Pemberton v. Zacharie
Pemberton v. Zacharie
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court, in this case, was delivered by
These cases were consolidated in the inferior court. The judgment on the merits required the plaintiff to give security, and the security offered being objected to, a judgment of the court approving it, was also rendered. This appeal is from both decrees.
The error alleged in the judgment on the merits is, that the defendants were condemned to pay interest from the time the notes became due, although during that time they were in danger of eviction. The contract under which this contest has arisen, was entered into while the provisions of the Old Code were in force. According to them, it was not the fact of an outstanding title, but the institution of a suit, which enabled the buyer to suspend payment. No evidence is offered that any such suit was commenced in the present instance. The error, therefore, alleged in the judgment below, appears to us quite unsupported by the law in force at the time the engagement was entered into.
But it is contended, that however this may be, the particular circumstances attending the rendition of the judgment below, and the terms of that judgment, show that interest ought not to have been given. The answer of the defendants sets out various objections to the payment of the obligations sued on. None of which, so far as we can discover,
. The various proceedings which have produced embarrassment in the progress of this case, have been already stated in our former opinion. There is nothing further disclosed by the record of the second appeal, save that on the 25th of June, the plaintiff took a rule on the defendants, to show cause why the order granting an appeal should not be rescinded, and if it were, why the defendants should not furnish additional security on the appeal bond.
This rule the court after hearing argument, discharged. Whereupon the plaintiff took another rule to the same effect, and offered further, that if it were granted, the evidence might be written down, to the refusal of the court to grant which, the bill of exceptions had been taken.
We do not learn from the record what disposition was made of the rule, except that it was continued to the 7th of July.
The order of the first of June, dismissed the defendants’ exceptions to the security, and from that decision an appeal was taken. We consider it clear, that after the inferior court granted the appeal, its cognizance of the case in the issue joined on these exceptions terminated, until that appeal was disposed of. The case could not be pending on this point in the Supreme Court and the District Court at the same time. It is true, that after judgment of dismissal, and before the appeal was decided, the plaintiff offered to withdraw all objections to the evidence being taken down. The question is, whether the defendants were compelled to accept this offer and withdraw their appeal. We think not.
It has been contended, that as this court has decided that the appeal was improperly granted, it could not have had the effect of suspending proceedings in the inferior court. But it is obvious, that the effect of an appeal does not depend on the ultimate disposition which may be made of it, but on the fact that it is pending and undecided.
It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment on the merits rendered in this case, be confirmed with costs, and that the judgment approving the security be reversed, and the cause on this point remanded to the District Court, with directions to the judge not to refuse the defendants permission to take down in court the evidence which they may offer in support of their exception, and it is further ordered, that the appellees pay the costs of this appeal.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- PEMBERTON v. ZACHARIES.
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published