Fahey v. Fahey
Fahey v. Fahey
Opinion of the Court
Motion of plaintiffs in error to dismiss the writ of error. Defendant in error resists. The general rule is that a plaintiff in error, or appellant, is entitled, as a matter of right, to dismiss his writ or appeal. And in the absence of some showing that the defendant in error, or appellee, wonld be prejudiced thereby, it would seem that this right should be fully protected. — Becker v. Henderson, 5 Colo. 346; 7 Enc. Pl. & Pr. 906.
The defendant in error here has no right that would be prejudiced by granting this motion. And in this case, even if she .had assigned cross-errors, that would not serve to retain the writ, for the application to dismiss must be granted upon the ground .that this court has not jurisdiction to entertain the writ of error. The motion is resisted by defendant in error because she says plaintiffs in error have not, either in their motion to dismiss or in their brief in support thereof, set forth a copy of the judgment sought to be reviewed, or presented in the proper way the questions which are involved in the action.
This court in Lochbrunner v. Sherman et al., 26 Colo. 164, and in Bank v. Montrose County, 27 Colo. 312, held, that upon a motion to dismiss an appeal for want of jurisdiction the court will not in limine
It therefore appearing that the court is lacking in jurisdiction, the writ of error is dismissed without prejudice, at the costs of the plaintiffs in error. ’In accordance with their request they may withdraw the transcript of record and bill of exceptions, assignment of errors, affidavit of J. F. Girardot, their abstract of record and briefs. Permission will also be given to defendant in error to withdraw her brief.
Writ dismissed without prejudice.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Fahey v. Fahey, Administratrix
- Status
- Published