National Mut. Savings & Loan Ass'n v. McGhee

34 P.2d 1093, 38 N.M. 442
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 16, 1934
DocketNo. 3968.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 34 P.2d 1093 (National Mut. Savings & Loan Ass'n v. McGhee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Mut. Savings & Loan Ass'n v. McGhee, 34 P.2d 1093, 38 N.M. 442 (N.M. 1934).

Opinion

SADLER, Justice.

Relator seeks by invoking our original jurisdiction in mandamus to compel respondent, as judge-of the district court of the Fifth judicial district, sitting in Lea county, to assume jurisdiction to act upon relator’s motion for an extension of time within which to settle a bill of exceptions and perfect an appeal to this court from a judgment of said district court theretofore rendered against it. Right to the relief prayed is based upon facts to follow.

The judgment was rendered on June 1st, appeal granted June 19th, praecipe for record on appeal filed July 18th, and extension of 90 days for perfecting appeal allowed on September 8th, all in the year 1933. These proceedings carried relator’s time for filing transcript in this court to December 16, 1933. It was not filed within such time, nor has it since been filed.

However, counsel for relator, apparently conscious that his time was about to expire, on December 15th addressed a letter to the official court reporter, charged with preparation of said record, requesting him to secure additional time for him within which to perfect said appeal. The reporter replied that under a rule of respondent the reporter was not permitted to prepare motions and extension orders for attorneys.

Thereupon, and on December 28, 1933, the relator formally moved for a further extension through written motion filed in .the cause, and hearing thereon was set for January 6, 1934. At the conclusion of such hearing respondent rendered a written opinion, reciting much of what is related above, and additionally that on account of the press of other business the reporter had been unable to transcribe his notes, but holding, nevertheless, that since the time for perfecting appeal had already lapsed when formal motion to further extend was filed, he was without jurisdiction to make an order of extension. This was the sole reason assigned for denying the requested extension.

Respondent set January 22, 1934, for signing an order denying the application for the reason stated. The date for signing .such order was later extended by respondent to February 4, 1934.

In the meantime relator moved in this court for mandamus to require respondent to assume jurisdiction of the motion for extension. The matter is now before us upon the alternative writ awarded relator and respondent’s answer by way of return thereto. The sole defense to the writ is the asserted want of jurisdiction in respondent to grant an extension for perfecting an appeal after expiration of the time therefor under the rules or previous order.

The decision of the question presented involves a consideration of changes in our appellate procedure as affected both by statutes and our rules relative thereto. As the law existed affecting this situation prior to the enactment of chapter 57, N. M. Session Laws of 1907, the material portion thereof being italicized in the quotation to follow; it provided: “All appeals taken thirty days before the first day of the next term of the supreme court shall be tried at that term, and appeals, taken in less than thirty days before the first day of such term, shall be returnable to the next term thereafter; the appellant shall file in the office of the clerk of the supreme court, at least ten days before the first day of such court to which the appeal is returnable, a perfect transcript of the record and proceedings in the ease. If he fail to do so, the appellee may produce in court such transcript, and if it appear thereby that an appeal has been allowed in the cause, the court shall affirm the judgment, unless good cause can be shoion to the contrary.” L. 1848, c. 16, § 6; section 2189, C. L. 1884; § 3140, C. L. 1897.

In 1907, by section 60 of chapter 57 of the Session Laws of that year, a specific repeal of this among many other sections affecting appellate procedure was enacted, and section 21 of said act covered the same ground as the section quoted above in the language following, the pertinent portion thereof being italicized, to wit: “The appellant in case of appeal and the plaintiff in error in eases of writs of error shall file in the office of the clerls of the supreme court at least ten (10) days before the return day of any writ of error or appeal, as perfect and complete a transcript of the record and proceedings in the cause as may be necessary to enable the court to properly review it. If he fails to do so, the appellee or defendant in error may produce in court such transcript any time after such return day and if it appear thereby that an appeal has been allowed in the cause, or from the record of the court, that a writ of error has been sued out, the court shall upon such transcript affirm the judgment, unless good cause be shown to the contrary.” L. 1907, e. 57, § 21.

In 1909, by section 2 of chapter 120 of the Session Laws of that year, the italicized portion of the section of the 1907 act, just quoted, was by amendment stricken out, and a more detailed procedure supplied in lieu thereof for filing abbreviated transcript and procuring the docketing and affirmance of a cause “unless good cause be shown to the contrary.” And there was added immediately following the language just quoted, the following:' “Provided, That the supreme court or the judge of the district court, where such judgment was rendered, or any other justice of the supreme court, in the absence from the Territory of the judge of the court which rendered the judgment, may for good cause shown, satisfactory to him, grant to the appellant or plaintiff in error, further time to file a complete transcript in said cause, even though the time to file the same may have expired.” L. 1909, c. 120, § 2, N. M. St. Ann. 1915 Codif., § 4490.

So the law stood until adoption of a new appellate procedure act known as chapter 43-of New Mexico Session Laws of 1917. While making some substantial changes in the language preceding the proviso quoted next, above, there was material change in the terms; of the proviso. Found as a part of section 22 of the 1917 act, it reads: “Provided, that, the Supreme Court or the Judge of the District Court, where such judgment, order, decision or conviction was entered, or any justice of the Supreme Court, in the absence from the state of the judge of the court which rendered the judgment, order, decision or conviction, may for good cause shown, satisfactory to him, grant the appellant or plaintiff in error, further time to file a complete transcript in said cause: Provided that application for such extension of time shall have been made at least ten days prior to the return date of such appeal or writ of error.” L. 1917, c. 43, § 22.

Section 3S of the same act authorized extensions of time to settle and sign bills of exceptions, to be granted by “the trial judge, or his successor, or in the absence from the state of said trial judge, any other district judge, or in the absence from the district of the trial judge, any other district judge designated by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court under the provisions of Section 15, Article 6, of the Constitution,” etc. It carried also the proviso “that no such extension of time for settling and signing the bills of exception shall be granted, except application for such extension shall have been made at least ten days prior to the return day.”

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34 P.2d 1093, 38 N.M. 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-mut-savings-loan-assn-v-mcghee-nm-1934.