43 S.C. 304 | S.C. | 1895
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff having recovered judgment, before a trial justice, against the defendants (for what amount is not stated in the “Case”), the defendants appealed to the Circuit Court, but upon what grounds do not appear. The case seems to have been docketed upon the proper calendar of the Circuit Court at fall term, 1893, and was continued at that term, because, as it is alleged, the record could not be found. At the next term (spring term, 1894), the record still being missing, his honor, Judge Watts, granted the following order: “IJpon hearing the appeal in the above entitled case, and it appearing that the papers in said case being lost, appellant’s attorney consenting, on motion of W. B. DeLoach, respondent’s attorney, it is ordered, that the said appeal be dismissed and with costs.” This order was neither excepted to nor appealed from, and on the contrary was formally consented to in writing by the attorney for the appellant. Soon thereafter the clerk, upon due notice, taxed the costs of respondent, as set forth in the “Case,” but as there was no exception to any particular item of costs allowed bysuch taxation, the items need not beset forth here. At the reference before the clerk for the
From the taxation of costs made by the clerk, the defendants appealed to the Circuit Court, and the same was heard by his honor, Judge Fraser, who dismissed the appeal and affirmed the taxation of costs made by the clerk. The only exception taken to this taxation before Judge Fraser, is set forth in the “Case” as follows: “Because the said clerk erred in taxing costs against the appellants because the order dismissing the appeal and the facts show, that the said appeal was dismissed for want of prosecution, and because the return of the trial justice had been lost.” From the order of Judge Fraser dismissing the appeal, the defendants have appealed to this court upon the followingexceptions: “1st. It is respectfully submitted that his honor, Judge Fraser, erred in affirming the judgment of the clerk, because the order of Judge Watts shows that the said appeal from the trial justice was dismissed, and dismissed because the records were lost; that the said cause was dismissed for want of prosecution, as the appellants and Judge Watts had no record upon which said cause could be heard upon its merits, and that the cause was not heard upon its merits. 2d. Because the evidence did not show that the amount involved in the action exceeded the sum of $20, but the evidence before the clerk and judge did show that the cause was dismissed because the records were lost, and for no other reason. 3d. Because the judge should have decided that the action was dismissed for the want of prosecution on the part of the appellants, or because they could not prosecute the cause further because the records were lost, and it was error to affirm the clerk’s judgment that required appellants to pay costs.”
The judgment of this court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.