Cadillon v. Malnoury
Cadillon v. Malnoury
Opinion of the Court
On Motion to Dismiss.
This controversy involves less than five hundred dollars, and our jurisdiction therein is upon questions of law alone. In such cases the questions of law involved can be introduced to our notice only by bill of exceptions, statement of facts or assignment of errors. There is, however, in this record neither bill of exception nor statement of facts; nor can we consider that there is before us an assignment of errors. Thirteen days after the filing of the record herein, appellant, defending himself against a motion to dismiss, files what is nothing more nor less than a brief in answer to that of the appellant and mover. To simply endorse such a document “ Brief and Assignment of Errors?’ cannot alter its character and make it what the law requires in an assignment of errors. There are certain forms of practice which cannot be blended and confused at will, without destroying the symmetry and the harmony of our system. This Court could not tolerate in a mere assignment of errors the prolixity and argumentation which are usual and even proper in briefs; and our courts have also invariably refused to permit briefs to stand in place of formal pleadings.
The necessity for preserving distinctions, as we are doing in
Surely, if such a document, and in such manner presented, is to be accepted as a formal and particular pleading, there would be an opening of doors to disorder and uncertainty, which must be intolerable at once to courts and to litigants.
We are not, therefore, called upon to determine whether the so-called assignment of errors was filed in time or not, for we consider that we have from appellant, in this connection, briefs, and nothing more.
Appeal dismissed at appellant’s costs.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.