Citation Numbers: 69 S.E. 680, 154 N.C. 174
Filed Date: 12/14/1910
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This action was tried at July Term, 1910, of (175) MITCHELL. When the district to which it belongs was reached at this term, the appellant moved for a certiorari because the case on appeal had not been settled by the judge without any laches on the part of the appellant.
The uniform holding of this Court has been that a certiorari will not be granted in such case unless the appellant has docketed the transcript of *Page 138
the record proper as the foundation of the motion. S. v. Freeman,
The only exception to the requirement that a transcript of the record proper must be docketed, as a basis for a certiorari, is that when "By reason of the loss of papers, or for any other good cause, the transcript of no part of the record can be docketed at the first term of the Supreme Court following the trial below, that fact should appear by affidavit and a certiorari asked for, supplemented by a motion below to supply the papers." Parker v. R. R.,
Under these circumstances, the motion of the appellee to dismiss the appeal must be granted. It can make no difference that the case on *Page 139 appeal may have since been settled by the judge. The right to appeal is not an absolute right, but the appellant must comply with conditions, upon which an appeal can be prosecuted. Appellees have rights which must be respected. To permit the case to be docketed now would delay the appellant six months in the argument of his case. A delay of justice may be, and often is, a denial of justice. The appellant did not docket the record in time, and the motion of the appellee to dismiss must be allowed.
Appeal dismissed.
Cited: Caudle v. Morris,
(177)
Pittman v. . Kimberly , 92 N.C. 562 ( 1885 )
Causey v. Snow. , 120 N.C. 279 ( 1897 )
Worth v. Wilmington. , 131 N.C. 532 ( 1902 )
Guano Company v. . Hicks , 120 N.C. 29 ( 1897 )
Brown v. . House , 119 N.C. 622 ( 1896 )
State v. Telfair. , 139 N.C. 555 ( 1905 )
State v. . Freeman , 114 N.C. 872 ( 1894 )
Haynes v. . Coward , 116 N.C. 840 ( 1895 )
Burrell v. . Hughes , 120 N.C. 277 ( 1897 )