Mayor, Etc., of Morristown v. Love

22 S.W.2d 769, 160 Tenn. 177
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 22 S.W.2d 769 (Mayor, Etc., of Morristown v. Love) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mayor, Etc., of Morristown v. Love, 22 S.W.2d 769, 160 Tenn. 177 (Tenn. 1929).

Opinion

Mb. Justice McKinney

delivered the opinion of the Court.

These cases involve the same questions and were consolidated for the purpose of hearing.

.The respective plaintiffs below, Mrs. Love and Mrs. Brown, sued the City of Morristown to recover damages to their property as a result of a change in the grade of the street upon which same abuts. The cases were tried before the trial court .without a jury. He fixed Mrs. Love’s damages at $1100 and that of Mrs. Brown at $200. Upon appeal the Court of Appeals reduced Mrs. Love’s judgment to $600 and that of Mrs. Brown to $125. Both the City and the property owners have filed petitions for writs of certiorari which have heretofore been granted, and the cases argued at the bar of this court. Final judgments were entered in the Court of Appeals on April 7, 1928.

Counsel for the property owners filed a petition for certiorari and assignments of error on May 22, 1928, hut did not file any brief in support of same until August 28, 1928.

On May 21, 1928, counsel for the City obtained from this court a forty-five day extension within which to file a petition for writ of certiorari, and same was filed, with assignments of error and brief, on July 5, 1928. Attached to said petition was a motion to dismiss the petition of the property owners because same was not accompanied by a brief, as required by the statute. Before the cases were argued counsel for the City filed *180 a written motion to dismiss the brief of the property owners, filed on August 28, 1928, because same was not filed within the period provided by the statute or the rules of this court.

Counsel for the City filed no brief in reply to that of the property owners referred to above.

The petition of the property owners, and their assignments of error, complain of the action of the Court of Appeals in reducing the amount of their recoveries, but no reference is made in the petition, or the assignments of error, to any testimony supporting their contentions. It follows that the property owners can be granted no relief without considering their brief.

The petition of the property owners for writ of cer-tiorari concludes with this statement, to-wit:

“A copy of this petition and assignments of error and brief accompanying it and notice of its presentation to the court have been furnished to counsel for defendant municipality as will appear from his acknowledgment of service hereafter appended.” Such acknowledgment, however, does not appear of record.

The question for determination is this: Can the court consider a brief, in support óf a petition for writ of certiorari, filed four months and twenty-three days after final judgment in the Court of Appeals?

The Court of Civil Appeals was created by chapter 82, Acts of 1907. In section 8 the following appears:

“It shall also be competent for the Supreme Court to require by certiorari the removal of any case to it, the decision of which by the Civil Court of Appeals is made final by this Act, in order that the judgment or decree of saidl Court of Civil Appeals may be reviewed by the Supreme Court. Such certiorari shall not be issued *181 after a lapse of ninety days from the final decree or judgment from the Court of Civil Appeals; and it shall not he awarded or issued from the Supreme Court, except upon petition duly sworn to, stating the substance of the case to be decided, accompanied by assignments of error or errors and brief in support thereof. ’ ’

The word “accompany” is thus defined in Webster’s New International .Dictionary, to-wit: “1. To cause to he a companion (to); to add or join (tó); also, to cause to be or go in company (with); to associate. 2. To go ■with or attend as a companion or associate; to keep company with; to go along with; to consort with.”

The rules of this court, effective. January 1, 1913, provide as follows:

“It (petition for certiorari) shall be accompanied by an assignment of errors, predicated upon the judgment or decree of the Court of Civil Appeals, and a brief in support thereof, in the form required by Rules. 14 and 15 applicable to cases brought directly from trial courts to this court.”

Section 14 of chapter 100, Acts of 1925, with respect to petitions for certiorari, provides as follows. . which petition shall state the substance of the case to be decided, and shall be accompanied by assignments of error and brief in conformity with such rules as the Supreme Court may prescribe.”

The latter part of the sentence just quoted refers to the form and substance of the assignments of error and brief and not to the time of the filing. This court had prescribed the form of the brief, as set forth above, viz.: in compliance with Rules 14 and 15, and the legislature in the Act of 1925, instead of prescribing the form or stating that it should conform to Rules 14 and 15 of the *182 Supreme Court, provided that this court should prescribe, the form.

The rules of this court, referred to above, do not undertake to specifically fix a time within which the brief of petitioner should be filed, the reason being that the Act of 1907 provides that the brief should accompany the petition, that is be filed at the same time., The rules do provide that reply brief shall be filed within fifteen days, since the Act of 1907 does not undertake to fix the time within which such brief shall be filed.

It was the intention of the legislature that the assignments of error and brief should be filed contemporaneously with the petition. Such was the construction placed upon the Act of 1907 by this court, and the legal profession has so construed the act and the rules of this court. This is the only instance that we recall in which this practice was not followed.

In Leather Co. v. Gillespie, 157 Tenn., 166, it was held that the court was without authority to' extend the time for filing a petition unless the application is made within forty-five days after final decree in the Court of Appeals.

In a memorandum opinion filed, at Knoxville on November 16, 1929, in the cause of Murat H. Davidson et al. v. Ben Phillips et al., from Anderson Equity, it was held that after the ninety-day period had expired the court had no authority to permit petitioner to verify his petition which by oversight he neglected to do.

Since the statute provides that the petition, assignments of error, and brief shall be filed within forty-five days, with the right of this court to extend the time not exceeding forty-five additional days, we are repelledl by *183 the .statute from allowing time beyond the ninety-day period.

In these cases no request for additional time was made, and no response was made to the motion to dismiss the brief of the property owners.. It follows that the motion to dismiss will be allowed.

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Bluebook (online)
22 S.W.2d 769, 160 Tenn. 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-etc-of-morristown-v-love-tenn-1929.