Springfield Steam Laundry Co. v. American Central Insurance
Springfield Steam Laundry Co. v. American Central Insurance
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiff obtained judgment in the trial court on tbe twenty-seventh day of November, 1894. The defendant appealed the same day, and
It is evident that someone is mistaken. Either defendant’s counsel forgot to notify the clerk to make out a transcript, or the clerks and their deputy forgot that they were thus notified. We do not deem it material to decide which version of the fact is the most probable, since we must conclude that the defendant has failed to show due diligence in the prosecution of the appeal, even if its version of the transaction is correct.
The appeal was returnable to the March term of this court. Under the orders of this court each firm whose name appears upon the docket is furnished with a printed copy thereof several weeks before the meeting of the court. The name of the defendant’s counsel appears to several cases on such printed docket, and they must, therefore, be held to have been advised that
We have repeatedly decided that, under such circumstances, an appellant is not within the saving clause of the Act of 1891. Beckman v. The Phoenix Ins. Co., 49 Mo. App. 343; Town of Kirkwood v. Cairns, 40 Mo. App. 631. That act does not contemplate that an appellant, who has notified a clerk to make out a transcript, need pay no further attention whatever to the matter until he is notified by the clerk that the transcript has been made out. The onus of showing some diligence still remains with him.
the judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.