Court Opinion

ID: 3677109
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:23:32.357258+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:25:28.646120
License: Public Domain

Under Rule 5, as amended (119 N.C. 930), an appeal must be docketed "during the first two days of the call of the docket of the district to which it belongs," at the first term of this Court which begins after the trial below. "During the first two days of the call" means on Tuesday or Wednesday of that week, as by Rules 7 and 61 (119 N.C. 931 and 954) the call of any district begins on Tuesday. (93)  By Rule 17 (119 N.C. 935), if the appeal is not docketed during said two days (Tuesday and Wednesday) the appellee may docket the certificate prescribed in that rule and have the appeal dismissed.
In the present case the appeal was not docketed during Tuesday or Wednesday of the week appropriated to the district to which it belonged. On Friday the appellee moved to dismiss, though without filing the certificate required by the rule, the absence of which would necessarily have caused his motion to be denied.
But there is another objection to granting his motion. While the appellee was delaying to make the motion, the appellant on Thursday *Page 101 
filed his transcript of the record. Though this was after the time limited, it having been done before the motion to dismiss was made, rendered the motion nugatory. This has been expressly decided heretofore in Triplett v.Foster, 113 N.C. 389, and cases there cited. The only change in the rule is that appeals must be docketed in the first two days of the call of the district, instead of allowing, as formerly, the whole week in which to docket appeals — a change which was made that counsel should not be detained here the whole week, lest the opposite party might docket an appeal towards the end of the week, but which does not affect the decision in that case, which is, that if the appellee does not move to dismiss as early as he may, and in the meantime the appellant shall docket his appeal before the motion to dismiss, though after the time allowed for docketing, the appeal will not be dismissed.
If the appellee has a right to take advantage of the appellant's want of diligence in docketing his appeal within the first two days of the call of the docket, as required, the appellant can avail himself of the appellee's dilatoriness in not moving to dismiss till after the appellant has cured his negligence by actually docketing the appeal. Triplett v.Foster, supra, has been cited and approved in Paine v. Cureton,114 N.C. 606; Haynes v. Coward, 116 N.C. 840, and Speller v.  (94)Speller, 119 N.C. 356.
The appellee also moves to dismiss because the judgment has not been printed. This would be good ground for dismissal if the cause had been reached for argument. Rule 28 (119 N.C. 940); Thurber v. Loan Assn.,118 N.C. 129. In Witt v. Long, 93 N.C. 388, it is said that, while it is better and more convenient to have the record printed as soon as the appeal is docketed in this Court, yet the rule is complied with if the record has been printed when the cause is called for argument, and this was reaffirmed in Walker v. Scott, 102 N.C. 487.
Motion denied.
Cited: Rothchild v. McNichol, post, 285; Parker v. R. R., post, 503;Packing Co. v. Williams, 122 N.C. 407; Benedict v. Jones, 131 N.C. 474;Curtis v. R. R., 137 N.C. 309.