113 S.E. 506 | N.C. | 1922
The summons in this case was issued 6 October, 1919, and the cause was tried at November Term, 1921. The appeal should have been docketed here at last term, but it was not docketed until this term. It has been too often held, to be a matter of debate, that an appeal is not a matter of right, but is allowed upon conformity with the provisions of law and the rules of the Court, which, if not complied with, the cause is not legally in this Court and cannot be considered by us. *610
In Mimms v. R. R.,
At a preceding term the same ruling was upheld in Buggy Co. v. McLamb,
While Magna Carta did not originate, or require, trial by jury, as at one time was thought, it is very certain that it did guarantee that there should be a prompt administration of justice by providing (ch. 47) that the courts will neither sell justice nor deny it nor delay it, and a delay of justice is often a denial of justice.
It would be impossible to have an orderly and regular dispatch of business in the courts if the parties either themselves or through their counsel (who certainly have no greater authority than the parties themselves) can, to suit their own convenience or whim, set aside at their will the regulations governing litigation, and taking the matter out of the hands of the courts, substitute their own agreements.
When an appeal is not docketed here in the time required, the party or his counsel should apply for a certiorari at that time, for then the Court, on hearing the grounds for failure to docket, can adjudge whether acertiorari should issue or the cause be dismissed. The Court does not favor even these applications, for it is not very often the case that the *611 cause cannot be prepared and docketed in the time required by statute and the rules of this Court.
It is not often that counsel are so overwhelmed with business that they cannot attend, in the required time, to docketing an appeal, and when this occurs there are a sufficient number of lawyers who can be called in to the aid of their brethren who are so overwhelmed at the moment that they cannot wade through the swollen tide of business that surrounds them. It is much better that in these emergencies aid should be sought from their brethren of the bar, who are not lacking either in ability or numbers, than that counsel should, by private agreements, interfere with the orderly procedure and practice of the courts in disregard of the prescribed regulations.
Appeal dismissed.