Hassell v. Rose
Hassell v. Rose
Opinion of the Court
This appeal is prosecuted from a judgment rendered in the district court of Anderson county on June 5, 1916. The certificate of the clerk to the transcript of the record discloses that the same was delivered to appellants’ attorney on September 22, 1916. The record was filed in the Court of Civil Appeals of the First Supreme Judicial District October 11,1916. Appellants filed their brief on February 9, 1917. Thereafter, by order of the Supreme Court, the appeal was transferred) to this district and the record filed in this court February 20, 1917. The transcript contained no assignments of error. On March 12, 1917, appellants filed a motion to have the transcript returned for correction. In the motion it was set up that the transcript was defective and erroneous in that the clerk in making up the same, by mistake or oversight, left out the assignments of error filed in the district court on the 10th day of August, 1916. Thereafter, this court, on March 29, 1917, granted this motion and ordered issuance of a writ of certiorari requiring the clerk of the district court to send up to this court the assignments of error filed in said court by appellants. In response to the writ there was filed in this court on April 12, 1917, copies of two assignments. The certificate thereto shows that the same were filed in the court below on April 2,1917. Appellees, on November 20, 1917, filed a motion to strike out the assignments of error upon the ground that the same were not filed in the district court and carried forward in the transcript, *846 nor were same filed within the time required by law, but were filed too late to be considered on appeal. In support of the motion an affidavit was filed by E. T. McCain, who was formerly district clerk of Anderson county during the year 1916. The substance of this affidavit is that, when he prepared and delivered the transcript to appellants’ attorney, no assignments of error had ever been filed, and that the omission of the same from the transcript was not due to mistake or oversight, but because the same had never been filed; that some time in February or March, 1917, appellants’ attorney called upon him to know about these assignments, and this was the first time the attorney had ever mentioned the same tq him; and that he then told the attorney that he had never filed them.
If we are at liberty to examine the statement of facts in this case for the purpose of ascertaining whether or not error has been committed, it still cannot be said that the errors complained of by appellant are readily seen; so under neither of the definitions given in the cases to which we have referred can the contentions of appellant be considered as presenting fundamental error.
In thq absence of any errors properly assigned or fundamental errors appearing, it follows that the judgment must be affirmed.
Affirmed.
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Reference
- Full Case Name
- HASSELL Et Al. v. ROSE Et Al.
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published