Danna v. Yazoo M v. R. Co.

154 So. 365
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 4, 1934
DocketNo. 4740.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 154 So. 365 (Danna v. Yazoo M v. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Danna v. Yazoo M v. R. Co., 154 So. 365 (La. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

Defendants appealed suspensively from a judgment rendered against them. September 1, 1933, was the return day for the appeal. The record was received by the clerk of this court several days prior to the return day, but was not filed by him because the advance deposit of $5, authorized by law and required by our rule No. 3, had not been paid. This deposit was made by defendants’ attorneys on September 7th and the record then duly filed. Plaintiff, on March 7, 1934, filed motion to dismiss the appeal because of the *366 tardy filing of the record here, alleging, as is true, that the time for perfecting the appeal in this court had not been extended, nor extension ashed for. On April 2d, he filed a second motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the transcript was not timely filed, and because the filing fee was not paid until September 7th, the day the transcript was marked “Piled” by the clerk.

Counsel of appellants argue that the first motion should not be considered by us because it was not filed within three days after the appeal was lodged in this court, and because the motion, on its face, disclosed that, if the transcript were not. filed or received before the return day, the fault was that of the clerk of the lower court, or the clerk of this court, and not the fault of appellants; and to the second motion to dismiss, they also urge that it was not timely filed, and that it does not specify the amount of filing fee required, nor refer to any law requiring deposit thereof within any definite time. Appellants’1 energetic counsel have exhaustively briefed the points urged by them in support of their contention that the appeal should not be dismissed, and vigorously attack the rule which forbids the clerk of this court to file the record in any case until the required deposit has been made. While conceding that such a fee may be required of an appellant, they vehemently assert and argue that the penalty of dismissal of the appeal is not authorized nor required by law, nor justified in reason or equity, simply because it is not advanced to the clerk prior to the last day within which the transcript may be timely filed.

Section 28, article 7 of the Constitution, provides that: “The costs of appeal in any case appealed to the Courts of Appeal of the First and Second Circuits shall not exceed five dollars.” And Act No. 53 of 1926 (section 3) provides that: “The deposit of Five Dollars required to be paid for the cost of appeal to said Courts shall be apportioned and disbursed by said Clerks in such manner as shall be directed and prescribed by the Judges of said Courts.”

Pursuant to these authoritative permits, this court adopted and promulgated its rule No. 3 which, after directing the method and manner the clerk should follow in filing, numbering, and docketing appeals received by his office, says: “No case will be filed by the Clerk until after a deposit of $5.00 has been made.”

No discretion whatever is vested in the clerk under this rule. Until the deposit is made, he has no authority to file, but, on the contrary, is prohibited from filing the transcript; and if the deposit is only made subsequent to expiration of the return day and grace period of three days following same, it follows that the transcript filed thereafter is not timely filed, though-it may have been actually received by the clerk prior to expiration of the period within which the timeliness of its filing could not have been questioned.

This court has held in many cases that until the filing fee has been paid to the clerk, he has no right to file a transcript, and that when the fee is not paid, or only paid after the expiration of the period of grace, the appeal would not be considered, but dismissed on motion. Nelms v. Hankins Brothers, 5 La. App. 733; Johnson v. Oil City Bank, 14 La. App. 698, 130 So. 854.

Our brothers of the First Circuit are in accord with us in this respect. Wiggins v. Texas & New Orleans Railway Co., 17 La. App. 31, 135 So. 265.

Section 27, article 7 of the Constitution, reads:

“All cases on appeal to the Courts of Appeal shall be tried on the original record, pleadings and evidence.
“The rules of practice regulating appeals to and proceedings in the Supreme Court shall apply to appeals and proceedings in the Courts of Appeal, so far as they may be applicable, until otherwise provided.”

In Stockbridge v. Martin et al., 162 La. 602, 110 So. 828, the court held that its rule, to the effect that it would be conclusively presumed that an appeal had been abandoned by appellant where he failed to file transcript in time, was not applicable in the Court of Appeal, notwithstanding article 7, § 27 of the Constitution, because, and for the reason, that the rules of the Court of Appeal directed the clerk of the district court to prepare and deliver the transcript, composed of the original record in the case, in the appellate court within the time required by law; whereas, filing of transcript in appeals to the Supreme Court is entirely under the control, and is the duty, of the appellant, and the failure to do so timely may only be imputed to him. It has been repeatedly held by us that, even though a transcript is not timely filed in this court, unless the fault is imputable to appellant, the appeal will not be dismissed. If the appellant has done all he is legally required to do, the blame for tardy filing of transcript will not be visited upon him. After securing order of appeal in open court during the 'session wherein the judgment was rendered and signed, furnishing of *367 proper bond and timely deposit of the fee required by law and rule of the court, an appellant has done all the law requires him to do to perfect his appeal here. It is the clerk’s duty to see that the record or transcript, made up of original papers, of which he is custodian, is timely filed. Stockbridge v. Martin, supra; Dupuy v. Phillips, 14 La. App. 696, 130 So. 855; Morehouse Lbr. & Bldg. Material Co. v. Jacob & Walker, 17 La. App. 409, 136 So. 106.

Act No. 32 of 1910 requires the clerks of the district courts, when the advance deposit for cost of appeal has been made to them, to transmit same, with the record in the case, to the clerks of the Courts of Appeal. The appellant may or may not leave the fee with the clerk of the lower court. If he does not do so, then it becomes his duty personally to transmit same to the Court of Appeal clerk. The clerk of the district court is not required to advance such fee though satisfactory suspensive appeal bond be given.

In the instant case no fault for tardy filing of the record is imputable to the clerk of the court below because, as said before, the record was delivered by him here before the return day of the appeal, and the fee was not deposited with him.

Appellants strenuously contend that, as the motions to dismiss the appeal were not filed within three days of the filing of the record here, they are too late. This position is not well founded.

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Bluebook (online)
154 So. 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/danna-v-yazoo-m-v-r-co-lactapp-1934.