9 S.D. 310 | S.D. | 1896
This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court dismissing an appeal taken from the judgment rendered in the justice's court. The judgment was rendered in the justice’s court on July 2, 1894. On August 1st notice of appeal and undertaking on appeal were filed with the justice, and one dollar paid for transcript. No question is made as to the due service of the notice of appeal. On August 3d the plaintiff served notice that he excepted to the sufficiency of the sureties in the undertaking given on the appeal in the action, and demanded that said sureties or others justify as required by law. The affidavit of service of this notice is as follows:
“State of-South Dakota, County of McCook — ss.: I hereby certify and return that the within notice came to my hands on the 2d day of July, 1894, and I served the same upon the within-named defendant, Z. Paris, by delivering to and leaving with him personally a true copy of. the same at Bridgewater, McCook county, S. D., on the 3d day of August, 1894. Jacob Tschetter.
‘ ‘Subscribed and sworn to before me, this 6th day of August, 1894. W. A. Morse, J. P.”
In December, 1894, the plaintiff made a motion in the circuit court to dismiss the appeal upon the ground that the sure ties on the undertaking, not having justified upon the notice to the plaintiff as provided by Sec. 6133, Comp. Laws, there was no undertaking on appeal, and no appeal perfected. Defendant thereupon moved the court for leave to file a new undertaking. The court denied the latter motion, and granted the former, and dismissed the appeal. The section before referred to provides that the “adverse party may except to the sufficiency of the sureties within five days.after the filing of the undertaking and unless they or other sureties justify within five days thereafter, upon notice to the adverse party, * * * the appeal must be regarded as if no such undertaking had been given.” It will be observed that notice of such justification is an essential prerequisite to the justification. The evident object of this provision is to enable the adverse party to be present and examine the sureties, in order to ascertain their pecuniary responsibility. It is not enough, therefore, that they are willing to make the ordinary affidavit as to their property. This they do in the first instance. Barber v. Johnson, 4 S. D. 528, 57 N. W. 225. The adverse party has the right to be present when the sureties justify and cross-examine them. The
The court therefore committed no error in dismissing the appeal unless the court erred in denying defendant’s motion for leave to file a new undertaking on appeal. If there was no undertaking the circuit court had no jui’isdiction of the case, and consequently no power' or authority to grant the defendant’s motion. No appeal having been perfected within the time allowed by statute, the action was not removed from the justice’s court. The circuit court had no power-or authority to extend the time within which a party might take and perfect his appeal from the justice’s court while the action still remained in that court; and, as we have seen, until the sureties justify upon proper notice to the adverse party of the time and place of such justification, the case remains in the justice’s court. There is a marked distinction between an appeal where no undertaking exists and an appeal where there is an undertaking, but it is defective. There being an'undertaking in the latter case, the court acquires jurisdiction of the appeal, and therefore possess the power and authority to allow a new under
The counsel for appellant contends that, as it appears that the exception to the sufficiency of the sureties came into the hands of the party serving the same 29 days before the undertaking was filed with the justice, it was not an exception taken to the sufficiency of the sureties within five days after the undertaking was filed, as required by the statute. It will be no
Appellant further contends that there was an agreement between the parties, in effect waiving notice of the time and place of the justification of the sureties. But the only evidence of such an agreement found in the record is the insertion of the words in the justice’s certificate to the justification “and by agreement of the parties,” which words are erased by a line drawn - through them. This court can only look to the return as it is found in the record. When the words were erased does not appear, but in the absence of evidence to the contrary we must presume they were erased before the return was filed, and were erased by the justice himself. Finding no error in the record, the judgment of the circuit court dismissing the appeal is affirmed.