DocketNumber: No. 1,439
Citation Numbers: 26 Mont. 379
Judges: Pigott
Filed Date: 7/1/1902
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
MotioN to Struck Out Bill oe Exceptions.
delivered the opinion of the court.
The plaintiff has appealed from a final judgment. The defendant moves that the bill of exceptions included in the transcript be stricken therefrom for the reason that it was neither served nor filed in time, and is therefore not properly a part of the transcript or record on appeal. The objections of the defendant to the settlement, together with the matter in support of the objections, appear upon the face of the bill.
The record on appeal from a final judgment consists of a copy of the notice of appeal, of the judgment roll, and of any bill of exceptions or statement of the case upon which the appellant relies. 1^36 of the Code of Civil Procedure.) If the bill, the copy of which is sought to 'be stricken, was prepared and settled under the provisions of Section 1154, or of Section 1155, of the Code of Civil Procedure, it is part of the judgment roll described in Section 1196, and is authorized or required to be furnished by copy as part of the record on appeal
Let the motion be denied.
Appeal erok Judgmewt.
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from a judgment entered on December 31, 1898. The cause has been submitted on briefs without oral argument.
Subdivision a of Section 3- of Pule X of this court provides that the appellant’s brief shall contain “a concise abstract or statement of the case, presenting succinctly the questions involved, and the manner in which they are raised, which abstract shall refer to the page numbers in the transcript in such manner that pleadings, evidence, orders and judgment may be easily fo-und.” We quote the only abstract or statement of the case contained in appellant’s brief:
“Statement of the Case.
“The plaintiff was the owner of a tract of land in Helena, on which, and as a part of which, was a stream of water. By a former adjudication of the court it had been decreed that one of the rights and possessions of the plaintiff and his partner was at the head or upper end of his claim, seven inches of water, thereafter inseparably ■ a part and parcel of his said property. Eor many weeks in each year that seven inches was supplied,*383 but at certain periods waters were so diverted from the gulch as that they did not flow to the head of his claim. By the statute of adverse possession in Montana then in force, applicable to his right, a period of ten years must elapse to preclude the assertion by him in court of his right. During this period he had asserted this right in court and had obtained a decree against the grantors of the defendant annihilating any claim or color of title in them to> seven inches of this water, and this defendant stood as a naked trespasser.” The statement imparts no information in respect of the action, of the questions involved, or of the manner in which they are raised; nor does it mention the pleadings, evidence, orders, or the judgment, or refer to the pages of the transcript where any of them may- be found. It fails in every respect to comply with any requirement of Subdivision a of Section 3, supra. Upon the authority of McCleary v. Crowley, 22 Montana Reports, 245, 56 Pacific Reporter, 227, Smith v. Denniff, 23 Montana Reports, 65, 57 Pacific Reporter, 557, Rehberg v. Greiser, 24 Montana Reports, 488, at page 490, 62 Pacific Reporter, 820, and of the many other like cases decided by this court, the judgment must be affirmed.
Consideration of the respondent’s motion to dismiss the appeal for the reason that the appellant has not furnished the proper record, as well as of the question whether the bill of exceptions is properly before us, is therefore unnecessary.
Let the judgment be affirmed.
Affirmed.