Court Opinion

ID: 3280913
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:54:41.556705+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:14:01.259138
License: Public Domain

The first ground of the motion is that the notice of appeal was not served upon respondent's attorney, and that no undertaking on appeal was filed within five days from the filing of the notice of appeal. The motion cannot be sustained upon the ground stated. Under the alternative method of taking an appeal, provided by sections 941a, 941b and 941c of the Code of Civil Procedure, it was sufficient to file the notice of appeal, without serving it upon the respondent or his attorney, and without filing any undertaking on appeal. It is only for the purpose of obtaining a stay of proceedings that an appellant must file an undertaking, which is to be done in accordance with those sections of the code which provide for stay bonds. (Chung Sing
v. Southern Pac. Co., 178 Cal. 261, [172 P. 1103]; Lang v.Lilley and Thurston Co., 161 Cal. 295, [119 P. 100].)
The second ground of the motion is that no request for aclerk's transcript, or notice or demand for such transcript, was filed with the clerk of the lower court within ten days after the service, on appellant 's attorneys, of notice of entry of judgment, no proceeding on motion for new trial being *Page 483 
pending. Counsel makes this contention on the theory that the provisions of section 953a of the Code of Civil Procedure (referring to appellant's duty to file with the clerk a request for "a transcript of the testimony," etc., when he desires to obtain such transcript), apply to the matter of obtaining a copy of the notice of appeal and of the judgment-roll. But that theory is unsound. The fact that, before respondent gave notice of motion to dismiss, appellant had filed in this court a typewritten clerk's transcript, duly certified, and containing the notice of appeal and the judgment-roll, is a sufficient answer to this part of the motion. (Rule V, [176 Pac. ix].) The typewritten transcript is sufficient. (Beckett v. Stuart,35 Cal.App. 796, [171 P. 107].) By this we are not to be understood as declaring that appellant need not print in his brief, or a supplement thereto, such portions of the record as he desires to call to the attention of the court. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 953c.)
The motion is denied.
James, J., and Myers, J., pro tem., concurred.