United States v. Gomez
United States v. Gomez
Opinion of the Court
reciting the facts, delivered the opinion of the court to the following effect :
Claimant assumes that the entry in the minutes of the fifth of June, 1857, is the final decree, and consequently that the appeal was too late. But the proposition cannot be sustained, as is evident from inspection of the record. Entry is that a decree was ordered to be entered up in conformity to such opinion. No decree of any kind, however, was drawn up, entered, or filed on that day. On the contrary, the record shows that on the seventh of January, L858, a
H. Want of citatiori is the second ground of the motion. Final decree was rendered on the fifth of February, 1858, but on the twenty-first day of March, 1861, the court entered a decree that all proceedings heretofore had in the cause be set aside,' and that it be put on the calendar and set for trial, de novo, according to law. Transcript shows that the order vacating the decree was passed upon the ground that the decree had been fraudulently obtained. [His honor here re-: ferred to the particulars as set forth in the order of Ogier, J., ante, p. 692, and to the proceedings in United States v. Gomez, 23 Howard, 326.] Delay ensued, and in the meantime a new appointment of district judge was made. Application was then made by the claimant to set aside the order vacating the original decree, and at the J une Term, 1862, held on the fourth of August of the same year, the court ordered that the previous order, made and entered on the twenty-first of March, 18Ó1, setting aside all proceedings had in the cause, and placing the same on the calendar for trial de novo, be and the same is hereby vacated and set aside. United States,
HP. Third ground of the motion is that the transcript is incomplete, and that the same is not duly certified. The certificate in this case is certainly made by an officer authorized by law to make it, and we are not able to perceive that it is defective. Bemedy of appellee, if the transcript is
In view of the whole case, our conclusion is that the motion to dismiss the appeal must be overruled. Effect of the motion, if granted, would be to leave the decree below in full force and unreversed, which is a result that at present we are not prepared to sanction. When the cause comes up upon the merits, we shall desire to hear the counsel upon the question whether there is any valid decree in the case, and if not, as to what will be the proper directions to be given in the cause. Those questions are not involved in the motion to dismiss, but they will arise when the merits of the case are examined, and will deserve very careful consideration.
Motion refused.
Reference
- Cited By
- 3 cases
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- Published
- Syllabus
- /Vhere the question was, whether a party should be heard on appeal, and the effect of refusal to hear him would have left in full force a decree that the court was “not prepared to sanction,” it was held: j.. That an order to enter up a decree was not to be taken as the date of a decree entered subsequently ‘‘nowfor then,” but that the date was the day of the actual and formal entry. i.. That the object of a citation on appeal being notice, no citation was necessary in a case where in point of fact, by agreement of parties, actual and full knowledge by the party appellee of the other side’s intention to appeal appeared on the record; and where, moreover, by such a construction as the court was inclined to put on part of the case, the appeal was taken in the same term when the decree was made. 3 That a certificate that a transcript of a record was a “full, true, and correct copy of all the proceedings, entries, and files in the District Court for the Southern. District of California, except the transcript sent up from the Board of La:.d Commissioners in the case,” was so far good that the party alleging it to be bad was referred, if dissatisfied with the transcript, to his remedy of a suggestion of diminution and motion for certiorari.