Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1913

Burgess v. Crumpton

Burgess v. Crumpton
Supreme Court of South Carolina · Decided March 14, 1913 · PER CURIAM.
77 S.E. 356; 93 S.C. 562; 1913 S.C. LEXIS 45 (South Eastern Reporter)

Burgess v. Crumpton

Opinion of the Court

Per Curiam.

1 Upon (the call of this case for hearing in this Court, it was made to appear to the Court that'after the appeal had been taken and perfected and the record printed for the hearing of the appeal, and while the appeal was pending in this Court, but before it was heard, the defendant, who- was appellant, made a motion- in the Circuit Court to vacate the judgment appealed from and grant a new trial on the ground of after-discovered evidence; that his motion was granted, and that the new trial was had, and resulted in a judgment for the defendant, from which no appeal has been taken. It necessarily follows that this appeal -cannot -be further prosecuted.

2 Appellant’s attorney asked that the Court provide in its order dismissing the appeal that he be allowed the necessary disbursements of .the appeal, but the Court cannot make such am order, because it has no- original jurisdiction of the matter. This Court can only review the orders of the Circuit .Counts- with regard to the taxation -of the costs and disbursements incident to- appeals. *563 Bradley v. Rodelsperger, 6 S. C. 290; Huff v. Watkins, 20 S. C. 477; Dilling v. Foster, 21 S. C. 334; Cooke v. Poole, 26 S. C. 321, 2 S. E. 609; Hecht v. Freisleben, 28 S. C. 181, 5 S. E. 475.

The appeal is, therefore, dismissed, without prejudice and without any intimation of opinion as to the rights of either party with regard to the costs and disbursements of the appeal.

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