The plaintiff moves to dismiss this appeal:
*434First — Because the judgment herein has been acquiesced in by S.Belden, Attorney General.
Second — Because the appellee has not been cited, the appeal being, granted by motion on fifteenth March, 1873, at á term different from that at which the judgment was rendered, which was on eighteenth. September, 1872.
Third — Because the State of Louisiana is neither a defendant nor an intervenor, and the Auditor has not given bond.
We do not recognize the right of the Attorney General, whose term, of office is about expiring, to make an agreement not to take an appeal in a case, so as to preclude his successor from taking an appeal and otherwise discharging his duty to the State.
An Attorney General who palpably neglects his duty and who abandons the interest of the State, which he was charged to protect and to defend, has no authority to make contracts binding on his successor for a like dereliction of duty to the State.
The Attorney General is not the State; but only the counsel for the State. His agreement to acquiesce in a judgment is not the acquiescence of the State; nor does it bind a succeeding Attorney General not to take an appeal where he believes it the interest of the State to do so,, and the time for appealing has not elapsed.
The rule for an appeal was tried contradictorily with the appellee, on second October, 1872, and the right to appeal was denied. The appellants applied for a mandamus and prohibition, and on tenth March, 1873, these writs were made peremptory and perpetual by this-court, and the appeal has been brought up in pursuance thereof. We do" not consider the appellee entitled to notice of the order of appeal, because it was granted on the mandamus of this court; and it relates back to the time the appeal was denied on the trial of the rule contradictorily with the parties to the suit. This court has only compelled the order which should have issued then.
Besides, the statement of facts signed by the relator and “to facilitate the trial and to be used on the trial in the Supreme Court,” would be sufficient to dispense with a citation of appeal. It is inconsistent and absurd for the relator to contend that he has no notice of this appeal, and at the same time to file a document signed by himself, for the purpose of facilitating the trial and to be used at the trial in the Supreme Court. A document of that character, voluntarily filed in the-lower court, would be considered as a voluntary appearance, and would, obviate the necessity for citation.
The third ground, that the State of Louisiana is neither a defendant, nor an intervenor, was probably made in error. Because from the-record it is positively untrue.
The Attorney General, in the same document, filed an answer for-
*435the Auditor and an intervention for the State; and the court entered the following order: “ The intervention in this is case is allowed by the court to be filed.” And at the trial the minutes of the court show that the State by the Attorney General, appeared as an intervenor.
The motion is therefore denied.