Stone v. First National Bank

193 P. 1023, 100 Or. 528
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 193 P. 1023 (Stone v. First National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stone v. First National Bank, 193 P. 1023, 100 Or. 528 (Or. 1920).

Opinions

McBRIDE, C. J.

1. This is a motion to dismiss an appeal. The undertaking was not served and filed until twelve days after the notice of appeal had been served and filed. Section 550, subdivision 2, Or. L., requires the undertaking to be filed within ten days from the service of notice of appeal. Subdivision 4 of the same section is as follows:

“From the expiration of the time allowed to except to the sureties in the undertaking, or from the justification thereof if excepted to, the appeal shall be deemed perfected. When a party in good faith gives due notice as hereinabove provided of an appeal from a judgment, order, or decree, and thereafter omits, through mistake, to do any other act (including the filing of an undertaking as provided in this section) necessary to perfect the appeal or to stay proceedings, the court or judge thereof, or the appellate court, may permit an amendment or performance of such act on such terms as may be just.”

One of the attorneys for appellant filed an affidavit, the substance of which is that the tenth day after the service of the notice of appeal fell upon Sunday, October 3, 1920, upon which day it was impossible to serve and file the undertaking; that on October 4th the Circuit Court was in session and affiant and his partner were very busy disposing of matters arising in court that day; that they had been very busy in preparing cases for trial at term for several days previously; that affiant was under the impression that he had ample time to serve and file the undertaking but that when he discovered late in the afternoon that October 4th was the last day in which to file it, [531]*531he prepared the undertaking and had it executed, but was not able to procure the attendance of his client and surety to execute it until late in the evening, after office hours; that he was unable to find Mr. Johnson, the attorney for the First National Bank of Tillamook, at his office at Tillamook, where both he and affiant resided; that he at once made service upon the other defendants, but was unable to serve the First National Bank or its attorney, Mr. Johnson, until the next day, when he made such service early in the morning; that the failure to serve the undertaking on October 4th was by reason of the oversight, inadvertence and mistake on the part of affiant as above stated; and that appellant has printed his abstract, prepared and filed his transcript and is intending to prosecute his appeal with diligence. We are of the opinion that the affidavit shows such excusable mistake and such good faith in prosecuting the appeal as justify us in permitting the appellant to file a new undertaking here.

The early cases cited by counsel held that the filing of the undertaking within ten days after service of the notice of appeal was jurisdictional, and a failure so to file was absolutely cause for dismissal. In our original Code the words, “including the filing of an undertaking as provided in this section,” did not appear; they were added by way of amendment at the legislative session of 1870, Laws of 1870, page 32, and their purpose was evidently to correct the harsh ruling of the cases decided before that time. In Dowell v. Bolt, 45 Or. 89 (75 Pac. 714), we held that filing of an undertaking was not jurisdictional, and permitted a new undertaking to be filed where the original paper had not been served on the adverse party. This ruling is followed in Mitchell v. Coach, 83 Or. 45 [532]*532(153 Pac. 478, 162 Pac. 1058), and McKissick v. McKissick, 93 Or. 644 (174 Pac. 721, 184 Pac. 272).

In Miller v. Arens, 193 Pac. 439, in an opinion handed down November 23, 1920, and not yet officially reported, we held that where there was an entire failure to file an undertaking within ten days, the default could be excused upon showing of excusable mistake, so that this court must be understood now as holding that doctrine. Fleming v. Pattison, 72 On 393 (143 Pac. 1101), appears to hold differently, but in that case there was no proffer of a new undertaking. So far as it appears to hold that the service and filing of an undertaking within ten days after service of notice of appeal are absolutely jurisdictional, it is overruled.

The motion is overruled, upon the condition that appellant file in this court within fifteen days a new and sufficient undertaking. Motion Overruled.

Reversed April 26, 1921.

On the Merits.

(197 Pac. 304.)

Reversed.

Department 2.

BURNETT, C. J.

On March 11, 1919, the plaintiff entered into a written contract with the CummingsMoberly Company, a corporation, which was then constructing a sawmill on Tillamook Bay, to furnish it a quantity of logs and piling at an agreed price of $12 per thousand. The price was “f. o. b. raft at slough tributary to Wilson River, at McKinster’s place, in Tillamook County, Oregon, payments to be made for each raft within thirty days from the time raft is scaled.” Under the terms of the contract, Stone assembled and had ready for delivery about 1,182,431 feet of spruce logs." The company having changed its [533]*533plans, did not want the logs and notified him of that fact and to cease operations under his contract. As a result of negotiations between all parties, on September 5, 1919, it was finally arranged that the Silver Spruce Company, another corporation, should take the assembled logs from Stone at the same price, under the following agreement:

“Tillamook, Ore., Sept. 5, 1919.
“This agreement this day made by and between Charles F. Stone of Tillamook, Oregon, and Silver Spruce Company, a corporation, of which J. K. Elder is President, hereinafter referred to as the company, Witnesseth:
“Stone hereby sells to the Company, and the Company hereby buys from Stone, all those certain Spruce logs gotten out by Stone under his contract dated March 11th, 1919, with the Cummings-Moberly Company (said Contract having been cancelled by mutual consent); said logs comprising, according to the official certificates of the Columbia Eiver Log Scaling and Grading Bureau one thousand, five hundred and twenty-seven (1,527) logs, with a total footage of one million, one hundred and eighty-two thousand, four hundred thirty one feet (1,182,431). The price of said logs under this sale is $12.00 per thousand feet.
“Said logs are now at Freeman slough, on the Wilson Eiver, Tillamook County. They are to be rafted by Stone and as rafted are to be again scaled by Columbia Eiver Log Scaling and Grading Bureau. As each raft is completed and scaled, the logs therein shall become the property and at the risk of the Company, and the Company agrees that, immediately upon the delivery to it of the certificate of the Columbia Eiver Log Scaling and Grading Bureau showing the number of feet included in a raft, the Company will promptly execute and deliver to Stone the Comnany’s acceptance for the price of the logs included in such raft at the rate of twelve dollars ($12.00) per thousand feet.
“It is understood that Stone expects to discount said acceptance with the First National Bank of Tilla[534]

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Bluebook (online)
193 P. 1023, 100 Or. 528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-v-first-national-bank-or-1920.