By the Court,
Appellant is plaintiff, respondent defendant, in the court below. Respondent has moved this court for an order dismissing plaintiff’s appeal from an order granting a motion for new trial; also for an order striking from the records and files in this court the bill of exceptions on appeal from order granting motion for new trial. When said motions were called up, appellant moved the court for an order granting permission to him to file as part of the record on appeal, a certified copy of the original undertaking on appeal filed in the district court on January 10, 1936, and a certified copy of the notice of exceptions to the purported undertaking on appeal and to the sufficiency of sureties, filed in said district court on January 15, 1936. All of said motions were heard and submitted together.
It is conceded by appellant that if his motion should be denied, the appeal would have to be dismissed. In the view we take of this case, the appeal must be dismissed regardless of whether appellant’s motion be granted or denied. In the following discussion we shall proceed as if appellant’s motion had been granted.
Plaintiff recovered a money judgment against defendant in the Third judicial district court, Eureka County. Defendant moved for a new trial, which was granted November 18, 1935. Notice of appeal was served by plaintiff January 8, 1936, and filed January 10, 1936. Undertaking on appeal, with two individuals as sureties, was filed January 10, 1936. Notice of exceptions to the sufficiency of said sureties was served January 14, 1936, and filed January 15, 1936. On January 17, 1936, a new undertaking on appeal was filed, with the American Surety Company of New York as surety. Accompanying this new undertaking was the certificate of the secretary of state pursuant to section 7629 ,N. C. L. 1929, certifying that said surety company was
Section 24 of the new trials and appeals act of 1935, Statutes of Nevada 1935, c. 90, at page 201, provides, in part, as. follows: “The adverse party may, however, except to the sufficiency of the sureties within five days after the filing of the undertaking, and, unless they or other sureties justify before the judge of the court below, or clerk, within five days thereafter, upon notice to the adverse party, to the amounts stated in their affidavits, the appeal shall be regarded as if no such undertaking had been given.”
Section 5 of “An Act to facilitate the giving of bonds and undertakings in certain cases and prescribing conditions upon which surety companies may become liable thereon in this state; fixing penalties for the violation thereof, repealing conflicting acts, and other matters relating thereto.” Statutes of Nevada 1909, p. 315, section 7630 N. C. L. 1929,.provides, in part, as follows: “The certificate or any duplicate certificate issued by the secretary of state in accordance with the provisions of this act shall be prima facie evidence in all the courts of this state of all matters herein stated; provided, such certificate shall not have expired. Any printed copy of a circular issued by the treasury department of the United. States known as form No. 356, stating the amount of the capital and surplus of any such surety company, and not more than six months old as appears from the date of issuance thereof, shall be prima facie
Inasmuch as the personal sureties on the first undertaking on appeal did not justify in response to defendant’s exceptions to their sufficiency, it is plain the surety on the second undertaking was required to justify, after notice to defendant. As no notice was given defendant, and as the surety company did not justify, this court has no alternative but to follow the express provision of the statute and regard the appeal as if no undertaking was given. Yowell v. District Court, 39 Nev. 423, 159 P. 632; Wood v. Superior Court, 67 Cal. 115, 7 P. 200. Though the surety company was not required to justify under the provisions of section 9032 N. C. L. 1929, which refers to the justification of individual sureties, it was, nonetheless, required to justify, and said section 7630 N. C. L. 1929, provides a method for such justification. Konig v. Nevada-Cal.-Oregon Ry., 36 Nev. 181, at pages 197, 198, 135 P. 141.
The Yowell and Wood cases, above cited, involved appeals from justices’ courts, but, owing to the similarity of the statutes construed in those cases to the corresponding portion of said section 24 of the new trials and appeals act of 1935, said cases have been cited as authority for the proposition that no jurisdiction is conferred upon the appellate court when the
Appellant relies chiefly upon the first of these curative provisions, but the failure of the surety company to justify after notice to defendant was not merely a defect or informality in appellate procedure; it was a failure to comply with a jurisdictional requirement of the statute. As was said with reference to the failure to serve a copy of notice of appeal in Johns-Manville, Inc. v. Lander County, 48 Nev. 244, at page 252, 229 P.
The second curative provision of said section 27 is clearly inapplicable because, in the instant case, even if the aforesaid failure should be considered as an insufficiency of the undertaking, no undertaking approved by the justices of this court or a majority thereof was filed herein before the hearing upon motion to dismiss the appeal. See Duncan v. Times-Mirror Co., 109 Cal. 602, 42 P. 147.
The third curative provision id inapplicable because, as was said in Ward v. Pittsburg Silver Peak Gold Mining Co., 39 Nev. 80, at page 101, 148 P. 345, 153 P. 434, 436, 154 P. 74, where there was no bill of exceptions or statement on appeal, “The matter with which we are confronted in the case at bar is one of jurisdiction. As has been stated by this court in numerous decisions, the right of appeal is one regulated by statute; and, where there is a failure on the part of the appellant to at least substantially comply with the provisions of the statute, this court can do naught else than dismiss the matter.”
It is the duty as well as the desire of this court to dispose of appealed cases on the merits when that can lawfully be done; but, as was said in Roush v. Van Hagen, 17 Cal. 121, at page 122, “It was necessary that the sureties should justify within five days after the notice of exception, and the failure to do so, rendered the appeal a nullity. The statute provides, that upon a failure to justify within the time limited, the appeal shall be regarded as if no undertaking had been given. The orders extending the time were in contravention of this provision, and were, therefore, inoperative. The statute is peremptory in its terms, and the consequence
As the appeal must be dismissed, we are not called upon to decide respondent’s motion to strike the bill of exceptions. ■
Judgment will be entered dismissing the appeal from the order of the trial court granting defendant’s motion for a new trial.