Clapp v. Freeman

This is an action of trespass and ejectment for the recovery of a tenement let, originally brought in the District Court for the Tenth Judicial District, from which, after judgment for the plaintiffs, it was taken by appeal to the Court of Common Pleas. The statute giving jurisdiction to the District Courts requires that on appeal by the defendant the appellant shall give, besides a bond to prosecute, a bond to the plaintiff with sufficient surety or sureties to the satisfaction of the court, in such sums as the court may order, to pay all rents or other money due for the occupation of such tenement or estate, etc. Such a bond appears among the papers sent up from the District Court to the Court of Common Pleas, indorsed, "filed April 26, 1888," but without any other indorsement or any record of approval by the District Court. In the Court of Common Pleas the plaintiffs moved that the appeal be dismissed for want of such approval apparent upon the record. The defendant offered to prove that the bond was satisfactory to the District Court, but the Court of Common Pleas dismissed the appeal, and the defendant excepted.

We are of the opinion that the court below erred in dismissing the appeal, the presumption from the fact that the bond is among the papers indorsed as "filed," being that it was satisfactory to the District Court, inasmuch as it could not properly be received and filed until the court had approved it.

Exceptions sustained and case remitted to Court of Common Pleas for trial.

Exceptions sustained.

The case was reentered in the Court of Common Pleas, and the question whether the bond had been approved was submitted to a jury, which found that "the bond to pay rent, filed in the clerk's office of the District Court of the Tenth Judicial District, was never approved by the justice of said District Court." The plaintiff excepted to the action of the court in submitting this question to a jury.