Vaill v. Town Council

28 A. 344, 18 R.I. 405, 1893 R.I. LEXIS 72
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 14, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 28 A. 344 (Vaill v. Town Council) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vaill v. Town Council, 28 A. 344, 18 R.I. 405, 1893 R.I. LEXIS 72 (R.I. 1893).

Opinion

Tillinghast, J.

The facts set out in the bill of exceptions are as follows, viz.: Abby E. Vaill, through whose land a highway was laid out by the town council of New Shoreham in 1892, being aggrieved by the action of said town council in the premises, desired to appeal therefrom to the Court of Common Pleas then next to be holden at Newport, at the May Term thereof, 1893. ' She filed an appeal bond for this purpose, which ran to the “town council of the town of New Shoreham,” and thereupon carried her case to said Court of Common Pleas, *406 where, on motion of appellee, it was dismissed for want of a sufficient bond.

Previous to said dismissal, the appellant moved the court for leave to amend said bond so that it should run to the town of New Shoreham, instead of the town council thereof, which motion was overruled, on the ground that the court had no power to allow such an amendment to be made.

The said appellant also moved for leave to file a new bond bearing the same date as that of the one in question, running to said town of New Shoreham, to be taken mine pro tunc, which motion was also overruled on the same ground; to all of which said rulings the appellant duly excepted, and now brings her case to this court to test the correctness of said rulings.

The first question which arises therefrom is as to the sufficiency of said appeal bond. Pub. Stat. E. I. cap. 64, § 11, provides that “If any person, through whose land a highway or driftway is laid, shall be aggrieved by the doings of the committee or town council, he, his heir or devisee may appeal to the next court of common pleas to be holden for-the county in which such highway or driftway is located, giving bond to the town to prosecute his appeal, and producing an attested copy of the whole proceedings to such court, and filing his reasons of appeal with the clerk of the court, ten days before the sitting thei’eof.”

It is clear that the giving of the bond in question was not a compliance with the requirement of the statute, and hence, the bond being essential to the effectiveness of the appeal, the case was properly dismissedj unless the court had power either to allow the bond to be amended as suggested or else to permit a new bond to be filed nunc pro tunc, as offered by appellant.

And first, then, had the court below any power to permit the bond in question to be amended ? Or, to state the question differently, was said bond amendable in the manner suggested? We think'not. For the appeal provided for, being a purely statutory proceeding, must be taken in the manner provided by the statute, or else the court obtains no *407 jurisdiction, and the proceeding is a nullity. See Santom v. Ballard, 133 Mass. 464; Henderson v. Benson, 141 Mass. 218; Moore v. Ellis, 18 Mich. 77; Dowell v. Caruthers, 26 Kan. 720; Clapp v. Freeman, 17 R. I. 384; Kenyon v. Probate Court of West Greenwich, ib. 652. The bond required by the statute is a bond to the town, while that .which was given was to the town council. It was not, therefore, defective in form merely, but in substance, in that it was given to another party than the one prescribed by the statute, which was practically the same as giving no bond at all. And to have allowed such a bond to be amended, as requested, would have been equivalent to allowing the filing of a new and different bond from the one which was filed. This court has xxnifoxmly given a liberal construction to our statute of jeofails, by permitting any imperfection, defect or want of form in the pleadings and process to be amended, whenever it could properly be done, to the end that the real question or questions in controversy might be determined and justice administered; Ellis v. Appleby, 4 R. I. 462, 469; Matthews v. Morrison, 13 R. I. 309; Hawkins v. McNeal, 16 R. I. 386; Hudson v. Fishel, 17 R. I. 69; Eaton v. Case, ib. 429; a practice of which we all.approve. But it goes without saying, that in order to enable the court to exercise the lax'ge discretionary powers conferred upon it by said statute, there must be something before it, upon which to graft an amendment. In the case at bar, there was really no bond to amexxd, and hence no amendment could be made thereto. In Thayer v. Farrell, 11 R. I. 305, Durfee, C. J., in construing the statute relating to axnexxdments, said : £ £ The power is large, but not unlimited. It authorizes the amendment of defects, not the substitution of a xxew action.” But the appellant contends that even if the statute of jeofails above referred to is insufficient to enable the court to allow the amendment proposed, section 4 of chapter 15 of the Judiciary Act is broad enoxxgh for that purpose. Said section is as follows : £ £ All pleadings which contain the essential avermexxts, according to the rxxles of the common law or the practice of this state, shall be held good, notwithstanding the omission of immaterial *408 matter of prescribed forms; and the court may at any time permit either of the parties to amend any defect in the process or pleadings, with or without terms, in the discretion of the court, or in pursuance of general rules.” We fail to see that this statute enlarges the.power conferred upon the court by the former provision. .

Second. Had the court below power to peimit the appellant to file a bond nunc pro time, as offered? We think not. The filing of the bond, at the time and in the manner prescribed by the statute above recited, is the basis of the jurisdiction of the appellate court, and hence, unless the record shows that the bond has been thus filed, the court is powerless, except to dismiss the proceeding. Elliott on Appellate Procedure, § 374 and cases cited; Turner v. Quinn, 92 N. C. 501. And to allow a new bond to be filed would be to permit an appeal to be taken at a time and in a manner not pro.-' vided for by the statute.

We do not think the cases cited by counsel for the appellant go to the extent of holding that where a statute expressly provides that the bond shall be given to a designated party, and where as matter of law the giving of the bond is essential to the jurisdiction of the appellate court, that court has power, in the absence of express authority or of some practice peculiar to the jurisdiction to that effect, to allow a bond given to another party to be so amended as to make it conform to the statute. We will briefly consider the cases cited in support of the appellant’s motion. Wiser v. Blachly, 1 Johns. Ch. 607, was a bill in equity against a guardian .and the surety on his bond charging waste and insolvency, and praying for an account. The bond given by the surety was taken in the name of the people instead of the name of the infant, as prescribed by the statute.

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Bluebook (online)
28 A. 344, 18 R.I. 405, 1893 R.I. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vaill-v-town-council-ri-1893.