Dunscombe v. Sayle
This text of 181 F.2d 118 (Dunscombe v. Sayle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinions
The suit, brought June 18, 1943, was for debt and foreclosure.
After many years of pendency, during which various and sundry pleadings including a cross-complaint by defendant against, and an answer by, E. L. Cannon, had been filed, the court, on March 13, 1947, no one objecting thereto, entered an order 'dismissing the suit 'for yvant of jurisdiction, both as to plaintiff’s claim for relief and as to any counterclaim asserted by the defendants against the plaintiff.
Similar action on the counterclaim of the Dunscombe defendants against other defendants having been deferred for further consideration, the Dunscombes, and their codefendant, E. L. Cannon, came in on May 2, 1947, and stipulated for, and there was entered, an order of dismissal by agreement.
On May 27, 1948, more than a year later, the Dunscombes, without stating any reason for their delay or any ground for relief, moved to amend the order of dismissal of March 13, 1947, dismissing plaintiff’s action for want of jurisdiction, to recite that the action be dismissed for want of prosecution, and for an order directing that defendant’s counterclaim be reinstated for prosecution.
On April 7, 1949, the court entered an order denying the petition and motion to amend.
On April 29, 1949, appellants gave notice of appeal from three orders; (1) the judgment dated March 12, 1947, dismissing the claim of the plaintiff for want of jurisdiction; (2) the order of May 2, 1947, dismissing the counterclaim of the defendant; and (3) the order of April 7, 1949, denying the relief sought by the motion filed May 27, 1948, to amend the 1947 order of dismissal.
It is quite plain, we think, that the appeals must be dismissed for want of jurisdiction. This is so as to the appeals from the orders of March 12, and May 2, 1947, because they were taken, one more than, the other nearly, two years after its entry. It is so as to the appeal from the order of April 7, 1949, because that order being not from a final judgment but from an order denying a motion to amend it, was not an appealable one, and the appeal from it presents nothing for our review.
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181 F.2d 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunscombe-v-sayle-ca5-1950.