9 Colo. 196 | Colo. | 1886
The judgment of the court below must be reversed. The statute regulating appeals from the county to the'district court undoubtedly requires that appellant
Section 500 of the General Statutes, treating of appeals from the county to the district court, closes with the following: “And provided further, that no appeal shall be dismissed on account of a defect or informality in the appeal bond, or the insufficiency thereof, if the appellant or appellants shall within a reasonable time, to be fixed by the court, file a good and sufficient bond. ” This provision is imperative. In effect, it commands the district court, when properly requested, to fix a time for filing an amended bond;.also to approve the same, if sufficient and if tendered within the period named. The court has no discretion thereunder, save as to the length of time it may allow for curing the insufficiency or defect, and even then such time must in all cases be reasonable. A refusal to make such order is error which may be reviewed by this court.
In the absence of judicial authority on this question, we would feel impelled to adopt the foregoing conclusions. But we are amply sustained. In Illinois, under a statute providing for the amendment of appeal bonds in cases taken by appeal from justices of the peace to the probate court, which is almost exactly similar to the statutory extract above given, it was held that, no matter how defective the instrument purporting to be a bond might be, it was amendable; also that the allowance of the amendment by the probate court was an imperative
In 1853 the Illinois provision aforesaid was slightly altered. After such alteration it read as follows: “No appeal from a justice of the peace shall be dismissed for any informality in the appeal bond; but it shall be the duty of the court before whom the appeal may be pending to allow the party to amend the same within a reasonable time, so that a trial may be had upon the merits of the case.” It will be observed that the ‘language of this statute is hardly as strong as that in the Colorado provision under consideration. There the appeal is not to be dismissed for any informality in the bond, while with us it is not to be dismissed on account of any defect, informality, or insufficiency therein; yet the Illinois decisions under their amended statute are ■ precisely the same as before. Wood v. Tucker, 66 Ill. 276; Patty v. Winchester, 20 Ill. 261; Weist v. People, 39 Ill. 509; Hinman v. Kitterman, 40 Ill. 253; Town of Partridge v. Snyder, 78 Ill. 519.
In the case of Crain v. Bailey, 1 Scam. 321, the judgment dismissing an appeal from the probate to'the circuit court, on account of defects in the bond, was sustained, but the decision is expressly put on the ground that the statute in that state regulating such appeals “ makes no provision to amend the bond, or file a new bond, in case an insufficient one is filed.”
The judgment is reversed.
Reversed.