Dorfer v. City of Natchitoches

160 So. 807, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 254
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 2, 1935
DocketNo. 4878.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 160 So. 807 (Dorfer v. City of Natchitoches) 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
Dorfer v. City of Natchitoches, 160 So. 807, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 254 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

MILLS, Judge.

On February 24, 1932, Herbert Dorfer, employed by the city of Natchitoches, in the Water and Light Department, while at work in the city’s power house, received an accidental injury to the index finger of his right hand. The finger healed in such a position that the usefulness of the entire hand was affected, but it appeared that surgical treatment or amputation would limit the disability to the finger.

Accordingly, on June 24, 1932, with the approval of the court, he entered into a compromise lump-sum agreement whereby he was paid and received $468 for -the loss of the use of the finger, and an additional sum of $110 to pay for the future surgical attention ox-amputation. Retaining these sums, and without submitting to the amputation, on December 16, 1932, plaintiff bi-ought this action asking that the lump-sum settlement or compromise be set aside, alleging, first, that it was not a compromise, but a discount of what was properly due him of mox-e than eight per cent.; and, in an amended petition, that he was imposed upon in the settlement. He claims, in the px-esent action, compensation for the loss of a hand, less the amounts paid, which, after due trial, was allowed by judgment rendered November 25, 1935.

*808 From this judgment defendants, City of Natchitoches and its insurer, the Maryland Casualty Company, were granted orders of suspensive and devolutive appeal, returnable January 15, 1934. The record was first lodged in this court and filed on March 1, 1935, no extension of the return day having been requested. On April 3, 1934, appellants moved in this court to advance the case on the docket. They were then officially informed by the clerk of the appellate court that the record had never been presented here. On April 20, 1934, they deposited the required filing fee of $5. On May 3, 1934, a duplicate or new appeal bond, dated December 1, 1933, was filed in the lower court and is the only bond appearing in the record; defendants contending that the original had been filed December 2, 1933, and the clerk contending that no bond had .been previously filed. Thereafter, appellants took no formal action until February 22, 1935, when they obtained here an alternative writ of mandamus ordering the record up. It was filed March 1, 1935, before the return day of the rule in the mandamus proceeding.

Plaintiff, appellee, has moved to dismiss the appeal upon the following grounds:

1. Filing fee not paid until more than three months after return day.

2. Record not lodged in Court of Appeal until more than thirteen months after return day.

3. Delay imputable to fault of appellant because even after bond filed on May 3, 1934, record, with their knowledge, was not filed in Court of Appeal until March 1, 1935, without any application for extension.

4. Bond filed May 3, 1934, more than 60 days after return day without extension thereof, too late to perfect either a devolu-tive or suspensive appeal.

It is necessary to determine first whether or not the appeal should be dismissed because of the failure to file the deposit for costs until after the return day.

Rule 3 of this court provides:

“No case will be filed by the Clerk until after a deposit of $5.00 has been made.”

The right of this court to adopt and enforce such a rule is not questioned.

We have dismissed the appeals in Nelms v. Hankins Bros., 5 Da. App. 733; Johnson v. Oil City Bank, 14 Da. App. 698, 130 So. 854; and Danna v. Xazoo & Miss. V. Ry. Co., 154 So. 365, where the record was lodged in this court before the expiration of the return day, but the filing fee was not paid until after that period for the reason that, though physically in this court before the return day, under the provisions of rule 3 the record was not legally filed until after its expiration. Under the well-recognized rule, the appeals were dismissed because the records were filed too late, due to the fault of the appellant in not making the deposit.

We can find no case where an appeal has •been dismissed for failure to make the deposit where that fee has been paid before the record is tendered for filing. In the present case, the deposit was made April 20, 1934, more than ten months before the record reached this court on March 1, 1935.

[I] In the case of Stockbridge v. Martin, 162 Da. 601, 602, 110 So. 828, 829, it is held that in appeals to this court, the failure to file the record on time is prima facie the fault of the clerk of the district court and not imputable to the appellant. The rule is different in the Supreme Court, and other circuits of this court (Wiggins v. Texas & N. O. R. Co., 17 Da. App. 31, 135 So. 265), where it is the duty of appellant to see that the appeal is timely filed; the penalty for failure being dismissal.

“This cannot be true with respect to appeals to the Court of Appeal. The appellant has no control over the record. That record is a part of the archives of the court and is under the control of the clerk until delivered to the clerk of the Court of Appeal. The duty of filing the record with the Court of Appeal is imposed upon the clerk of the district court and not upon the appellant, and the failure of the clerk to perform that duty cannot be imputed to the appellant. The appellant in this ease did everything that was expected or required of him in the perfection of his appeal, He could not know in advance that the clerk would not transmit the record before the expiration of the return day, and hence was without a legal remedy to force the clerk to perform the duty required of him in transmitting the record to the appellate court. To apply the rule of this court to the Courts of Appeal would be to penalize an appellant by the loss of his appeal for the omission and neglect of the clerk of coui’t, for which the appellant was not responsible and over which he had no control.” Morehouse Dumber & Bldg. Material Co. v. Jacob & Walker, 17 Da. App. 409, 136 So. 106; Dupuy v. Phillips, 14 Da. App. 696, 130 So. 855; Devereaux & Ashby v. Rochester, 10 Da. App. 430, 120 So. 658; Carter v, Bolden, 11 Da. App. 655, 124 So. 562.

*809 The effect of these decisions is that, where the clerk alone is at fault, the return day is automatically extended until he lodges the record in the Court of Appeal.

Therefore, when the record reached here on March 1, 1935, the deposit for costs having been previously made on April 20, 1934, before it was legally Alable, the appeal should not be dismissed unless fault on the part -of appellant was in some way responsible for the delay.

The right of appeal is a constitutional right which should not be forfeited except in clear and (indisputable cases. Appeals are favored under the law. A rule, the violation of which results in the dismissal of an appeal, is highly penal and should be strictly construed. Rules of court should be plain and unequivocal. Their requirements should be clear and their meaning derived from the wording of the rule, without the necessity of resort to jurisprudence.

Our rule 3 does not say that the deposit must be made before the expiration of the return day. It merely provides that no case will be Aled until It has been made.

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160 So. 807, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorfer-v-city-of-natchitoches-lactapp-1935.