165 P. 997 | Idaho | 1917
Appellant was convicted, in the probate court of Clearwater county, of disturbing the peace. A transcript of the docket of the probate court shows that immediately upon the rendition of judgment he gave oral notice of his intention to appeal and, within ten days thereafter, filed a written notice of his appeal to the district court; also that, upon appellant’s request, the bail bond theretofore given was refiled as a bond on appeal.
The notice, which appears to be regular in all other particulars, is unsigned. It bears the following indorsement: “Service of a true copy of the within notice of appeal is hereby admitted, by receipt thereof, this 10th day of March, A. D., 1915. F. E. Smith, County Attorney.”
Respondent moved, in the district, court, to dismiss the appeal upon the ground that the notice thereof was not suffi
Sec. 8324 merely provides that a party appealing may, in order to be released from custody or if he desires a stay of proceedings under the judgment, enter into a recognizance for the payment of any judgment, fine and costs that may be awarded against him on appeal, and that he will faithfully prosecute the same and render himself in execution of any judgment or order entered against him in the district court.
Assuming that refiling the bail bond was not a substantial compliance with the requirements of sec. 8324, supra, it may be said that failure to comply therewith would only result in failure to stay the execution of the judgment of the probate court and would not defeat the jurisdiction of the district court to hear the ease, nor render the appeal subject to dismissal. (In re Schuster, 25 Ida. 465, 138 Pac. 135.)
Sec. 8321, is as follows: “A defendant intending to appeal must give notice of his intention to do so at the time of the trial or rendition of the judgment, and must within ten days after the rendition and entry of the judgment, file with the judge or justice of the court wherein the conviction was had, and serve on the prosecuting attorney of the county,, a notice of appeal, entitled in the action, setting forth the character of the judgment, and the intention of the defendant to appeal therefrom to the district court.”
The giving of notice of appeal in the manner provided by the foregoing section of the code is necessary to the jurisdiction of the district court, but, it will be observed, the statute does not require the notice to be signed. Therefore, the failure to have affixed thereto the signature of the appellant or his attorney is a formal, rather than a jurisdictional, defect and may be waived. In this case the prosecuting attorney, by accepting service in the manner and form he employed, waived the defect occasioned by the notice not being signed. (Wilson v. Wilson, 6 Ida. 597, 57 Pac. 708; People v. Schmitz,
. Tbe judgment and order of dismissal are reversed and the cause remanded to the district court with direction to grant appellant a trial.