Hanson v. McCue
Before: Niles
Synopsis
This case is reported in 42 Cal. 303.
The facts are stated in the opinion. .
By the Court,
Niles, J.: A decision in this case was rendered on the 31st of October, 1871.
On the 24th of November following, the respondent’s counsel deposited in the express office of Wells, Fargo & Co., at San Francisco, a package addressed to the Clerk of this Coprt, and containing ■ a printed petition for rehearing and the required number of copies. • This package, from [179]some unknown cause,, did not reach the Clerk. Upon the 27th of ¡November, the Clerk issued the remittitur under the provisions of Rule Twenty-one of this Court.
Upon these facts, sufficiently shown, respondent moves that the remittitur be recalled, and that he have leave now to file his petition for rehearing. The propriety of granting this motion depends upon the construction of Rule Twenty of this Court. This rule requires that the petition for rehearing “ must be filed within twenty-five days after the judgment has been rendered;” and, further, that “the time herein prescribed shall not be extended by the Court, and the Clerk shall not file a petition after such time has expired.”
These plain and positive provisions cannot be avoided upon the ground of accident or excusable neglect. The filing of a petition for a rehearing is not a matter of right. It is a privilege given by the Court, governed and limited entirely by its rules. The power to make these rules is given and controlled by the statute. The Court, equally with the suitor, is bound by them, until they are abrogated. We must construe them as statutory provisions would be construed. We can conceive of no case in which the time for filing a petition for rehearing can be enlarged, or the failure to file excused, under the positive prohibition of the rule.
Another question, however, is presented in this case. It seems that the counsel for respondent deposited his petition for rehearing in the office of the express company, in ample time to reach the Clerk of this Court within the period allowed by the rule for filing the petition, in the ordinary course of the business of the company. It also appears that this was the customary and most reliable means of transmission. Here, then, was no negligence on the part of counsel. He had performed fully, and in due time, all that he could be required to do in ordinary cases, and in the absence of [180]
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