This is a motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground that no transcript or bill of exceptions was *Page 757 filed within the time required. It appears that judgment was entered on February 16, 1926, and notice of entry thereof given on the same day; that notice of intention to move for a new trial was filed within the time and on February 26, 1926; that nothing further was done with respect to the motion for a new trial and therefore it was denied by lapse of time on April 16, 1926; on March 3, 1926, the appellant gave notice that it appealed; the motion to dismiss the appeal was served on May 13, 1926, and came on for hearing on the fourteenth day of June, 1926. In the meantime, and on June 5, 1926, both the clerk's transcript and the reporter's transcript were filed in this court.
The two transcripts having been filed prior to the time that the motion came on for hearing, the real ground of the motion to dismiss is that the appellant did not give notice of the request for a transcript of the testimony within ten days after notice of the entry of the judgment, or within ten days after motion for a new trial was denied by lapse of time.
In the case of In re Barney, 191 Cal. 18 [214 P. 853], it is said: "It has been frequently held and is now thoroughly established that the failure to give the notice to prepare the typewritten record for use on appeal is not a ground for a dismissal of the appeal. If, however, it appears from the entire record that, in the absence of a properly authenticated reporter's transcript, there is no record upon which a reversal of the decision could be predicated, then the proper course is to move for an affirmance of the judgment upon that ground, and upon such application the court will consider the question as to whether or not the record was properly prepared." And in MillValley v. Massachusetts etc. Co., 189 Cal. 52 [207 P. 253], it is held that diligence in the preparation of the record on appeal should ordinarily be subject to investigation and determination in the trial court rather than in the appellate court.
In re Barney, supra, would be decisive of the question were it not for the fact that in that case the transcript was settled more than six months after the default of the appellant in giving his notice for the preparation of the transcript, which delay was considered to rob the trial court of its jurisdiction to relieve the appellant of his default. [1] *Page 758 But where, as here, the transcript has been settled by the trial judge within the six months' period, it must be presumed either that the objections to its settlement were raised, as they should have been, in the trial court, and the settlement was the equivalent of relief from that default, or that the respondent waived the default by failure to object in the trial court. The latter would seem to be the situation here as is evidenced by the stipulation of respondent to the correctness of the transcript.
[2] There is another feature of this case, however, which is determinative of the motion. The appellant's opening brief is on file, together with the clerk's transcript, including those papers going to make up the judgment-roll, notice of appeal, and the notice to the clerk to prepare transcript. From an inspection of the plaintiff's opening brief we observe that points are raised which would not necessitate the reporter's transcript, the merits of which we cannot determine at this time because a determination of the merits would effect an unwarranted advancement of the case. Under a similar state of facts the supreme court, in the case of Weaver v. Frickett, 196 Cal. 401 [238 P. 87], refused to dismiss the appeal on the ground that no bill of exceptions or reporter's transcript was required. What is said there is applicable to the situation here.
Motion denied.
Works, P.J., and Craig, J., concurred. *Page 759