Northern Counties Investment Trust v. Hender

The opinion of the court was delivered hy

Anders, J.

The respondents move to dismiss the appeal for the alleged reason that the court has no jurisdiction to hear and determine the matters in controversy. The specific grounds for dismissal set forth in the motion aré that no notice of appeal has been given, served or filed herein as by law required; that the appeal bond is not in form or substance such as to render the appeal effectual; that the pretended bond filed herein is void because none of the makers of said bond have justified as by law required, or at all; and that the guardian ad litem of defendant Henry Hender has not been made a party to the appeal and no notice of the appeal has been served upon him.

It is provided in § 4 of the act of March 8, 1893, relating to appeals to the supreme court (Laws 1893, p. 120), that:

“ A party desiring to appeal to the supreme court under the provisions of this act may, by himself or his attorney, give notice in open court or before the judge, if the judgment or order appealed from is rendered or made at chambers, at the time when such judgment or order is rendered or made, that he appeals from such judgment or order to the supreme *561court, and thereupon the court or judge shall direct the clerk to make an entry of such notice in the journal of the court. If the appeal be not taken at the time when the judgment or order appealed from is rendered or made, then the part}1- desiring to appeal may, by himself or his attorney, within the time prescribed in § 3 of this act, serve written notice on the prevailing party or his attorney that he appeals from such judgment or order to the supreme court, and within five days after the service of such notice shall file with the clerk of the superior court the original or a copy of such notice, with proof or the Written admission of the service thereof, and thereupon the clerk shall enter such notice, with the proof or admission of service thereof, in the journal of the court.”

It is conceded that the notice of appeal was given in open court, and the record shows that the notice was entered in the journal of the court by order of the judge. It was given in strict conformity to the statute and there is no objection to it on the ground of informality. But the respondents insist that the notice was ineffectual because it was not given at the time the judgment appealed from was rendered or made, and because said judgment was not rendered at chambers, the latter ground being based on the untenable proposition that the notice in open court or before the judge is limited to judgments or orders rendered or made at chambers.

The action was brought to foreclose a mortgage, and was tried by the court without a jury. The record discloses the fact that the appeal bond and the motion for a new trial were filed on September 12, 1894. It further appears that the notice of appeal was given at the time when the motion for a new trial was overruled, and when the court ordered judgment to be entered in favor of the defendants in accordance with the findings of fact and conclusions of law theretofore *562made. The statute, it will be observed, requires the notice of appeal, if given in open court, to be given at the time when the judgment or order appealed from is rendered or made, and the question is, when was the judgment and decree rendered in this case.

The court made findings of fact and conclusions of law in accordance with § 879 of the Code of Procedure, which is as follows:

“Upon the trial of an issue of fact by the court, its decisions shall be given in writing and filed with the clerk. In giving the decision, the facts found and the conclusions of law shall be separately stated. Judgment upon the decisions shall be entered accordingly.”

The findings and the conclusions of the court, as well as the judgment based thereon, were dated September 11, 1,894, and it is urged on behalf of the respondents that the judgment was rendered on that date, and that therefore the notice which was not given at that time was too late to effect an appeal. The record, however, discloses that neither the findings of fact, conclusions of law nor judgment were filed until the 12th of September, and, inasmuch as the statute requires the decisions of the court in cases tried without a jury to be given in writing and filed with the cleric, it follows that the judgment was not rendered until it was filed in accordance with the order of the court. It is not the mere signing of the findings, but the filing, that is essential. to the decision contem.1 plated by the statute. The action was not determined until the findings and judgment, or at least an order for a judgment, were filed with the clerk. This is evident from the fact that at any time-before filing the findings might have been changed by the court, or new findings substituted. See Comstock Q. M. Co. v. *563Superior Court, 57 Cal. 625, and Adams v. Nellis, 59. How. Pr. 385.

As the notice of appeal was given at the time when the court ordered judgment to be entered, it follows, from what we have said, that it was given within the time contemplated by law, that is, when the judgment was actually rendered.

But we are forced to the conclusion that the objection to the appeal bond is well taken, and that the appeal was not perfected in the manner prescribed by law. The bond filed by appellant in the court below was properly conditioned to effect the appeal, but as it was not accompanied by the affidavit of the sureties required by §10 of the act of March 8,-1893,'or by any affidavit whatever, it was absolutely without force and was therefore, in effect no bond at all. Section 6 of the act above mentioned provides that —

“An appeal in a civil action or proceeding shall become ineffectual for any purpose unless at or before the time when the notice of appeal is given or served, or within five days thereafter, an appeal bond to the adverse party conditioned for the payment of costs and damages, as prescribed in § 7 of this act, be filed with the clerk of the superior court, or money in the sum of $200 be deposited with the clerk in lieu "thereof.”

And in § 10 it is declared that —

“ An appeal bond, whether conditioned so as to •effect a stay of proceedings or not, shall be of no force unless accompanied by the affidavit of the surety or sureties therein attached thereto, in.which each surety shall state that he is a resident of this state and is worth a certain sum mentioned in such affidavit, over and above all debts and liabilities, in property within this state, exclusive of property exempt from execution, and which sums so sworn to by the surety or sureties shall be at least equal to the *564penalty named in the bond if there he but one surety, or shall amount in all to at least twice such penalty if there be more than one surety.”

In Harshaw v. McDowell, 89 N. C. 181, the court held that language similar in substance to that used in these sections was not directory merely but mandatory, and that an appeal must be perfected in accordance with the requirements of the statutes or it will be dismissed. That the affidavits of sureties required by statute must accompany the bond to give it validity seems to be the settled doctrine of the courts. See Bryson v. Lucas, 85 N. C. 397; Bailey v. Rutjes, 91 N. C. 420; State v. Wagner, 91 N. C. 521; Turner v. Quinn, 91 N. C. 92; Anthony v. Carter, 91 N. C. 229; Holcomb v. Teal, 4 Or. 352; Albertson v. Mahaffey, 6 Or. 412; State v. McKinmore, 8 Or. 207; Pencinse v. Burton, 9 Or. 178.

It is true that this court, actuated then, as now, by the desire to hear every case upon its merits, declined to dismiss the appeals in McEachern v. Brackett, 8 Wash. 652 (40 Am. St. Rep. 922, 36 Pac. 690), .and in Warburton v. Ralph, 9 Wash. 537 (38 Pac. 140), and perhaps some other cases, in which the affidavits were defective in not stating some one of the particular things mentioned in the statute. In so doing we were certainly more liberal than some other courts have been under similar provisions of law and, perhaps, went beyond the strict letter of the statute. But, be this as it may, we here have a bond unaccompanied by any affidavit whatever, not one with a defective or informal affidavit merely, and hence this case is distinguishable from those above mentioned, and must be determined on the facts presented and the law applicable thereto. The law says that the bond before us is of no force, and it is the plain duty of *565the court to so declare it. To remedy the difficulty confronting them, the learned counsel for the appellant have tendered, and* asked to- have filed, in this court, a new bond accompanied by a proper affidavit of the sureties. Whether such a bond as the law requires to be filed in the trial court within a limited time, can, after the expiration of that time, properly be filed in this court, is a question, the solution of which depends upon the authority conferred upon the court to correct, or supplement, the record of the court below. This is an appellate tribunal, so far as this and kindred cases are concerned, and it can amend the records sent up to it for review only in so far as it is thereunto authorized by statute. Accordingly, it is stated in Yol. 1, Ene. PL & Prac. p. 993, that appellate courts cannot allow a substantially defective appeal bond to be amended without statutory authority,” and the cases cited seem ample to sustain the proposition. What then is the statutory authority of this court in respect to the matter before us? It has authority to allow all amendments in matters of form curative of defects in appellate proceedings (Laws 1893, p. 129, and § 19), but the defect under consideration is not merely one of form but one of substance and therefore that provision does not meet the present emergency. Again, we are directed to disregard all technicalities and hear, upon their merits, all cases brought before the court in the manner provided by law. But that cannot be said to be a technicality which goes to the substance of the appeal. In fact, by the express terms of our statute this court only acquires jurisdiction of an appeal upon the taking of an appeal by notice as therein prescribed, and the filing of a bond to render the appeal effectual. Laws 1893, p. 128, § 16. As we have seen, the bond *566filed to render the appeal effectual in this instance was without force, and it may well be said that this court has not acquired jurisdiction to-hear this appeal. The filing of the bond to perfect the appeal was just as necessary as the giving of notice of the appeal within the time limited, and the one can no more be dispensed with than the other. Works, Courts and Their Jurisdiction, p. 734.

In many of the states provision is made by law for the amendment of a defective appeal bond or the. giving of a new one, but we find no such provision in our statute, nor any provision or provisions which can be construed as giving the court the power to allow the filing of a new bond under such circumstances as appear in this case.

The appeal must be dismissed and it is accordingly so ordered.

Gordon and Scott, JJ., concur.