Court Opinion

ID: 3674758
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:21:57.015178+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:22:51.988637
License: Public Domain

The defendants were convicted at January Term, 1922, of Pitt. The appeal was not docketed here until 9 September, 1922. The record proper was not docketed last term, and no motion of certiorari was asked for, and the appeal must be dismissed.
This has been the uniform rule of this Court always, and we have repeatedly called the attention of counsel for appellants to the fact that the procedure in this Court, by the Constitution, is left entirely to this Court, and no act of the Legislature has sought to or could modify the procedure here. Herndon v. Ins. Co., 111 N.C. 384. At last term, in S. v.Johnson, 183 N.C. 730, this Court again fully discussed the settled rule, and said: "This Court has never changed its rule, of which it is sole judge, that in every case when the record is not docketed in the time required at the next term, the appellant must docket the record proper and ask for certiorari. Whenever this is not done, the case not docketed until the next succeeding term will be dismissed. S. v. Telfair, 139 N.C. 555
(2 Anno. Ed.), and cases there cited; Buggy Co. v. Lamb, *Page 619 182 N.C. 762; Rogers v. Asheville, ibid., 596." The Court in that case fully discussed the matter now before us, and we reiterate what was there said.
The Constitution provides, in Art. I, sec. 8, "The legislative, executive, and supreme judicial powers of the Government ought to be forever separate and distinct from each other." Art. IV, sec. 2, of the Constitution further provides that the "General Assembly may regulate by law, if necessary, the methods of proceeding in the exercise of their powers of all the courts below the Supreme Court, so far as the same may be done without conflict with other provisions of this Constitution."
The above is discussed fully in Horton v. Green, 104 N.C. 400, and the Court there points out that while the Legislature may, as above stated in the Constitution, regulate the procedure in the courts below, it cannot interfere with the regulations of this Court as to the procedure here, which includes, of course, the time within which an appeal must be docketed.
This Court has often stressed the fact that there should not be any unnecessary delay in bringing up appeals, and while the Legislature may regulate procedure in the lower courts, provided it does not interfere in bringing up appeals to this Court, it is forbidden by the Constitution, and has never attempted, to interfere with the regulation of procedure in this Court.
It is to be trusted that this matter will receive the attention of the bar, and that we will not be called upon so often to enforce the procedure that we have deemed necessary to prescribe, and that counsel will thus save the time of the Court and consider the interest of their clients.
Appeal dismissed.