Woodruff v. County of Douglas

21 P. 49, 17 Or. 314, 1889 Ore. LEXIS 16
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 28, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 21 P. 49 (Woodruff v. County of Douglas) 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
Woodruff v. County of Douglas, 21 P. 49, 17 Or. 314, 1889 Ore. LEXIS 16 (Or. 1889).

Opinion

Thayer, C. J.

This appeal is from a judgment of said circuit court affirming proceedings had in the county court for said county in locating a county road.

The appellants claimed that the said county court had no jurisdiction of the said proceedings, and sought to have them annulled by the said circuit court by a writ of review duly issued and returned to the latter court; but that court found that the writ should be dismissed, and the said proceedings should be in all things affirmed, from which decision this appeal was taken.

The appellant is met at the threshold of this court by an objection that his notice of appeal is insufficient to confer jurisdiction upon the court to try any alleged errors in the trial of the case in the said circuit court. Respondent claims that the notice of appeal should have specified the grounds of -error with reasonable certainty [316]*316upon which the appellant intended to rely on the appeal.

The Civil Code, section 591, provides that an appeal from the judgment of the circuit court on review may be taken to the supreme court in like manner and with like effect as from a judgment of such circuit court in an action; and section 537 of the Civil Code requires that the appellant shall cause a notice to be served on the adverse party, and file the original, with proof of service indorsed thereon, with the clerk where the judgment is entered, and that such notice, in case the judgment be one rendered in an action at law, shall specify the grounds of error with reasonable certainty upon which the appellant intends to rely upon the appeal.

These two provisions, taken together, would probably, require that the notice of appeal to the supreme court from a judgment on the circuit court on review should specify the grounds of error upon which the appellant intended to rely on the appeal, although there is much less reason for requiring it in such a case than in an appeal from a judgment in an action, as the petition for the writ of review is required to set forth the errors alleged to have been committed, and the appeal to the supreme court from the judgment rendered on review is really nothing more than a new trial of the questions determined in the circuit court. The object in requiring the notice of appeal to specify the grounds of error upon which the appellant intends to .rely on the appeal evidently was for the purpose of informing the adverse party as to the points which he would be required to controvert in the appellate court. But what grounds of error an appellant can specify in a notice of appeal from a judgment on review more than that the judgment is erroneous I am unable to comprehend. I cannot see that he can specify anything as error further than that the court had decided wrong. The [317]*317alleged errors set forth in the petition for the writ are the only matters which this court can. ordinarily consider; and there would certainly be no necessity ofpointing them out, as they are already a part of the record. All that can possibly be required in such a case is a specification of what was known in the assignment of errors upon a writ of error as common error in law, as distinguished from special error.

The common errors were, that the declarations were insufficient in law to maint-am the action, or that the judgment was rendered for the plaintiff instead of the defendant, or vice versa. (2 Tidd’s Practice, 1169.)

But whether-it is essential to specify any error whatever in order to authorize this court t;o examine the transcript, and to determine as to the judgment being erroneous, is very questionable. That a notice of appeal which fails to specify the ground of error relied upon is a nullity, I am very much inclined to. doubt. ■ Such might be the result if no error whatever, except those actually specified in the notice of appeal, could be considered in this court; but its rulings have -been otherwise. It has repeatedly held that where the error goes to thé jurisdiction of the court, and it appears from the face of the record, the court is bound to take judicial notice of it, although not specified, or any mention made of it in the argument; that if the want of jurisdiction appeared to the judge before whom the proceeding .was had, at any stage, he would, of his own notion, have dismissed the cause, and this court on appeal stands in the same position. (State of Oregon v. McKinnon, 8 Or. 487.)

The same rule has been maintained where the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action or suit. (McKay v. Freeman, 6 Or. 453.)

If this court is. not precluded from considering every ground of error which the. notice of appeal from a judg[318]*318meat of the circuit court in an action at law fails to specify as such, then I infer that such specification is not essential to confer jurisdiction upon it to hear the appeal.

No one can consistently, it seems to me, contend that the court would have the right to consider a question of jurisdiction or the sufficiency of the complaint because the appellant specified in his notice of appeal some other ground of error, when it would not have it if such ground of error were not specified.

To hold that the court has jurisdiction to consider the grounds of error referred to, although not specified in the notice of appeal, but has it because the notice of appeal specifies some other grounds of error, however untenable such other ground may be, would be adhering too strongly to a nicety..

There is nothing in the language of the code that I can discover which requires a specification of the grounds of error in the notice of appeal as a condition upon which the appeal is taken, although it is mandatory in its character. Such a specification is somewhat analagous to the assignment of errors upon a writ of error.

The two modes of proceeding are very different in most respects, yet some traces of the former procedure remain; and as the legislature adopted the code in order to make a change in the former practice, we should consider them both in construing the later system.

The issuance and service of the writ of error, and the giving to the adverse party notice of its test, return, and the court in which it was returnable, and the certifying of the proceedings to the appellate court, invested that court with complete jurisdiction over the case. Errors were then assigned by the plaintiff, and a rule entered that the defendant join in error. It was, however, a distinct proceeding, and took place when the record had been certified to the court out of which the writ issued; while under the [319]*319code it is combined with the notice of appeal, which occupies the place of the writ.

Under the former procedure, judgment of non prosequitur, or non pros., as it was usually termed, might be entered against the plaintiff in the writ if he failed to assign errors within the time limited by the rule for assigning them; and under the code, the appeal doubtless may be dismissed if the appellant fails to specify the grounds of error in the notice; and I cannot understand how the jurisdiction of the appellate court depends any more upon the fact that the notice of appeal specifies the grounds of error under the present practice than the jurisdiction of the court which issued the writ of error depended upon the fact of the plaintiff’s assigning error under the former practice.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 P. 49, 17 Or. 314, 1889 Ore. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodruff-v-county-of-douglas-or-1889.