Case ID: nc_114/html/0872-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Clark, J.:", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

STATE v. B. F. FREEMAN.
    Practice— Certiorari- — Failure to Docket Transcript.
    
    Where an'appellant, without whose default the case on appeal was not settled by the Judge, failed to docket the transcript of the record at the next succeeding term of this Court, but applied at such term for a certiorari, the writ will not be allowed.
    The defendant was tried and convicted at Fall Term, 1893, of MadisoN Superior Court, before Armfield, J., on an indictment under section 1062 of The Code, and appealed. Without default of his own (as defendant alleges) the case on appeal was not settled by the Judge below, and at this (February, 1894) Term of this Court he applied for a cer-tiorari, but di-d not cause the transcript of the record to be docketed.
    
      The Attorney General, for the State.
    
      Mr. J. F. Morph&io, for defendant (petitioner).
   Clark, J.:

This is a petition for certiorari. It was filed at the first'Term of this Court after the trial below. The ground of the application is that the case on appeal was not settled by the Judge without any default on the part of the appellant. The petitioner, however, failed to docket at such term the transcript of the record proper. In Pittman v. Kimberly, 92 N. C., 562, it is held by Siiith, G. J., that if for any reason the Judge fails to settle the case on appeal on disagreement of counsel the appellant must, in proper time, docket the transcript of the record proper and then move for a certiorari to bring up the “case on appeal,” and that it is the duty of the appellant, not of the Clerk, to have the record sent up. In that case the appeal was dismissed, even though, unlike the present case, the transcript of the record proper had been filed at the next Term before the motion to dismiss was made. In this case no record proper has yet been filed, and there is nothing to show that the case was properly constituted in the Court below. There is nothing before us save the petition.

Pittman v. Kimberly, supra, .is exactly in point, and has often been cited and approved. Stephens v. Koonce, 106 N. C., 255, 256; Porter v. Railroad, 106 N. C., 478; State v. Preston, 104 N. C., 733; Bailey v. Brown, 105 N. C., 127; Pipkin v. Green, 112 N. C., 355. Motion denied and appeal dismissed. Dismissed.