State ex rel. Evershed v. Judges of the Court of Appeals
State ex rel. Evershed v. Judges of the Court of Appeals
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The relator, defendant in a suit in the Civil District Court, was adjudged to pay the amount claimed. Before appealing to the Court of Appeals he applied for a statement of facts. He alleges the judge of the lower court required the submission of statement to the plaintiff acting as his own counsel — counsel then absent from the city. The petitioner further alleges that on plaintiff’s return he furnished his memoranda or statement to the judge, who thereupon gave a statement of facts. But the judge’s statement was not signed until the 16th November, 1893, nearly two months after the appeal was granted. The Court of Appeals dismissed the rela
If the relator had any cause of complaint when the first appeal was dismissed in April, 1894, he should then have applied to this court. That appeal was dismissed because the statement was filed too late. It is indispensable the statement be procured before the appeal; if after, the delay is fatal to the appeal. Code of Practice, Arts. 603, 604; Syndic of Hellis vs. Asselvo, 3 Martin Reports, 204; LeBlanc vs. Broussard’s Heirs, 16 La. Reports, 137. The relator’s explanation of the delay is, that the judge of the lower court, presented with the statement, required it should be submitted to the opposite party. The law requires it should be presented first to the opposite counsel.
The relator’s further explanation is that the opposite counsel was absent. If there was any force in the explanation, then a mandamus should have been sought to compel the lower court to sign the statement. After the first dismissal there was the devolutive appeal. If the judge of the lower court could have been required by this court to make another statement for that appeal, the application for the exercise of our supervisory jurisdiction should have been made prior to April, 1894, when that appeal was dismissed by the Circuit Court of Appeals. We can not issue writs of mandamus and certiorari to correct supposed wrongs under decrees or orders of the lower courts made months before the application is made to us.
The relator’s application is therefore refused.
Rehearing refused.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.