This сase is before the Court on a writ of error to the final judgment of the Circuit Court of Wirt County. Willard B. Legg, the appellant, was convicted by the jury in a trial upon an indictment which charged him with the larceny of United States currency of the value of $64.32 of the money, goods, effects and property of the Board of Education of Wirt County.
At the time the offense is alleged to have been committed, Willard B. Legg was employed by the Board of Education of Wirt County as a teacher and as assistant principal of Wirt County High Schоol. He was also employed by the board of education, pursuant to a “homebound teaching” program, to teach certain high school subjects to Linda Lou Brohard at her home in Wirt County after regular school hours. Linda Lou Brohard was unable to attend high school because she was afflicted with muscular dystrophy.
The appellant was convicted on the basis of evidence introduced at the trial to prove that he received compensation in the sum of $64.32 from the board of education as a consequence of his representation that he taught Linda Lou Brohard at her home during the month of March, 1962, when, as a matter of fact, such representation was wholly false.
Code, 1931, 61-3-24, provides that if any person * * obtain from another, by any falsе pretense, token or representation, with intent to defraud, money, goods or other property which may be the subject of larceny * * * he shall * * * be deemed guilty of lar-
*403
eeny; * * * and, upon conviction, shall be confined in tbe penitentiary not less tban one nor more than five years, * * Tbe sentence imposed upon tbe appellant by tbe Circuit Conrt of Wirt County on October 7, 1965, was an indeterminate sentence of one to five years pursuant to tbe statute quoted above. The sentence of onе to five years is a proper sentence in such circumstances, notwithstanding tbe fact that it is provided by Code, 1931, 61-3-13, as amended, that one convicted of grand larceny ‘ ‘ shall * * * be confined in tbe penitentiary not less than one nor more than ten
years;
0 *
State v. Martin,
After a writ оf error was granted and after tbe case bad been placed on tbe docket for argument, tbe State of West Virginia, by counsel, pursuant to Rule IX of tbe rules of this Court, filed in tbe office of tbe clerk of this Court on September 12, 1966, a motion to dismiss tbe .“writ of errоr and appeal” as having been improvidently awarded, by reason of tbe failure of tbe appellant to comply with the provisions of Code, 1931, 58-5-4, as last amended by Chapter 9, Acts of tbe Legislature, Regular Session, 1965. Tbe statute in question is quoted immediately below, tbe second paragraph, added by tbe 1965 amendment, being tbe precise portion of the statute upon which tbe motion is based :
“No petition shall be presented for an appeal from, or writ of error or supersedeas to, any judgment, decree or order, whether tbe state be a party thereto or not, which shall have been rendered or made more than eight months before such petition is presented.
“In criminal cases no petition for appeal or writ of error shall be presented unless a notice of intent to file such petition shall have been filed with tbe clerk of tbe court in which the judgment or order was entered within sixty days after such judgment or order was entered. Tbe notice shall fairly state tbe grounds for tbe petition withоut restrict *404 ing the right to assign, additional grounds in the petition. ’ ’
Counsel for the appellant filed an “answer” to the motion asserting: (1) That the provisions of the statute are not jurisdictional; and (2) that even if such provisions are jurisdictional, the appellant has substantially complied with them. Questions arising upon the motion were submitted to the Court upon written briefs and oral arguments of counsel at the same time the case was argued orally and submitted for decision upon its merits.
The appellate jurisdiction of this Court in criminal cases is conferred by Article VIII, Section 3 of the Constitution of West Virginia in the following language: * *It shall have appellate jurisdiction in criminal cases where there has been a conviction for felony or misdemeanor in a circuit court, and where а conviction has been had in any inferior court and been affirmed in a circuit court, * * *, and such other appellate jurisdiction, in both civil and criminal cases, as may be prescribed by law. ’ ’
The Constitution does not define the procedure for appeal from a circuit court to this Court. The authority to do so has been left to the legislature. 4 C.J.S., Appeal and Error, Section 8, page 73. The procedure, as prescribed by the legislature, is defined in Article 5 of Chapter 58, Code, 1931, as amended. Sectiоn 1 enumerates the types of cases in which one may obtain from this Court, or from a judge thereof in vacation, an appeal from, or a writ of error or supersedeas to, a judgment, decree or order of a circuit court. Section 3 provides for the presentation of a petition, assigning errors, in this Court by a person wishing to obtain a writ of error, appeal or supersedeas in the cases enumerated in the first section. Then follows Section 4 which, as amended and reenacted in 1965, has been quoted previously in this opinion.
One convicted of a criminal offense is not entitled to a writ of error as a matter of right. The Constitution
*405
and statutes create an absolute right merely to apply for a writ of error. Constitution, Article VIII, Section 6;
Linger v. Jennings,
*406
“Appellate jurisdiction is. derived from the constitutional or statutory provisions by which it is created, and can be acquired and exercised only in the manner prescribed.” 4 Am. Jur. 2d, Appeal and Error, Section 4, page 535. To the same effect, see
State v. Shumate,
Other statutes governing appeals to this Court have been held to be mandatory. The time limits prescribed by Code, 1931, 56-6-35, and 56-6-36, for obtaining bills of exceptions or certificatеs in lieu thereof have been held in many cases to be jurisdictional.
Lester v. Rose,
We are of the opinion that the statutory language in question is clear, unambiguous and mandatory. The statute provides that “no petition for appeal or writ of error shall be presented * * *” unless a notice of intеnt to file such petition shall have been filed with the clerk within sixty days. The phrase, “no petition for appeal or writ of error shall be presented,” is almost identical with the language in the same statute dealing with the eight months period of limitations, and as, has been noted previously herein, this time limit for appeal has been held to be mandatory and jurisdictional.
Because of the difference in the language of similar requirements prescribed in other jurisdictions by statute or rule of court, it is difficult to find an exact case in point among decisions of other appellate courts. We believe, however, that the following cases sustain our view that the statutory language here in
*408
question must be regarded as mandatory and jurisdictional: Ske
ens v. Commonwealth,
We are of the opinion and accordingly the Court holds that the statutory language in question is clear, unambiguous and mandatory; that the requirement that a notice of intent to file a petition for appeal or writ of error be filеd with the clerk of the court within sixty days after entry of the judgment or order appealed from is jurisdictional; and that the appellant in this case failed to comply with the mandatory jurisdictional requirement of the statute. Therefore, the motion is sustained and thе writ of error is dismissed as having been improvidently awarded.
Judges Browning and Calhoun agree that the statutory requirement here in question is jurisdictional. They believe, however, that the jurisdictional requirement relates primarily to the sixty-day period and that a substantial compliance with the mere procedural matters relating to compliance with the statute, such as the nature and form of the notice, should suffice. They are of the opinion that there has been a substantial compliance in this case inasmuch as, wholly *409 within the sixty-day period, the appellant filed his motion for a new trial which assigned twenty-one grounds in support of the motion, being the same or substantially the same grounds assigned in the petition to this Court for a writ of error; the appellant indicated his purрose to appeal to this Court and was granted a stay for that purpose; the court reporter completed a transcript of the evidence and trial proceedings which was duly authenticated by his certificate and signature; and a certificate in lieu of a bill of exceptions, making the evidence a part of the record, was duly executed. They would hold that the appellant substantially complied with the statute in question and, therefore, they would overrule the motion to dismiss and decide the case on its merits.
For reasons stated, the motion to dismiss is sustained and the writ of error is dismissed as having been improvidently awarded.
Writ of error dismissed as improvidently awarded.
