Hood v. . Orr
This text of 4 N.C. 584 (Hood v. . Orr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The clerk of the Superior Court died in the vacation, leaving no deputy, and there was no person to receive the appeal from the time it was made until the first day of the Superior Court.
I do not think that the appeal ought to be sustained in this case. If the appellant was without remedy, that might make a difference, perhaps. But he is not; for it has been usual to grant a writ of certiorari in such a case, and, indeed, in all others where the appellant has been prevented from filing the record by accident and without his own laches. This is, therefore, rather a question of practice than of property; and it is almost of as much consequence that the rules of practice should be certain as that they should be right. The act of Assembly is positive upon this subject; and since Robertson v. Stone,
If the suit is afterwards suffered to go on, he ought to have notice (585) of it, this he gets when a certiorari is granted. But, otherwise, he has no notice.
The rest of the Court concurred.
NOTE. — See Robertson v. Stow,
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4 N.C. 584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hood-v-orr-nc-1817.