*295Motion to Dismiss.
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Pooué, J.The ground of tiro motion is that tire transcript was filed too late.
The appeal was returnable on the 16th of January last, and the transcript was not filed before the 15th of February following; But appellant relies on an order of tin's Court, rendered on January 20th, extending the return day, thirty days from that date.
Appellee mates the point that the application for delay was itself made too late, and that the order granted thereon was inadvertently and wrongfully issued.
From the minutes, it appears that this Court was in session on the 16th, 17th. 18bh and 19th of January, and thence it is clear that under the provisions of Article 883 of the Code of Practice, the application for an extension of the return day should have been made at che latest on the 19th.
But in answer to that position, appellant contends that he is protected by certain proceedings which he filed in this Court on that day.
In those proceedings he alleged that the clerk of the lower court had failed, when called upon, to deliver to him a transcript of appeal in the case, or to furnish him with a certificate of the reasons which liad prevented him from completing the transcript. Whereupon he prayed for writs of certiorari and mandamus on the clerk for relief in connection witli the transcript, or for the required certificate, and for a writ of prohibition, intended to lestrain the execution of the judgment during the pendency of his proceedings.
For reasons unnecessary to mention here, his counsel concluded not to piess his proceedings for the writs above stated, and on the next day he filed his motion for delay, accompanied by a proper certificate from the clerk of the lower court. In his proceedings, filed on the 19th of January, appellant’s counsel did not pray for an extension of the return day, and such an application was not made before the following day, the 20th of January.
The question piesented for discussion is, therefore, to determine whether the proceedings filed by appellant on the 19th of January can avail him to save his appeal under the provisions of Article 883 of the Code of Practice.
The rule is as follows : “ If the appellant has not filed in the Supreme Court, on the day appointed by the inferior judge, the record from tiie court below, and was prevented from doing so by any event-*296not under liis control, lie may, either in person or by attorney, apply to the court, before the expiration of three days, * * * and demand a further time to bring it up, which may be granted by the court if the event causing the delay be proved to its satisfaction,”
This is a rule of law from which the Court cannot depart, and by -which it is stripped of all discretion in the premises. No other showing can be made, and no other proceeding can be invoked to follow the path thus clearly indicated.
Hence this Court has uniformly enforced the rule according to its plain and unambiguous import and meaning. Vancampen vs. Morris, 6 Rob. 79; Brickell et al vs. Conner et al, 10 Ann. 235; Farmers, etc., vs. Strawbridge, 24 Ann. 126; Redmond vs. Maun, 23 Ann. 373.
In the case of Rhea vs. Steamer Simonds, 15 Ann. 712, the transcript was filed on the fourth judicial day after the return day, and that was held too late, and the appeal was dismissed.-
This is precisely the case here, as to the application for delay, and hence this appeal must share the same fate, unless it be saved by the proceedings of January the 19th.
As herein above stated, those proceedings did not contain a prayer for, and were therefore not followed by, an order of extension of the return day, and hence they must be held as nought under the requirements of the rule as established by the Code and as construed in our jurisprudence.
Section 3 of Rule 3 of this Court reads: “ Motions for extension of time to file the transcripts must be supported by affidavit of the clerk of the lower court, or of counsel, or of the mover.”
Hence it follows that the certificate of the clerk, which the latter was alleged to have refused him, was not the exclusive support which appellant needed for an application for delay.
JBy means of his proceedings, appellant informed the comt of the •cause, not under his control, by which he had been prevented from bringing up his appeal in time, but he failed, or omitted to pray for the only relief which could avail him under the provisions of the Code. Under the plain requirements of the rule, and in keeping with judicial construction of the same, it is clear that even the order of this Court granting the writs prayed for could not have been construed as a prayer for and an extension of time.
A similar conclusion would follow, if the prayer of appellant, that his affidavit and his motion predicated thereon, be taken in lieu of the transcript, had been granted. Nothing but an extension of time cau be substitued for the transcript.
*297A similar excuse was made by tbe appellant in the case of DeBouchel vs. Husband, 34 Ann. 102, in which an application for an extension of time had been made and an order therefor obtained, after the expiration of the three days of grace. His excuse was that' the District •Judge had, by an exjparte order, illegally dismissed his appeal, which he had succeeded to re-establish only after the expiration of the three judicial days. The excuse was undoubtedly more weighty than the reasons relied upon by appellant in this cáse, but in obedience to the strict mandate of the law the court said:
“ The appellant was in fault, and he must bear the consequences.”
“ Whatever has been the action of the District Court, it was the •duty of the appellant to have procured the transcript required bylaw, if possible, and to have seasonably filed it in this Court: or, he should, -at least before the expiration of the delay, within which he should have filed the transcript, have made a proper showing here, for an extension of time to bring up the transcript. He has don'fe neither,” and the appeal was dismissed. Lacroix vs. Bonin, 33 Ann. 119.
In the case of Pierce vs. Cushing, 33 Ann. 401, the appellant urged that by reason of the voluminous record he had been prevented from having it completed in time, the court answered: “ This cannot justify the filing of the record beyond the delays and extensions prescribed therefor. There was a special remedy provided by law for cases of appeals attended with such difficulties, of which the appellant twice or thrice availed himself, and could have done so again by proper application.”
By presenting to this Court, on 'January 20, his formal motion for an extension of thirty days, supported by the required certificate, appellant tacitly admitted, as it is otherwise shown, that his proceedings of the day previous were not intended by himself as an application for additional delay to file his transcript. It is, therefore, inevitable to conclude that he has entirely mistaken his remedy, that the application of January 20 came too late, and that the order for an extension granted thereon must be considered as rescinded, and as null and void.' “ The court can grant no valid order in contravention of law, and when surprised, as in this case, into an error, * * * will rescind its own orders without special motion to that •effect. In making such motions, attorneys must be careful to be within “ the plain requisites of the láw, or else they will eventually be deprived of any relief which may be granted inadvertently.” Chrétien vs. Poincy, 33 Ann. 131; Succession of Kuntz, 33 Ann. 30; Exposition vs. Railroad Company, 38 Ann. 905.
*298“It is true that an appellate tribunal will always and firmly protect the constitutional right of appeal, but, on the other hand, the court must not lose sight of the legal rights acquired by an appellee through the omission or neglect of his opponent.”
Such is the condition of things presented here, and such must be the result.
This appeal is, therefore, dismissed at appellant’s costs.