Although the respondent, in conformity with the practice laid down by this court in Phelps v. Swan (2 Sweeny, 696), has obtained an order of the special term declaring the case upon appeal abandoned, it by no means follows that upon a production of a certified copy of that order and a mere reference to the judgment roll on file in the office of the clerk we can, on a motion to dismiss,' dispose of the appeal in this case against the objection of the appellant. The .decision of the case referred to does not go to this extent The real question involved therein was whether the general term has the power to decide whether or not an appellant has lost his right to make a case or bill of exceptions, or to annex the same to the judgment roll, and if it has, whether it will, as a matter of practice, exercise it We held that these matters should be determined at special term, and intimated that after such determination against the appellant, the general term may, on a subsequent motion to dismiss, founded in part upon such order of the special term, determine that the record without a ease or bill of exceptions presents no question which is the subject of an appeal, and consequently dismiss the appeal. This may undoubtedly be done, whenever, upon the production and submission of the record, it should clearly appear that the decision below is not appealable. Such motion to dismiss the appeal may, perhaps, also be granted if the appellant concedes that, having lost his right to make or annex a case or bill of exceptions, he *340lias no questions left to present to the consideration of the general term. But it should not be granted if the appellant objects and insists upon his right to be heard upon the judgment roll as it stands. He is not precluded from doing that, and consequently is still at liberty to raise such questions as appear upon the face of the judgment roll and might formerly have been raised on a writ of error (Brown v. Hardie, 5 Robt., 678 ; Berger v. Duberner, 7 Id., 1).
In order to be in a position, however, to do so, he must print and serve the papers intended to be used on the hearing of the appeal, according to the requirements of general rules 49 and 50 (Rules 42 and 43 of 1858), at least eight days before the commencement of the general term sitting after the entry of the order made by the special term declaring the case abandoned, and if he neglects to do so, the respondent may, by special order, put the cause upon the calendar of the general term, and move, on any of the motion days of the term, that the cause be stricken from the calendar, and that judgment be rendered in his favor (Rules 49 and 50). Such motion on part of the respondent must be founded on a proper notice to the appellant, on the order of the special term declaring the case abandoned, and an affidavit showing that since the entry of the last-named order a reasonable time has elapsed to procure the printing of the appeal papers which the appellant is still entitled to use, and that no printed copies thereof have been served as required by the rule.
The practice as here laid down is in entire harmony with the decisions of this court, reported in 36 How. Pr., 366; in Phelps v. Swan, 2 Sweeny, 696; and Ward v. Central Park, North & East River R. R. Co., 2 Sweeny, 701, as well as with the general rules applicable to all the courts and the additional special rules in force in this court, and should be strictly fol*341lowed by a respondent who means to get rid of the appeal out of its regular course and order, and against the objections of the appellant.
Respondent’s motion for a dismissal of the appeal must, therefore, be denied.
Present, Barbour, Ch. J., Monell and Freedman, JJ.