By the 118th rule, if the appellant neglects to file his petition of appeal addressed to this court, with the register or assistant register, within fifteen days after he has entered the appeal with the surrogate, by filing the appeal and giving a bond as required by the statute, (2 R. S. 611, § 117,) the appeal is to be considered as waived. This, however, is not such a waiver as to deprive this court of all jurisdiction over the case, and to authorize the surrogate to proceed as if no appeal had ever been entered. But it is such a waiver as to enable this court to declare the appeal deserted, and to direct the surrogate to proceed notwithstanding the appeal which has been entered in his office. By the practice of the ecclesiastical courts, though an appeal apud acta was entered, and apostles were granted by the judge a quo, it did not prevent the court below from proceeding to execute the sentence, after the expiration of the time limited by that court for the appellant to retro-certify what steps had been taken by him on the appeal. But the appellant, if he wished to stay the proceedings "upon the sentence appealed from, was obliged to
By the practice of the ecclesiastical courts in England, upon an appeal in a testamentary cause, the appellant was not required to wait until he had obtained the transmiss from the judge a quo before he filed his libel of appeal; but the transmiss of the proceedings in the court below must be exhibted before the conclusion of the cause; that is, before the cause could be in readiness for a final hearing on the appeal. (Cockburn, 193, § 9.) If the judge or his register neglected to transmit the proceedings, the appellant might compel a return thereof by monition, or if the transmiss was imperfect he might, upon a proper application to the appellate court, obtain a monition for a further return of such parts of the proceedings as were omitted or imperfect in the original transmiss. (Cockburn, 191, § 2, 193, § 13.) Here, the petition of appeal, which corresponds with the libel of appeal in the ecclesiastical court, and which is also founded upon the proceedings and the appeal in the court below and not upon the transcript, may likewise be filed before the transcript is obtained. Though