59 Ind. App. 438 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1914
The appellees, Harold B. Hibben, Thomas E. Hibben, and Louis Hollweg, have entered a special appearance herein and moved to dismiss the appeal on the ground that this court has not acquired jurisdiction of the appeal. The substance of the motion is as follows: That the suit was
The precipe expressly calls for “Notice of appeal to Clerk. Notice of appeal to parties plaintiff, Harold B. Hibben, et al; notice to coparty, George C. Benham”, and the clerk certifies that the “transcript contains true, full, exact, and. complete copies of the papers, * * * notices, serv
The record shows, and all the parties concede, that a joint judgment was rendered against appellants and George C. Benham; that Benham did not appear either in person or by attorney; that he was defaulted and never at any time took any steps to appeal from said judgment nor did he authorize anyone so to do. It also appears from the record that at the time the notice of appeal was served on Benham in July, 1913, he was a resident of Cuyahoga County, Ohio. Rule 2 of this court provides: “When an appeal is taken and notice is given below, the transcript must be filed in the clerk’s office within, sixty days from the time of giving such notice; if the transcript is not so filed, the notice shall be without effect.” This rule has been sustained by the decisions of the Supreme Court and of this court, and it has been held that it neither abridges nor extends the time within which an appeal may be taken as provided .by statute, but places a reasonable limitation, in harmony with our statutory provisions, on the time during which a notice of appeal “given below”, remains effective for the purpose of perfecting the appeal. If notice of the appeal has been served
As already shown the transcript in this case was filed on January 7, 1914. When the transcript was filed the notice of the appeal given in July, 1913, was of no avail to notify the adverse parties of the appeal, for the reason that such notice expired, or became ineffective under Rule 2, supra, at the expiration of sixty days from April 5, 1913, and for the further reason, as applied to Benham, that the notice served upon him under §674, supra, to be effective, should have been filed with the clerk of this court.
This court has frequently held that where a party has failed to perfect his appeal within the time allowed by statute, he may not thereafter change or amend his assignment of errors, or take any other steps to give the.court jurisdiction it did not acquire within the time given by the statute in which to perfect an appeal. Pope v. Voigt (1912), 49 Ind. App. 176, 96 N. E. 984; Tate v. Hamlin, supra 98; Brown v. Brown, supra 655.
This case stands on the docket the same as if no attempt to give notice of the appeal .had ever been made. The court did not have or acquire jurisdiction of the appeal within the year allowed by the statute to take an appeal. No steps were taken by appellants to perfect the appeal within the meaning of our statutes and the rules of the court as interpreted by many decisions of both the courts of last resort in this State. The case comes within the provisions of Rule 36 and the appeal must therefore be dismissed.
The other suggestions and motions do not affect the determination of the motion to dismiss the appeal. We have treated the precipe as signed and the transcript as showing the summons and service thereof on Benham as a part of the record, since the facts shown.by the record and the statements of counsel in their briefs leave no room for doubt as to the correctness of such conclusions. There is no need
, Note. — Reported in 107 N. E. 40. See, also, under (1) 3 Cyc. 191; (2) 3 Cyc. 152; (4) 3 C. J. 1221; 2 Cyc. 864; (5) 3 C. J. 1238; 3 Cyc. 1913 Anno. 188-new; 3 Cyc. 190, 194; (6) 3 C. J. 1005, 1221; 2 Cyc. 757, 864; (7) 3 C. J. 1043, 1238 ; 2 Cyc. 785; 3 Cyc. 1913 Anno. 188-new.