dissenting.
The record in this case was filed at the instance of the appellant by order of oourt, and upon a statement and. certificate of the clerk of the court from which the appeal was taken, accounting for the delay in not having sent up the transcript at an earlier day.
The appellee now moves an affirmance of the judgment, without reference to the merits, under the provision of the act of 1848, on the ground that the record was not filed within the time prescribed.
I am of opinion that the motion ought not to prevail; because, 1st. The delay is, I think, sufficiently accounted for (and it was so adjudged on the motion to docket the cause), in the fact that the clerk failed to make out and furnish the transcript to the appellant, when requested to do so, in due time. But for this failure of the clerk to perform his duty, it is but reasonable to suppose the appellant would have brought up the record within the time prescribed. The omission of the clerk in this respect is, I think, a sufficient excuse for the appellant; who ought not, it seems to me, to be prejudiced by an ineffectual attempt to supply the omission by subsequently forwarding the record by mail, or to suffer for the wrongful acts of others over whom he had no control. 2d. The record having been brought up by the appellant, and his having at least attempted to account for the delay, saves the case, I think, from the operation of the statute.
It was, in my opinion, the intention of the legislature, to authorize an affirmance without reference to the merits, only in case the appellant should be found wholly in default in prosecuting his appeal. In that case the law proceeds upon the presumption that the appellant has no merits; and ascribing his delay to that cause, authorizes the appellee to file the *156record and have an affirmance of judgment with damages. But I do not conceive that the contingency has happened which makes it imperative upon us to affirm the judgment of course, until there shall have been an omission to file by the appellant, and a filing by the appellee, within the terms of the statute.
The appeal may doubtless he dismissed, and the party driven to his writ of error, if, in our judgment, the delay shall not have been satisfactorily accounted for. But when the appellant has endeavored to comply with the rule, and has shown an excuse for his failure, I cannot think it was intended to permit the appellee, so soon as we shall have adjudged the excuse insufficient, and without any action of his own as contemplated by the statute, to come forward and avail himself of the appellant’s acts in having brought up the record, and thus press the appellant himself into his service to effect his final condemnation, regardless of the right and justice of the case. We have already witnessed enough, it would seem, to convince us that to permit such a practice may lead to controversies of a character illy becoming this tribunal.
When the appellant shall have wholly made default; then only, in-ray judgment, is it “lawful,” in the language of the statute, for the appellee “ to file a copy of the record,” and require an affirmance of the judgment. This construction seems to me warranted by the letter and required by the spirit of the law. Any other must he attended with irremediable injury and mischief; which certainly cannot be supposed to have entered into the contemplation of the legislature.