Ice Co. v. . R. R.

34 S.E. 100, 125 N.C. 17, 1899 N.C. LEXIS 160
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 10, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 34 S.E. 100 (Ice Co. v. . R. R.) 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.

Bluebook
Ice Co. v. . R. R., 34 S.E. 100, 125 N.C. 17, 1899 N.C. LEXIS 160 (N.C. 1899).

Opinion

On the 12th day of October, 1894, plaintiff commenced an action against defendant in the Superior Court of Wake County, in which it alleged that the defendant wrongfully and negligently burnt its ice factory in the City of Raleigh. The defendant denied these allegations and alleged contributory negligence on the part of plaintiff. This action was tried at April Term, 1899, of said court, when the plaintiff recovered and obtained judgment for $20,000. From this judgment the defendant appealed; notice of appeal was waived in open court; appeal bond fixed at $50, which was given by defendant. And the defendant also gave a supersedeas bond for the stay of execution until the appeal should be heard in the Supreme Court.

By consent of parties, forty days was given to the appellant to make up the case on appeal and thirty days for appellee to except or make up counter case. The time allowed expired on June 15th, and defendant's case on appeal was not served or tendered until the 19th — four days after the time allowed by the agreement had expired. The plaintiff refused to accept service of defendant's case on appeal, for the reason that it had not been tendered within the time agreed upon. And while plaintiff made out a counter case, it insisted on its objection as to time and objected to the judge who presided at the trial settling the case on appeal.

The defendant after notice to plaintiff applied to the judge to (19) settle the case on appeal. But plaintiff attended and there objected to the judge's settling the case, for the reason that defendant's case on appeal had not been tendered or served in time; and upon this state of facts the judge held that he had no power to settle the case on appeal, and declined to do so, stating that he had his notes of the trial and could settle the case in a very short time, if he had the power, and that he would do so. *Page 14

At the opening of the present term of this Court and upon notice to the plaintiff, the defendant filed its petition asking for a writ ofcertiorari, sworn to by Mr. St. John, vice-president of defendant company, and the affidavits of J. C. MacRae and W. H. Day were also filed in support of said petition.

It appears from the petition that the defendant employed J. B. Batchelor, W. H. Day and J. C. MacRae, three reputable lawyers of good standing, residents of the city of Raleigh, and practicing attorneys of the Raleigh bar, to attend to and manage said action for it; that the defendant caused the appeal to be taken, and that it gave the appeal bond required by law, as fixed by the court; that it also gave a supersedeas bond for the stay of execution; that this was all done in good faith, as it was advised that defendant had good ground for said appeal, upon which it expected to obtain a new trial; and that it never abandoned or thought of abandoning its appeal; that all three of said attorneys are insolvent and that defendant is without remedy or redress, except by the intervention of this court and the issuance of the writ of certiorari, as prayed in the petition.

The attorneys Day and MacRae admit that they are insolvent, and it is not disputed by plaintiff or any one that the attorney Batchelor is also insolvent.

(20) The said MacRae states in his affidavit that it was agreed between the attorneys that he should prepare and serve the case on appeal; and that on account of his own bad health and sickness in his family he was not able to do so within the time agreed upon. He also alleges that Mr. Batchelor was only consulting counsel, and that Mr. Day had been elected or appointed to an important public office which took a large portion of his time.

The plaintiff admits that Mr. MacRae was unwell a part of the time and that he had sickness in his family, but alleges that he was in his law office the most of the time. The plaintiff also alleges that Mr. Batchelor was more than a mere consulting counsel, that he took an active part in the trial of the case, examined some of the witnesses and argued the case to the jury. Plaintiff admits that Mr. Day has been appointed to an important public office, but it alleges that he continued his practice as an attorney; and that it was the duty of both Batchelor and Day to make up the case on appeal if MacRae could not do so.

This is a substantial statement of the facts in the case, and if the precedents of this Court and the decision of other courts do not intervene to prevent our doing so, we are of the opinion that the writ should issue. *Page 15

The writ of certiorari is a remedial writ and should be issued in proper cases, where the petitioner has lost his remedy without fault or neglect on his part, and where he is without any other remedy. But it is an extraordinary writ, to be granted or not, in the sound discretion of the court, and will not be granted for the relief of a party who is by his own negligence in default — where he has lost his remedy by his own laches or negligence.

Negligence is admitted, but the defendant says that it was not its negligence but that of its attorneys; that it took the appeal and gave the bond; that this was all it could do; that it could not (21) make out the case on appeal; that this was the business of its attorneys, the only parties who could do so, and that it had every reason to believe, and did believe, that they would do so.

If this is so, the question presented is this: Will the negligence of defendant's attorneys be charged to defendant and prevent the issuance of the writ, or will the writ issue, notwithstanding the negligence of its attorneys?

The plaintiff contends that it was the duty of the defendant to serve the case on appeal after it had been prepared by its attorneys and that it was guilty of negligence in not doing so. We do not assent to the truth of this proposition. If the case had been made out in time and given to the defendant to serve and it had neglected to do so, this would have been its negligence — would have been charged to it, and the writ refused. But we understand it to be the practice of the profession (and the writer of this opinion knows that it has been the practice in that section of the State where he has practiced for thirty years) for the attorney who made out the case, or counter case on appeal, to serve the same or cause it to be served. That was what was done in this case. The attorney who prepared the case on appeal served it on the counsel of the plaintiff, and they recognized this service, without waiving the fact that it was not served in time, and proceeded to make a counter case, by way of exceptions. We have no reason to suppose that if this case on appeal had been tendered to the opposing counsel, within the time agreed upon, but what they would have treated it as a service. Of course they would have had the right to refuse to accept such service, and then the appellant would have been put to the necessity of having it served by an officer.

In Walton v. Pearson, 82 N.C. 464, the case on appeal (22) was tendered by the attorneys of the appellant to the attorneys of the appellee, and they refused to accept it, for the reason that it had not been tendered within the time. In that case this Court granted the appellant the writ of certiorari. And it does not seem to have been suggested the appellant (Walton) had been guilty of negligence in not *Page 16 having the case on appeal served in time.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 S.E. 100, 125 N.C. 17, 1899 N.C. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ice-co-v-r-r-nc-1899.