Deal v. Deal
This text of 67 S.E. 241 (Deal v. Deal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
A verdict was rendered in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendants on May 5, 1909. By special order of the Court the plaintiff was allowed to enter up judgment on the verdict during the term, which was done on May 18, 1909. On the same day defendants *263 served notice of intention to appeal to this Court. On June 14, 1909, defendants served on plaintiff’s attorney notice of a motion, to be heard on June 18, 1909, by his Honor,'Judge Klugh, the Judge who heard the cause, to extend the time for the service of the case and exceptions. The motion was resisted on the ground that the time for the service of the case and exceptions had already expired, and, therefore, the Judge had no jurisdiction to grant the order.
Section 345 of the Code is, so far as pertinent, as follows: “In every appeal to the Supreme Court from an order, decree or judgment granted or rendered at chambers from which an appeal may be taken to the Supreme Court, the appellant or his attorney shall, within ten days after written notice that such order has been granted, or decree or judgment rendered, give notice to the opposite party or his attorney of his intention to appeal; and in all other appeals to the Supreme Court the appellant or his attorney shall, within ten days after the rising of the Circuit Court, give like notice of his intention to appeal to the opposite party or his attorney, and within thirty days after such notice the appellant or his attorney shall prepare a case with exceptions and serve them on the opposite party or his attorney, etc.
*264 Under this section his Honor held that the time for service of the case and exceptions, when the notice of appeal was served before the rising of the Court, began to run on the first day after the adjournment of the Court; that the motion was, therefore, within the time, and granted an order extending the time till October 28th, 1909.
From this order the plaintiff appealed. Pending this appeal, the time for service of the case and exceptions in the original appeal was subsequently further extended by an order of one of the Justices of this Court, till January 1st, 1910, and by order of this Court, it was again further extended, without prejudice, however, to the present appeal.
As there is no doubt of the power of this Court, under section 349 of the Code, to exercise its discretion to permit an appeal to be perfected by service of case and exceptions, even after the expiration of the time allowed by statute for ■the service thereof, and as this Court has exercised its discretion to that end, the questions whether Judge Klugh’s construction of section 345 is or is not erroneous', and whether he had jurisdiction to pass the order appealed from, become purely speculative.
If it be said that the Court did entertain an appeal from such an order in Stribling v. Johns, supra, and in Scurry *265 v. Coleman, 14 S. C., 166, the answer is that the point that the orders were not appealable does not seem to have been made in either of those cases, as it has been in this case. Besides, in Scurry v. Coleman, motion to dismiss the original appeal seems to have been made and heard at the same time the appeal from the order of the Judge granting the extension of the time was heard, and the original appeal was dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
67 S.E. 241, 85 S.C. 262, 1910 S.C. LEXIS 231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deal-v-deal-sc-1910.