Court Opinion

ID: 6736045
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 23:18:31.300473+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:01:46.696159
License: Public Domain

Spalding, J.
Defendant appeals from a judgmnet of the district court awarding plaintiff damages in the sum of $207.23, and costs. The action was brought by plaintiff against one Omlie and the appellant jointly for the recovery of damages for an alleged breach of contract. After all parties had rested, a motion *405to dismiss the action as to defendant Omlie was granted, after which a verdict was rendered, and judgment entered against the appellant.
We first meet with a motion to dismiss the. appeal. We see no merit in this motion. It is based on the ground that notice of appeal was not served upon Omlie. This was a matter which rested entirely with the appellant, Beecher. If he desired to protect his rights as against Omlie, and throw the burden upon him, he should have served notice of appeal on him; but the respondent cannot .complain that he did not do so without himself appealing. Although he objected and. excepted to the order, he has taken no appeal.
■ Rule 7 of the Supreme Court (10 N. D. 41, 91 N. W. 6), relating to the contents of the statement of the case, provides that: “If the evidence, or any part thereof, is embraced in the statement, it must be epitomized by excluding all superfluous matter and verbiage. The evidence shall be reduced to a narrative form except in those particulars in which a transcript of part of the stenographer’s minutes becomes necessary to preserve the sense, or present the particular points of error. All superfluous matter, including all evidence not bearing upon the specifications, is required to be rigorously excluded. The stenographer’s minutes of the trial, as settled and allowed, do not constitute a statement of the case, in this class of cases, within the meaning of the law, and will not be so regarded by this court.” In this case, the abstract and briefs are typewritten, and the appellant makes no attempt to comply in good faith with the requirements which we have quoted. While there are portions of his abstract in which the evidence is given in narrative form, yet an examination shows that it is only a pretense, and that in effect there has been no reasonable attempt to comply with the rule. The respondent claims that material portions of the record have been omitted from appellant’s abstract, and he supplies them in additional abstract, wherein no attempt is made to reduce testimony to narrative form. Appellant’s abstract contains 48 closely typewritten pages, and respondent’s 67. Appellant’s specifications of error number 26, and are extended throughout the entire evidence contained in the abstract, instead of being placed together following the title as required by the rule. His brief contains 15 assignments of error, all by reference to pages *406and lines of the abstract. The rules of the court are intended for the guidance of litigants, and to facilitate the work of the court, and to aid litigants in pointing out and making clear the errors relied upon, without making it necessary for the court to explore and consider the whole record. The violations of the rule to which we have referred in the case at bar are so flagrant that to overlook them would be to wholly abrogate the rule mentioned. Indeed, it would be far easier and more satisfactory to do so than to examine the abstract of the appellant, and compare it with that of the respondent and determine where the omitted portions should have been inserted, if at all. The work of this court is too burdensome to admit of taking the time made necessary by the procedure adopted in this case, and to overlook this failure to comply with the rules would furnish a precedent which would result in a great amount of unnecessary labor for the court, which could- not fail to seriously retard its work, to the great detriment of litigants and the public.
(117 N. W. 353.)
Appellant’s abstract and brief are made in no manner to conform to the requirements of rule 19 (10 N. W. 52, 91 N. W. 11). The requirements of this rule should be obeyed, but for violations of these alone we should not’ at this time decline to consider the abstract.
After due deliberation, we have decided to disregard everything except the judgment roll. Bertleson v. Ehr, 17 N. D. 338, 116 N. W. 335.
That discloses no reversible error, and we therefore affirm the judgment of the district court.
All concur.