BROOKS v. EDWARDS

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BROOKS v. EDWARDS
1924 OK 1031
231 P. 83
107 Okla. 239
Case Number: 15576
Decided: 11/18/1924
Supreme Court of Oklahoma

BROOKS et al.
v.
EDWARDS et al.

Syllabus

¶0 Appeal and Error--Dismissal--Petition in Error Filed Out of Time. When it has been determined that a petition in error was not filed with the clerk of the Supreme Court until after the expiration of the time for bringing the appeal, an order made by this court directing the clerk to file the petition in error and case-made as of a date within the time limit will be vacated and the appeal dismissed.

Chas. R. Freeman, for plaintiffs in error.
Turner, Turner, Harley & Parris, for defendants in error.

PER CURIAM.

¶1 Plaintiffs in error seek to have reviewed the order overruling motion for new trial made January 21, 1924. Petition in error with case-made attached was deposited with the clerk of this court July 23, 1924. On the same day that the record was received in the office of the clerk, this court entered an order directing the clerk to file the petition in error and case-made as of July 18, 1924. This order was based upon a showing that the record was deposited in the United States mail at Checotah, Okla., properly directed to the clerk of the Supreme Court with postage prepaid in the amount the receiving postmaster advised was the proper charge for carrying the matter and received in the post office at the Capitol Station in Oklahoma City July 18, 1924, and on that day tendered to the clerk upon condition that several dollars postage held to be due be paid and that the clerk refused to pay the same notwithstanding there was on deposit in the case costs sufficient to cover the amount held to be due. The delay occasioned by returning the record to Checotah made it impossible for plaintiffs in error to deliver the petition in error and case-made to the clerk until July 23rd, which was six months and two days after the order complained of was made. Defendants in error have filed a motion to dismiss, contending that the appeal was not filed within the statutory time limit and that this court is without jurisdiction in the case for any purpose. There is a long line of decisions of this court holding that where more than six months have intervened between the rendition of the judgment or final order sought to be reviewed and the filing of a petition in error in the Supreme Court, this court is without jurisdiction to review the order complained of. Home Savings & Loan Ass'n v. Rounds-Porter Lbr. Co., 80 Okla. 201, 195 P. 479. The decisive question then is, When was the petition in error filed? In State National Bank v. Lowenstein, 52 Okla. 259, 155 P. 1127, it is held:

"The date of filing papers is that upon which they are deposited with the proper custodian, and not that upon which they are marked 'Filed,' and the filing is the actual delivery to the clerk, without regard to any action that he may take thereon."

¶2 But plaintiffs in error contend that acting upon the advice of the postmaster as to the amount of postage required to carry the matter should excuse them for the delay occasioned by his mistake. In Greening v. Maire Bros. Co., 79 Okla. 136, 192 P. 202, it is said in dismissing an appeal from an order refusing to appoint a receiver for the reason it was not filed in time that:

"Plaintiff states in his response to the motion that he substantially complied with the statute above quoted in the following particulars: That on the 11th day of June, 1920, and before 6 p. m. of said date, he deposited the petition in error, with the case-made attached thereto, in the United States mail at Pawhuska, Oklahoma, with the proper postage attached, and addressed to William M. Franklin, clerk of the Supreme Court, Oklahoma City, Okla.; that by the usual course of the United States mail said petition in error and case-made should have reached Oklahoma City before 8 a. m. on the 10th day for taking said appeal; that this court should take judicial knowledge of the fact that the usual train time between the city of Pawhuska and Oklahoma City is less than seven hours, and if said petition in error and case-made were delayed in the United States mail, or if said papers reached the State Capitol of Oklahoma on the 10th day, but were not filed by the clerk of the said court on said date, then and in that event plaintiff in error is absolved from blame by reason of his having done all within his power to comply with the strict letter of the statute.

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