175 P. 77 | Or. | 1918
The undertaking given by the New Amsterdam Casualty Company provided, “that if said judgment or any part thereof be affirmed, the appellant
“The Supreme Court shall have jurisdiction only to revise the final decisions of the Circuit Court.”
The only exception to this rule promulgated by the amendment referred to is that the court may in its own discretion take original jurisdiction in mandamus, quo warranto and habeas corpus proceedings: Article VII, § 2. This court, therefore, is one of limited jurisdiction aside from the instances just mentioned. It cannot acquire authority to act except in the manner provided by statute, in a case of the kind before us, and can exercise only power expressly conferred upon it by statute. Except in the stated instances of our original jurisdiction, authority of this court to hear and determine a case is derived from perfection of an appeal. That result is accomplished either by giving oral notice at the time of the rendition of the judgment appealed from or by causing a notice to be served upon the adverse party, filing the original with proof of service indorsed thereon with the clerk of the court in which the judgment appealed from is entered, and by serving or filing an undertaking, all as provided by Section 550, L. O. L., as amended by Chapter 319 of the Laws of 1913, which section requires that the appeal shall be taken and perfected in the manner therein prescribed and not otherwise. There are provisions in Section 554, as amended by Chapter 320, Laws of
“After compliance with the provisions hereof the appellate court shall have jurisdiction of the cause, but not otherwise.”
An abandonment of an appeal is defined in that section, substantially, as a failure to file a transcript within the thirty days mentioned, unless such time shall have been enlarged, and the last subdivision of the section reads thus:
“If the appeal be abandoned as provided in subdivision 2 of this section, thereupon the judgment or the decree, so far as it is for the recovery of money, may, by the appellate court, be enforced against the sureties in the undertaking for a stay of proceedings, as if they were parties to such judgment or decree.”
This, however, must be read in connection with the other provisions of the statute about serving notice of appeal in the manner and time required by the law, which it has’always been held is essential to the jurisdiction of this court: Baskin v. Marion County, 70 Or. 363 (141 Pac. 1014).
At the argument, counsel cited Simpson v. Prather, 5 Or. 87; Peck v. Curlee Clothing Co. (Okl.), 162 Pac. 735; Dunterman v. Storey, 40 Neb. 447 (58 N. W. 949); Flannagan v. Cleveland, 44 Neb. 58 (62 N. W. 297), and Morgan v. Soisson, 21 Pa. Super. Ct. 141; all of which,however, are cases where an original action had been brought upon the undertaking in a court of general jurisdiction. Without intimating what the rule would be in this state in an action on the undertaking here involved, we hold that whatever the liability on the instrument it cannot be enforced in any court, much less in a court having only the limited authority to