Weitzman v. Handy

1 Alaska 658
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedOctober 15, 1902
DocketNo. 163
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 1 Alaska 658 (Weitzman v. Handy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weitzman v. Handy, 1 Alaska 658 (D. Alaska 1902).

Opinion

BROWN, District Judge.

This case came on for hearing before the court on motion of the plaintiff to dismiss the appeal because of the insufficiency of the notice of appeal in the lower court. Several grounds are assigned in the motion for such dismissal, some of which are in substance as follows ;

That the defendants are not properly described in the notice : that the judgment referred to in the notice of appeal is not so described that it could be identified; that there is no date given in said notice on which the judgment sought to be appealed from was entered, and the notice does not indicate who the defendants were, against whom such judgment was entered. The notice of appeal, as sent up from the Commissioner’s Court with the record of the case, is in the following words, to wit:

[659]*659“In the U. S. Commissioner’s -Ex Officio J. P. Court for the District of Alaska, at Skagway. S. J. Weitzman v. M. E. Handy et al. Notice of Appeal. To John E. Dillon, Attorney for Plaintiff Herein: You will please take notice that the defendants in the above-entitled action hereby appeal to the U. S. District Court for the District of Alaska, Division No. 1, from the judgment therein made and entered in the said Commissioner’s Court on the - day of July, 1902, in favor of'the plaintiff and against said defendants, and from the whole thereof. T. A. Marqbam, Attorney for Defendants.”

It further appears that the notice was . served on Mr. Dillon, the attorney for the plaintiff, on July n, 1902, by Deputy Marshal Snook, which certificate of service is indorsed upon the notice.

. Section 996, c. 97, pt. 4, p. 346, Carter’s Code, provides that appeals taken to the District Court may be so'taken within 30 days from the date of entry of judgment. Section 997, following, provides as follows:

“An appeal is taken by serving a notice thereof on the adverse party or his attorney, and filing-the original, with the proof of service indorsed thereon, with the justice, and by giving the undertaking for the costs of the appeal, as hereinafter provided.”

There is nothing in our statute describing or indicating what the notice of appeal shall contain. The whole question, therefore, is one of construction, and is left to depend largely upon the practice that maybe established in this court, and what may be deemed by the court sufficient to notify the parties properly of the intended appeal. Clearly, a notice stating merely that a party intends to appeal “from the judgment entered in said action” could hardly be deemed sufficient. Neither would a notice, it would seem,' be deemed sufficient that was not addressed to the parties defendant, and that did not refer in an intelligible way to the judgment that had been entered. ■ If a money judgment, it would seem that the amount for which judgment was rendered should be stated, [660]*660and the date on which such judgment was entered; and, if it were a judgment for the recovery of personal property, the notice should at least state that it was such judgment. There might on any day be judgments entered in the same court, between the same parties, and of a different character. There might be a judgment entered on a certain day for the recovery of personal property, and on the same day a money judgment on an entirely different cause of action might be entered between the same parties. To say that a party plaintiff or defendant appeals from a judgment entered in a certain court on a certain day, without in any way identifying or indicating the character of such judgment, would not, in my opinion, be a sufficient notice. The notice should so far and so clearly state the nature of the judgment that there would be no mistake in identifying it when the record should come to this court.

The notice of appeal provided by our statute is in the nature of a process whereby this court obtains jurisdiction of cases appealed; that is, the giving of the notice is a preliminary step to be taken, and, if followed by other steps required by law, this court thereby obtains jurisdiction of the case. Being in the nature of a process, it should, I think, as clearly describe the parties, the nature of the judgment sought to be appealed from, the date on which such judgment was entered, the court in which entered, and the court to which appeal is taken, as a summons is required to indicate the nature of the action, the court in which brought, the parties to the action, and the amount sued for, when issued from the district court.

It is very earnestly urged on the part of appellant that the notice should be informal, and that the notice in question is as full as is ordinarily required by the courts of last resort of the state of Oregon, where the same statute has been under consideration. And counsel further urges that inasmuch as this [661]*661statute of ours was evidently taken from that of Oregon, and adopted by the Congress of the United States as the law of Alaska, the construction given to the statute under consideration by the courts of last resort in the state of Oregon was also adopted by Congress. This contention is in accord with the general authority upon the proposition as stated, if the section of the statute was one peculiar to Oregon. An examination of the various statutes will disclose, however, that the same section has been included in the statutes of many states, and has received construction more or less in accord with that given by the courts of last resort of the state of Oregon. But the courts of Oregon seem to differ upon the construction of the section, rendering their own decisions at least uncertain, and not so far commanding as to control this court on the theory advanced by counsel for appellant. Indeed, where the statute had been construed by other courts long, before it was adopted by the state of Oregon, this court would be more inclined to follow the decisions of those courts, if there were any material difference in the construction given by such other courts and that given by the courts of last resort of the state of Oregon.

In the case of Neppach, Administrator, v. Jordan, 10 Pac. 341, 23 Am. St. Rep. 145, the Supreme Court of Oregon passed directly upon the question at issue, and the conclusion of the court in that case meets my hearty approval. In that case the court says:

“Judgment was rendered against Jordan in a justice’s, court. Jordan appealed to the circuit court. In the circuit court the appellee moved to dismiss the appeal for the reason that the notice of appeal was insufficient, in this: (1) That it failed to describe the court in which judgment was rendered; (2) that it failed to describe the parties; and (3) that it failed to describe the judgment. The notice was of the tenor following:
“ ‘In Justice Court for Couch Precinct, William Neppach, Plaintiff, v. W. P. Jordan, Defendant. Notice of Appeal. Civil Action. [662]*662To William Neppack and Charles H. Hewell, Your Attorney: Please ■take notice that tlie defendant in the above-entitled action appeals from the judgment rendered and entered therein on the 5th day of June, A. D. 1885, in favor of the said plaintiff and against the said defendant, for the possession of the premises described in the complaint herein, and costs and disbursements, and from the whole of such judgment, to the circuit court of the state of Oregon, for the county of Multnomah. E. 0. Dowd, Attorney for Defendant.’ ”

In passing upon the motion, the court says:

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Bluebook (online)
1 Alaska 658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weitzman-v-handy-akd-1902.