Court Opinion

ID: 3672844
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:20:39.890112+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:16:05.197998
License: Public Domain

The judgment was rendered against the plaintiff as to one of the defendants, and in his favor as to the other, on 30 November, 1857, and an appeal was prayed by him and granted on 9 December, 1857. The appeal was returned to Spring Term, 1858, of Bladen and at next term (fall of 1859) the defendant moved the dismissal of the appeal because "not taken within ten days, and because the said justice did not note on the judgment the application for time to give security." His Honor refused to dismiss, "because the motion was not made in apt time."
The defendant appealed to this Court.
In McMillan v. Davis, ante, 218, it did not appear that the appeal was taken at a different time from the granting of the judgment. In our case it does appear on the face of the paper that the appeal was taken at a different time. Indeed, his Honor considered the appeal liable to objection because it appeared not to have been taken in the manner required by the statute, and puts his refusal to allow the motion to dismiss on the ground that it was not made in apt time. In this, we think, he erred. What is apt time depends on circumstances. In McMillan v. Davis, supra, there were three continuances in the county court, an appeal and three continuances in the Superior Court, and this Court was of opinion that the motion was not in apt time, because, (397) after the delay, and the unnecessary accumulation of costs, it was unreasonable for the defendant to fall back upon an objection which he might have taken at first, and therefore the Court treated the objection as having been waived. So, in Wallace v. Corbitt, 26 N.C. 45, where the case had been removed to an adjoining county for trial, and pended three years, a motion to dismiss the appeal was considered too late. So in Arrington v. Smith ibid., 59, the cause had been continued in the Superior Court two years, and witness had been summoned on both sides. *Page 307 
In our case the appeal was returned to the Spring Term, and the motion was made the next Fall Term. So only one term intervened. The probability is that it was not reached the first term; and there is this further circumstance — as the plaintiff did not appeal, or have his intention to appeal entered at the time when the judgment was rendered, the defendants were justified in taking it for granted that no appeal would be afterwards allowed. So there is nothing to show that they had notice of the appeal until after the first term, and it would be strange if the plaintiff could take advantage of a consequence of his own neglect in not appealing in apt time, and put on the defendants the blame of "being behind time." Where a defendant fails to appeal in proper time, and is allowed to do so afterwards, it is probable the plaintiff will soon hear of it, because he is concerned in taking out execution; but when a plaintiff fails to appeal, the defendant has no further concern in it, and may be taken by surprise if required to move to dismiss the appeal at the first term. So we conclude he is in "apt time" at the second term. There is error. The judgment must be reversed, and motion to dismiss the appeal allowed.
PER CURIAM.                                             Reversed.
(398)