Casanova v. Kreusch

21 W. Va. 720, 1883 W. Va. LEXIS 139
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 21 W. Va. 720 (Casanova v. Kreusch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Casanova v. Kreusch, 21 W. Va. 720, 1883 W. Va. LEXIS 139 (W. Va. 1883).

Opinion

Green, Judge,

announced the opinion of the Court:

If a plaintiff brings a suit in a common law court of original jurisdiction and fails to prosecute it, and he is non-suited or his case is dismissed, such a dismissal does not hinder him from again bringing a like suit for the same cause of action. The law gives to every one a remedy when his legal rights have been invaded, and his failure to prosecute his suit to enforce such right as he ought to do, the common law courts hold ought not to deprive him of his rights or debar him of a right to institute another suit, as the merits of his case have never been passed upon by any court. But in case his rights have been passed upon by a court of competent jurisdiction, and he deems himself injured by the decision of the court, and obtains a writ of error with or without supersedeas to have the judgment of this Court of original jurisdiction reviewed, and fails properly to prosecute his writ of error, and after due notice and consideration the appellate court dismisses his appeal or requires him to give a new bond with approved security, such as the defendant in error has a right to require, the first bond being worthless because of the insolvency of the obligors on it, and he fails to give such new bond and his writ of error is dismissed, it [724]*724is by no means clear, that bo ouglit as a matter or right to be awarded another writ of error either with or without a super-sedeas, lor he has already had his rights passed upon and decided by the court of original jurisdiction. And though the law extends to him a right to have this judgment of the court reviewed, yet this right is not as in the case of a suit at common law in the first instance an absolute right, but is one subject to such conditions and restrictions as the statute-law has properly put upon it; and if his writ of error has been dismissed because of his failure to comply with these conditions, and restrictions inserted in the law for the benefit of the defendant in error, who having the judgment of the court below in his favor is frima facie presumed to have the right on his side, it seems to mo, that the plaintiff in error ought not to have as of right a second writ of error awarded him to the injury and annoyance of the defendant in error, except in such case as the statute-law expressly or by fair implication authorizes such granting of a second writ of error.

Thus by our statute law, see chapter 171 of Acts of 1872-3, “If the appellant or plaintiff in error fails within six months, after his case has been docketed in the Court of Appeals, to deposit with the clerk a sufficient amount to pay for the printing of the record, he is decreed to have abandoned his appeal, and the same shall be dismissed.” Yet though thus dismissed for this cause, a second writ of error would be awarded the plaintiff in error as a matter of course, because our said statute expressly provides, when a case has been thus dismissed for failure, to print or to deposit the money within six months with the clerk to have the record printed, that “the appeal may be renewed at any time within five years from the date of the judgment, order or decree appealed from.” But when no provision of statute-law can be found thus expressly or by fair implication authorizing the granting of a second writ of error, after one has been dismissed by the appellate court, the plaintiff can not as of right have awarded to him a second writ of error. That our law. did not intend to permit after the dismissal of a writ of error a second writ of error to be awarded as a matter of course, except in particular classes of cases, such as we have pointed [725]*725out, seems to me to be a necessary conclusion from the phraseology of the bond required to be given by the plaintiff, when the first writ of error, if accompanied by a superse-deas, is awarded. The condition ,of the bond is, “to perform and satisfy the judgment, decree or order or any part thereof, proceedings on which are stayed, in case said judgment, decree or order, or such part thereof be affirmed, or the appeal, writ of error or supersedeas he dismissed.” This would seem clearly to indicate, that if the plaintiff in error himself dismissed his writ of error and supersedeas, or if it was dismissed by the court for want of prosecution, except in cases where it was otherwise provided, no second writ of error was to be awarded as of course; for by the terms of the bond the plaintiff and his sureties were on the first dismissal of the writ of error bound to perform and satisfy the j udgment of the court below; and of course it was not contemplated, that after such dismissal a second writ of error should be awarded, whereby perhaps this judgment of the court below might he reversed, excepting in such cases as the statute-law by express provision or fair implication permitted and required such second writ of error to be awarded, and in that case the sureties in the bond given on the first writ of error could not be held responsible, if the judgment below was reversed on the hearing of the second writ of error.

This conclusion, that the plaintiff in error can not except by statutory provisions be awarded as of right a second writ of error, where his first writ of error has been dismissed for want of prosecution or because of his failure to give a new bond with sufficient security when required so to do after a full hearing of the matter by the appellate court, is sustained by the decided weight of authority. In New York it seems to have been the practice of the appellate court to grant a second writ of error when the first had not been dismissed on its merits, but because of its want of prosecution by the plaintiff in error. See Langley v. Warner, 1 Com. 606; Kelsey v. Campbell, 38 Barb. 238. But from what is said by Judge Duer in Watson v. Husson, 1 Duer 252, I infer, that this practice was adopted because the bonds given, when a writ of error was awarded in that State, only provided, that the obligors should be responsible in case the judgment ap[726]*726pealed from was affirmed, and not as do the bonds given under our statute “where the writ of error is dismissed.”

The judge in this case says : “The bond which the revised statutes required to be given when a writ of error was brought, which was intended to operate as a stay of execution, not only bound the parties to satisfy the judgment in case it should be affirmed, but also in case the plaintiff in error should fail to prosecute the writ or the same should be quashed or discontinued, (2 R. S. 59 § 28), and why these additional and very significant provisions have been omitted in the Code we have been unable to discover, and are at loss to imagine. "We cannot believe, that they were rejected by the framers of the Code as superfluous, in the belief that they were all virtually comprehended in the affirmance of the judgment. If they really intended, that the undertaking upon an appeal should be construed as largely as the bond upon a writ of error, it is to be regretted that they have not expressed themselves in terms that could enable us to carry their intention into effect. We can not depart so far from all sound and safe rules of interpretation as to adopt a construction, which is plainly inconsistent with the settled and sole meaning of the words they have chosen to employ. To affirm a judgment is by the judicial sentence of an appellate court to declare its validity, and it is a legal solecism that a judgment has been affirmed, when the question of its validity is exactly that which the appellate court refused to consider.

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Related

In Re Estate of Kneeream
191 S.E. 867 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1937)
Miller v. Miller
184 S.E. 246 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 W. Va. 720, 1883 W. Va. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/casanova-v-kreusch-wva-1883.