Koin v. McIlvaine
Koin v. McIlvaine
Opinion of the Court
Can you cite any case where this court has dispensed with a writ of error ?
Stewart. — I do not recollect any case of the kind. But this case has been continued from term to term, without any motion to take advantage of the defect: is the party now to be entrapped by this motion ?
The bond speaks of this ease as an appeal. The bond is certified by the clerk ; and it is by the certificate of the clerk
The record appears to have been filed 10th January, 1833. During the same time a special certiorari was ordered to bring up the writ of error ; which issued in March following, but of which there has been no return.
At each of tb,o three succeeding terms, the cause appears to have been continued ; but there has been no waiver of the writ of error, unless an appearance by the defendants’ counsel, on the docket, would constitute it. This would be sufficient notice of the writ, if it was regularly before the court. Not so, however, in respect to the existence of the writ of error, which must be the foundation of the procedure in this court, and our only warrant for entertaining jurisdiction in civil suits, except in cases of appeal. It is insisted that this , may have been an appeal, as a bond of record alludes to an appeal, in which it purports to have been taken. This allusion having been made only by way of recital, in the condition of the bond, and which bond is understood to bear date subsequent to the time at which the judgment was rendered, it is insufficient to show that an appeal was applied for or granted.
We have heretofore recognised the principle,. which appears to be as salutary as any we can adopt, that in the event of the death of a party, pending a writ of error, if the adverse party, or the representatives of the deceased, fail for two terms, including that at which the death was suggested of record, to institute and regularly pursue the proper means for supplying the want of parties, the suit will be abated. By analogy, the principle should be the same in a case like this. Here, three terms have intervened, without any showing to the court of the existence of any writ of error, or appeal, and w ithout the proscution of an alias certiorari, to obtain the writ of error.
The writ of error must therefore be dismissed.
Al. Rep.285-
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John W. Koin v. Robert McIlvaine & E. G. Collier
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published