40 La. Ann. 793 | La. | 1888
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The complaint in this case is that the respondent judge •erroneously dismissed an appeal brought to his court by relator from •one of tbe city courts.
The ground of the dismissal was that the appeal had not been completed in time under Rule 29 of the Civil District Court, which reads -as follows:
*794 “In any case appealed from a city court, the record must be filed in this Court before the expiration of the tenth day after filing the bond in the court a qua, unless such tenth day should fall upon a holiday, in which event the appellant shall be entitled to the whole of the next-succeeding day upon which the clerk’s office may be open for businesswitliin which to file such record.”
It appears from the record that the appeal bond was filed in the city court on the 11th of June, and that the transcript was filed in the appellate court on the 22d of the same month.
Relator’s main contention is that under the provisions of Art. 318-of the Code of Practice, as construed in our jurisprudence, his appeal was seasonably brought up, because the day on which his bond was-filed, and the day on which the transcript was to be filed, under the-rule, should not be counted.
The article of the Code provides that “in all cases where delay is-given either to do something or to answer, neither the day of serving-the notice, nor that on which the act is to be done or the answer filed,, are included.”
If that provision governs the case, the appeal is saved.
The respondent concedes this conclusion if the question is to be-controlled by Sec. 2093 of the Revised Statutes of 1870, which was the-law regulating appeals from justice’s courts, under the judiciary system which had been established by the Constitution of 1868; but his-contention is that the section is necessarily inconsistent with, and was-therefore abrogated by, the present Constitution, under which justices” courts, and the tribunal which was then their exclusive appellate-court, have both ceased to exist. That section reads as follows: •
“All appeals from judgments of the justices of the peace, returnable to the Third District Court, shall be made within ten days after the bond of appeal shall be filed in the office of said justice of the peace.”'
As we are unable to discover any difference between a rule which requires the performance of an act within ten days of a given time, and! a rule which requires the same thing to be done “ before the expiration of the tenth, day1' of the same time, we cannot make the distinction which is the basis of the respondent judge’s conclusions in his ruling complained of. If the appeal was filed within ten days after the date-of filing the appeal bond in the city court, the act must, in the nature of things, had been done, before the expiration of the tenth day, or-otherwise it would have been after, and not ivithin, ten days.
Under these views it becomes unnecessary for the purposes of this case to judicially determine whether the section has been abrogated or-
From the circumstance that the supervisory jurisdiction now vested in this Court did not exist under any previous constitution of this State, it follows, and it appears, that the provisions of Sec. 2093 R. S., have never been construed by this Court, and the proper interpretation of the same provision, as now incorporated in Rule 29 of the Civil District Court, comes up in this case for the first time since the adoption of the constitutional amendment (1884) which vested that court with appellate jurisdiction over city courts.
But we are not without judicial precedents in our present investigation, as we find several decisions of this Court which give an interpretation of the rule in Art. 318 of the Code of Practice as applicable to an analogous provision of law incorporated in Art. 575 of the same Code, which declares that execution of a final judgment is stayed if an “ appeal has been taken within ten days” after said judgment.
It has been held that in computing these ten days, the day on which the judgment was signed, and the day on which the appeal is taken,, should not be included.
Thus in the case of Garland vs. Holmes, 12 Rob. 421, it appeared that the judgment had been signed on the 20th of December, 1855, and the appeal was taken only on the 2d of January following, making an-actual interval of thirteen days, but after excluding two Sundays, and ruling that the day on which the judgment had been signed and that on which the appeal had been taken should not be included, the court held that the appeal had been taken within ten days after the judgment had been signed.
That case was followed under similar circumstances in State ex rel. Mercier vs. Judge, 29 Ann. 224, and subsequently in. Tupery vs. Edmondson, 29 Ann. 850.
Without expressing our opinion on the subject, if the question was res nova, we conclude that the decisions above referred to, in the construction therein adopted of the application of Art. 318 of the-Code to expressions precisely similar in Art. 575, have acquired the force of the rule stare decisis, and that they must control our ruling rathe present controversy. To be efficient, rules of practice must be unequivocal, and hence they must be uniformly expounded.
Thus concluding, we hold that relator’s appeal had been seasonably-brought up, and that there is error in the judgment of dismissal.