65 Md. 356 | Md. | 1886
delivered the opinion of the Court.
A motion to dismiss has been made in this case upon the ground that the record was not transmitted to this Court within three months after the appeal was taken. The appeal was entered on the 11th of July, 1885, and the transcript did not reach this Court until the 10th of December following, a period of nearly five months from the date of the appeal. Rule 16, Relating to Appeals, declares that no appeal shall be dismissed because the transcript shall not have been transmitted within the time prescribed if it shall appear to the Court of Appeals that the delay was occasioned by the neglect, omission or inability of the clerk; but such neglect, omission or inability shall not be presumed, but must be shoion by the appellant. The rule thus throws upon the appellant the onus of showing that the fault lies with the clerk, and, according to the practice in such cases, affidavits on this subject have been produced on both sides.
The clerk’s certificate appended to the transcript shows that it rvas completed on the 1st of October. If the appellant had then paid the cost of making it out, it would have been the duty of the clerk to have transmitted it to this Court at once, but he had the right to retain it until these costs were paid, and was not bound to transmit it before they were paid. It appears from an undated receipt, also appended to the record, as well as from the affidavits, that the costs were actually paid by Mr. Camalier, one of the appellant’s attorneys, but the affidavits on the part of the appellant fail to show when this was done. Mr. Camalier, in his affidavit, says he informed Mr. Young, the deputy-clerk, who had charge of the office, that he was ready to pay the costs at any time he was informed of the amount, and did pay the same to Mr. Young as soon as he was notified that the record was completed. But he does not say when the payment was actually made, and it must be observed that, under the rule,
Appeal dismissed.