19 S.E. 225 | N.C. | 1894
This cause having been tried below at Spring Term, 1893, the appeal should have been docketed in this Court before the perusal of *183 the district to which it belonged, at Fall Term. It is true that as the appellee did not move to docket and dismiss, the appeal could have been docketed at any time during said Fall Term (113 N.C.). But instead of so docketing the appeal the appellant, on 16 December. 1893, near the end of the term, applied for a certiorari, the (283) motion reciting that the petition was to be heard on 18 December. Ten days notice was not given as required by rule 43, nor was the time shortened by the court. The petitioner's counsel himself fixed the time at two days, and 18 December, 1893, as the day the motion was to be heard, but did not place the notice in an officer's hands for service till 12 January, 1894. Such laches and irregularity do not entitle the petitioner to the benefit of a certiorari, which should be asked for in apt time and upon due notice.
Apart from this the application is resisted on the affidavit of the clerk that the transcript was not sent up because he repeatedly demanded his fees for the same and the appellant failed to pay them. This the clerk was entitled to demand (Andrews v. Whisnant,
Petition denied.
Cited: Mortgage Co. v. Long,