Succession of Edenborn

22 So. 2d 673, 208 La. 25, 1945 La. LEXIS 847
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 30, 1945
DocketNo. 37797.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 22 So. 2d 673 (Succession of Edenborn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Succession of Edenborn, 22 So. 2d 673, 208 La. 25, 1945 La. LEXIS 847 (La. 1945).

Opinion

HAWTHORNE, Justice.

This case is before us on a motion filed by the qppellces to dispiiss the appeal on the *27 ground that the transcript of said appeal was not filed in this court on January 9, 1945, the time fixed by the order of appeal, or within three days thereafter, due wholly to the fault and neglect of appellant, and that, since appellant’s motion for an extension of time, which was granted by this court, did not set forth the true reasons for the delay in filing such transcript, the order of this court extending the retum day for filing the transcript to February 8, 1945, was improvidently issued and should be recalled, and the appeal dismissed.

In the alternative, appellees set forth that, should this court find that the transcript of appeal was filed within the time required by law and the Rules of this court, then, in that event, said appeal should be dismissed for the reason that the transcript of appeal is not in the form required by law, in that appellant instructed the clerk of court for the Parish of Caddo, in the praecipe filed by appellant, to send up only in the original, and not to copy in the transcript of appeal, Exhibits “A” to “Q”, both inclusive, offered in evidence by appellees and referred to in the note of evidence, and that said clerk, in accordance with said instructions, did not copy the documents in the transcript of appeal but forwarded the original documents filed in the district court to this court as part and parcel of said transcript of appeal.

On December 18, 1943, judgment was rendered by Robert J. O’Neal, judge of the First Judicial District Court for the Parish of Caddo, sustaining an exception of want of interest and no right of action filed by all defendants, and a piba of res judicata filed by certain defendants, and rejecting and dismissing the demands of plaintiff, Mrs. Sophie Meier. A motion for a rehearing filed by plaintiff in the court below was overruled, and on July 14, 1944, the said Mrs. Meier filed a motion for a devolutive appeal to the Supreme Court of Louisiana, which appeal was granted and made returnable on September 11, 1944, devolutive bond being fixed in th.e sum of $500.. The record does not disclose any further proceedings under, and pursuant to, this motion and order, and this appeal was not perfected.

On motion made by Mrs. Meier, an order of appeal to this court was granted on November 7, 1944. This appeal was made returnable on January 9, 1945, and devolutive bond was fixed in the sum of $1000. This motion and order was filed on November 15, 1944. On December 11, 1944, the devolutive appeal bond in the sum of $1000 was filed in the court below.

On January 9, 1945, the return day, appellant filed in this court a motion for 30 days’ additional time in which to file the transcript, and attached thereto a certificate of the deputy clerk of the First Judicial District Court, charged with the duty of preparing the transcript, which certificate set forth that the transcript was not ready for filing in this court, and, further, that 30 days’ additional time would be necessary for the preparation thereof due to the. voluminous size of said transcript and the labor in preparing the same. Pursuant to this motion, this court extended the return day for filing said transcript in this court to February 8, 1945.

*29 On February 2, 1945, appellees filed the motion to dismiss the appeal, alleging that the reason that said transcript was not ready for filing in this court on January 9, 1945, or within the three days of grace allowed thereafter, “was not due to 'the inability of the Clerk’s Office in and for the Parish of Caddo to prepare said transcript in time for filing within 'the original delay provided in the order of appeal dated November 7, 1945 [1944], and filed November 15, 1944, but that said failure to complete said transcript and have the same available for filing on January 9, 1945, or within the three days of grace allowed thereafter, was due to the failure of the appellant promptly to file .the order of appeal and the bond with said Clerk in order that the Clerk might begin preparation of said transcript of appeal; that had the said bond been filed promptly after the order of appeal had been entered, the Clerk could have completed the transcript within the time allowed by the order of appeal, so that it would have been ready for filing on or before January 9, 1945. Due to the fact that the appellant’s praecipe and the appeal bond were not filed until December 11, 1944, and the appeal thereby perfected, the Clerk did not begin, and was not required to begin work on the said transcript in order that the same might be completed within the time fixed for the filing of said transcript in this Court as provided in said order of appeal”.

The motion further alleges that from November 7, 1944, the date of the corrected order of appeal, to January 9, 1945, the return day, was a term of two months and two days, which provided ample time for the preparation of the transcript, and that said transcript was actually completed on January 20, 1945, or within one month and 10 days from the time that the appeal bond was filed on December 11.

Attached to the motion to dismiss the appeal are two affidavits, one made by one of the attorneys representing the defendants-appellees, and the other by a deputy clerk of the First Judicial District Court in and for the Parish of Caddo, who is charged with the duty of preparing all transcripts of cases to be appealed to this court. In this affidavit the deputy clerk alleges, among other things, that, had the appeal bond in the sum of $1000 been filed promptly and not delayed until December 11, 1944, the transcript would have been ready for filing in this court-on or before January 12, and that the delay in the filing of the appeal bond prevented affiant from preparing and having the transcript ready on or before the return day, January 9, 1945.

After the motion to dismiss had been submitted to this court on March 26, 1945, numerous affidavits were filed herein by both appellant and appellees. From these affidavits, the affidavits attached to the motion to dismiss, and the record itself, we find the relevant facts to be substantially as follows:

(1) The motion and order of appeal dated November 7, 1944, originally fixed the appeal bond at $500 and made the appeal returnable December 21, 1944, and service-of this motion and order was accepted by appellees on the same date.

*31 (2) On November 8 or 9, attorney who represented plaintiff-appellant in the lower court presented this motion and order to Mrs. E. E. Hope, deputy clerk of court, for filing.

(3) This motion and order was received by Harold Booth, minute clerk, after 10:00 a. m. on November 15, 1944, and filed by him on this date. Shortly after he received the motion and order, he discussed with Mrs. Hope, who handles the preparation of transcripts of appeal, the question of the sufficiency of the amount of the bond as fixed in the original order. Mrs. Hope informed him that the bond was not sufficient and that it should be increased to $1000; that more time would be needed for the preparation of the transcript, and that the return day should be extended to January 9, 1945. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
22 So. 2d 673, 208 La. 25, 1945 La. LEXIS 847, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-edenborn-la-1945.