Court Opinion

ID: 3666602
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:16:28.169266+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:40:09.850131
License: Public Domain

In this case the Judge below certifies that the notes taken by him on the trial have been mislaid or lost; that he is not willing to trust to his memory to set forth the evidence in detail, as should (140) be done, in justice to both parties, and he therefore requests this Court to order a new trial. There is no appearance of laches or fraud on the part of the appellants, and in such cases it is the well settled practice of this Court to order a new trial. In the leading case ofS. v. Powers, 10 N.C. 376, the opinion delivered by Taylor, C. J., says: "It appears from the certificate of the Judge that a case presenting the points was intended to have been made up, but was prevented from his having lost his notes of the trial. Under these circumstances there is no other mode by which the justice of the case can be attained but by awarding a new trial." Cited and approved in Isler v. Haddock, 72 N.C. 119; Sanders v.Norris, 82 N.C. 243; Burton v. Green, 94 N.C. 215; Simmons v.Andrews, 106 N.C. 201; Owens v. Paxton, 106 N.C. 480; Clemmonsv. Archbell, 107 N.C. 653.
There is also a line of decisions to the same effect where the trial judge died or went out of office before the case was made up, but Section 550 of The Code now makes if, in such cases, the duty of the Judge going out of office to settle the case as if he were still in office.
These cases uniformly lay down the rule that a new trial will not be ordered unless it is made to appear that the appellant is not guilty of laches. Simmons v. Andrews, 106 N.C. 201; Heath v. Lancaster,116 N.C. 69. It would not be just to permit an appellant to obtain, simply through his own negligence or fraud, the benefit that would properly result only from the successful prosecution of his appeal. It should be made to appear affirmatively that he exercised due diligence in endeavoring to perfect his appeal, and that his failure to do so is not due (141) to any act or negligence of his own, or of another with his knowledge or consent.
While in this case no such evidence has been offered. by the appellants, the finding and request of his Honor, who tried the case, is taken as sufficient.
The appellants are entitled to a new trial and it is so ordered.
New trial.
Cited: S. v. Robinson, 143 N.C. 625. *Page 97