godard, jointly, on the ground that said Godard did not join in the appeal, and was not served with notice of appeal. The judgment being joint, said Godard was a necessary party to the appeal; and, not joining in the appeal, it was necessary to serve upon her, as an adverse party, the notice of appeal. (Coffin v. Edington, 2 Idaho, 627, 23
It is made to appear to this court that the attorney for tho appellant presented to the attorney for the respondent the transcript on appeal for certification, and that the attorney for the respondent refused to certify the transcript, or to point out any error therein. Rule 27, paragraph 9, of this court, provides that: “If a party shall present to the attorney of the a.dverse party a transcript on appeal on a civil cause, and request his certificate that the same is correct, and said attorney, upon such request, shall, for a period of five days, neglect or refuse to join in such certificate, or, if it be incorrect, shall neglect or refuse for the same time to serve upon the party making the request a written statement of the particulars in which the transcript is incorrect, or, upon the presentation of the transcript corrected in the particulars thus specified, shall still neglect or refuse, for a period of two days, to join in such certificate, the cost of procuring a certificate to such transcript from the clerk of the proper court shall be taxed against the party whose attorney so neglects or refuses.” (32 Pac. xi.) It is urged by the respondent that that part of rule 27 above quoted is void, for the reason that this court has no power to make said rule. In support of this contention, we are cited to the case of Loftus v. Fischer, 113 Cal. 286, 45 Pac. 328. A careful consideration of the decision in the case cited convinces us that it has no application to the case before us. In that case the supreme court of California says: “The code provides the mode by which the appellant shall bring his appeal to this court, and, as one of the steps in the process, that the clerk shall certify to the correctness of the contents of the transcript.” We must take it for granted that the supreme .court of California correctly states and interprets the code of that state. Section 4821 of the Eevised Statutes of our state, authorizes the certification to the transcript to be made “by the clerk or the attorneys.” The rule under consideration does not conflict with said statute, as did the California rule. In Potter v. Talkington, ante, p. 316, 49 Pac. 14, this court stated the object of the rule, and we there said that “it is in
Dissenting Opinion
Dissenting. — I cannot concur with the majority of the court. Paragraph 9 of rule 27 of the rules of this court provides that if a party shall present to the attorney for the adverse party a transcript on appeal in a civil cause, and request his certificate that the same is correct, and the attorney shall fail or neglect or refuse to Join in such certificate, the cost of procuring a certificate to such transcript from the clerk shall be taxed against the party whose attorney so neglects or refuses. In Loftus v. Fischer, 113 Cal. 286, 45 Pac. 328, the supreme court of California (under a statute and rule like our own, as I understand it), when considering the question involved in this ease, said: “The code provides the mode by which the appellant shall bring his appeal to this court, and, as one of the steps in the process, that the clerk shall