Court Opinion

ID: 3865339
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 08:59:03.828745+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:41:31.686034
License: Public Domain

The plaintiff has preferred his petitions for leave to prosecute a bill of exceptions in this case, under the provisions of section 473, C.P.A., and for a new trial in said cause, averring that his failure to give notice of his filing of said bill of exceptions for allowance in the Superior Court was by reason of accident, misfortune, and mistake in this, that counsel for the plaintiff, as appears by his affidavit in support of the petition, "understood" the defendant's counsel, in a certain conversation, "to state that the defendant's counsel would not insist upon a notice of the filing of the bill of exceptions in said cause." The counsel for the defendant has filed an affidavit denying such statement, averring, on the contrary, that, during a conversation by telephone, concerning another case, the defendant's counsel inquired of plaintiff's counsel "what he was going to do in the Doucette case, to which question he replied that he was going to take it up, and I then told him not to fail to give notice of the filing of his bill of exceptions, thereby putting me in the embarrassing position of having to move to dismiss the bill in the Supreme Court."
We are of the opinion that the plaintiff has failed to establish the ground of his petition by a preponderance of evidence, *Page 205 
and that the case must be governed by the provisions of Rule 28 of the Superior Court, viz.:
"All agreements of parties or attorneys touching the business of the court shall be in writing, unless orally made or assented to by them in the presence of the court when disposing of such business, or they will be considered of no validity."
Petitions denied and dismissed.