286 P. 732 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1930
Petitioners, Rucker and wife, have appealed to the Supreme Court of California from a judgment rendered against them as defendants in an action for the quieting of title to certain real property. After serving and filing their notice of appeal petitioners applied to the Superior Court by motion for an order allowing them to perfect their appeal in forma pauperis, and particularly for an order that the clerk of the Superior Court furnish to appellants, *685 without cost, the necessary clerk's transcript on appeal and that the court reporter who acted as such reporter at the trial of the action, furnish to appellants a reporter's transcript of the proceedings of the trial, also without cost to appellant. The motion was supported by affidavits of facts tending to prove that appellants were in a condition of poverty and were unable to pay in advance the costs on appeal. The judge to whom said application was made denied the motion "upon the ground that the above-entitled cases have been duly and regularly tried in above court, and judgments adverse to defendants (petitioners herein) have been duly filed, docketed and entered therein, and upon the further ground that this court is without jurisdiction to grant the relief prayed for."
In Martin v. Superior Court,
Apparently there has been no formal expression of opinion on this question, in the decisions of the Supreme Court. In the case of Brandow v. Superior Court, L.A. No. 11606, the petitioner, claiming the rights of a pauper litigant, applied to the Supreme Court for writ of mandate to require the Superior Court to allow the preparation of an appeal without payment of costs by the appellant. This demand included the furnishing of a stenographic reporter's transcript without payment therefor by appellant. The petition for the writ of mandate was denied, by order of date June 10, 1929. We infer from such denial that the justices of the Supreme Court were of the opinion that in the absence of any other provision by statute for the payment of the expenses of a reporter's transcript as part of the record on appeal, such expenses would have to be paid by the appealing party, and that there is no exception to this rule.
[4] It should be noted in connection with this matter of expenses of the reporter's transcript that appellants were not without an alternative remedy of which they could have availed themselves without a reporter's transcript. The reporter's transcript provided for by section 953a of the Code of Civil Procedure is allowed at the election of the party "in lieu of preparing and settling a bill of exceptions." It is quite possible to prepare a bill of exceptions without the expense of a reporter's transcript. In times past this has often been done.
The alternative writ is discharged, and the petition for peremptory writ is denied.
Houser, J., and York, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the District Court of Appeal on April 10, 1930, and an application by petitioners to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on May 22, 1930. *687