Clark v. Haines

3 N.J. Eq. 136
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1837
StatusPublished

This text of 3 N.J. Eq. 136 (Clark v. Haines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Haines, 3 N.J. Eq. 136 (N.J. Ct. App. 1837).

Opinion

The Ordinary.

The questions in this case arise upon an appeal made from the orphans’ court of the county of Burlington. The decree in the court below, was entered on the twenty-second of January, eighteen hundred and thirty-four. On the tenth of April, in the same year, the appellant filed her petition of appeal in this court in the usual form, and on the same day [137]*137obtained a rule from the respondent to answer in forty days. At the succeeding July term, the appellant was ordered by a rule of this court to show cause why her appeal should not be dismissed out of this court.

And in support of this rule, it is alleged on the part of the respondent, that the appeal should be dismissed for two causes; in the first place, because the appeal was not made within the thirty days prescribed by the act; and second, because the appellant had not made the deposite required.

As to the first point, it is admitted that the appellant demanded and filed her appeal before the orphans’ court at the time of pronouncing the decree appealed from, hut did not file her petition of appeal until the next regular term of this court.

The. appeal was made under the twenty-first section of the act entitled “ an act to ascertain the power and authority of the ordinary and his surrogates,” &c., which authorizes an appeal to this court, “ if demanded by any of the parties within thirty days after the sentence or decree of the orphans’ court;” and the question is, whether this appeal was made in time, according to the true construction of that act. If the limitation as to time refers to the filing of the petition of apppeal in this court, then the appeal should be dismissed, as it was not filed within the thirty-days. But if it refers to the demand and filing the appeal in the orphan’s court, then the appeal is properly before this court.

An appeal is correctly^ defined to be “ the removal of a cause from one tribunal to a higher;” but this definition gives but little aid in solving the present question, for that appeal can not be affected without the action of Imth of the tribunals ; they must both be addressed, or appealed to; the one to send up the proceedings, and the other to receive them, and take jurisdiction of the cause. This definition does not ascertain to which oi these appeals the limitation as to time refers.

Nor can we have much aid from examining the practice in England in analogous cases. It is indeed said that an appeal to the house of lords is to be signed by the counsel, and ex hibited by way of petition, but that petition can be presented only [138]*138during the fourteen first days of the session of parliament, unless the appeal be made from a decree which is pronounced whilst parliament is actually sitting.

In the state of New York, in cases of appeal from the court of chancery to the court of errors, the practice is to file the appeal with the register or assistant register of the court of chancery, within the time prescribed bylaw; and this proceeding is considered as the appeal, and so treated and called in all the further proceeedings in the cause; and upon filing this appeal with the register or assistant register, he is bound, without further order, to send the necessary papers up to the appellate court, at the session of which court the appellant presents his petition of appeal, when the transcripts and proceedings of the court below are brought in and filed with the clerk of the appellate court-And although the appellate court are not fully possessed of jurisdiction of the cause until the petition of appeal is presented to them, yet if the appellant neglects to file his petition of appeal after having filed his appeal in the court below, the appellate court will make an order on him that he present his petition within a limited time, or that it be not received: Bradwell v. Weeks, 1 John. Chan. R. 326. It is therefore evident, that for certain purposes, the appellate court are possessed of j urisdiction of the cause by virtue of the appeal to the court below, even before filing the petition of appeal.

The course of practice in our court of appeals, in cases of appeal from the court of chancery, is similar to that of New York. By the sixty-second, sixty-third and sixty-fourth rules of the court of chancery, any person who wishes to appeal, is required to file his appeal with the clerk in chancery, and that proceeding is considered as the appeal. The petition of appealis not to be filed until the next term of the court of appeals, and on the first or second day thereof; and in default of so doing, such appeal shall be considered as waived, and proceedings may thereon be had as if no appeal had been filed in the court below.

So far, therefore, as the practice of the court of appeals in die state of New York or in this state can have any influence [139]*139upon this court, in establishing its practice, it leads to the conclusion that the limitation in our statute refers to the time of making and filing the appeal in the court below, and not to the time of filing the petition of appeal in this court. And if we refer to the practice in New-York, in case of appeal to the court of chancery from the sentence or decree of the surrogate, or from the decision of a circuit judge on appeal from a surrogate, wo shall arrive at the same conclusion.-

I find, however, that the practice in this court has been otherwise. In the case of

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.J. Eq. 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-haines-njch-1837.