Messerly v. Hull
Messerly v. Hull
Opinion of the Court
This appeal is ' brought here under the provisions of section 2253 of the Revised Statutes of 1889 by filing a certified copy of the record entry of the judgment appealed from, together with the order granting the appeal.
The case was set for hearing October 18,1894. On that day it was taken as submitted on briefs, with leave to appellant to file his brief within ten days thereafter, the respondent to have five days additional to reply thereto. The appellant’s time was subsequently extended at his request, and his brief was not filed until December 3. The respondent promptly filed his brief in reply by December 7. Upon an examination of the record we then ascertained that no abstract of the record had ever been filed, as required by the section hereinabove mentioned, and hence there was nothing for review in this court, except errors arising on the record proper which were not claimed to exist. We called the attention of the parties to this fact, and they consented by stipulation that the facts stated in the briefs already on file might be considered by this court as an abstract of the record. An examination of such briefs, however, disclosed that no mention was made in either of them that a bill of exceptions had ever been filed in the trial court, or that an exception had been saved to any ruling of the court, which are essential requisites to give to this court jurisdiction to consider matter of exception as distinguished from error arising on the record proper, since statutory requirements in appellate procedure are not subject to waiver. Tower v. Moore, 52 Mo. 118; Spurgeon v. West, 23 Mo. App. 42; Snyder v. Hopkins, 39 Mo. 418; Disse v. Frank, 52
We have stated the facts thus in detail for the purpose of showing that we have given the appellant every opportunity to test the merits of this appeal, and for the further purpose of calling the attention of parties litigant to the importance of complying with the statutory requireménts in the first instance. It results that the judgment must be affirmed. So ordered.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.