History
  • No items yet
midpage
Newnan v. Newnan.
5 N.C. 178
N.C.
1808
Check Treatment

From Rowan. The act of Assembly regulating appeals from the County to the Superior Court declares, "that all persons dissatisfied with the judgment of the County Court shall be entitled to an appeal to the Superior Court; but before obtaining the same shall enter into bond with two sufficient securities for prosecuting the same (179) with effect." It seems, therefore, that the County Court have no power or authority to grant an appeal until they have received from the appellant a bond and adjudged that the security offered is sufficient. If, therefore, the party fail, during the sitting of the court, to obtain an appeal by executing a bond according to the provisions of the act, he is precluded forever thereafter from obtaining the same. The Court is therefore of opinion that this bond being executed after the rising of the County Court, the appeal intended to be prosecuted thereon cannot be sustained, and that the Superior Court have no authority to take a bond to sustain it. The appeal must therefore be dismissed.

Case Details

Case Name: Newnan v. Newnan.
Court Name: Supreme Court of North Carolina
Date Published: Jul 5, 1808
Citation: 5 N.C. 178
Court Abbreviation: N.C.
AI-generated responses must be verified and are not legal advice.
Your Notebook is empty. To add cases, bookmark them from your search, or select Add Cases to extract citations from a PDF or a block of text.