119 S.E. 821 | N.C. | 1923
This case was tried at the April Term, 1923, of Gaston. It was requisite that the appellant should docket his appeal in this Court seven days before the call of the Fourteenth District, to which it belongs. The only exception under Rule 17 is that if for any sufficient reason the full record of the case on appeal could not be docketed in time, the appellant must file, seven days before the call of the district, the record proper, and upon sufficient cause apply for a certiorari. The plaintiff makes this motion, but has not filed any record proper, or in any respect complied with the requirements of the rule which applies to all other appellants.
The appellant filed, it is true, a statement that he appealed, and that he asked the clerk of the court below to send up the record, but avers that by some mistake the clerk confused it with another record and has failed to send it up. The clerk of the court below, in contradiction, filed a statement that such application to send up the case was not made so far as is recalled by the clerk's office, but, however that might be, it was incumbent upon this appellant, as upon all others, to see that his case was sent up and docketed in time; and in any event if, without fault of the appellant, this was not done, it was his duty to have gotten a copy of the record proper, duly certified by the clerk, and filed it in the office of this Court seven days before the call of the docket as an indispensable requisite for a motion for certiorari to cure the defect to bring up the appeal in time. This has not been done, and the appellant does not even allege that he has paid, or tendered the cost of making out the record, or has taken any steps whatever to have it sent up.
The motion for certiorari in this, as in all other cases under like circumstances, must be denied, and the motion to docket and dismiss must be allowed. The precedents to this effect are numerous and uniform.
Motion for certiorari denied.
Motion to docket and dismiss allowed.