Lemon v. Stephenson, 40 Ill. 45 (1864)

April 1864 · Illinois Supreme Court
40 Ill. 45

Lemon et al. v. Stephenson.

(April Term, 1864.)

Appeal bond—must recite the judgment appealed, from correctly. An appeal bond which recites the judgment appealed from as having been rendered on the seventh day of a given month, when the record shows it to have been rendered on the sixth, is bad, on a motion to dismiss the appeal.

Appeal from the Circuit Court of the county of La Salle.

Messrs. Bangs & Shaw,

for the appellee, moved the court to dismiss the appeal for the want of a sufficient appeal bond.

By the record, it appeared that the judgment appealed from was rendered on the sixth day of November, 1863, whereas the *46bond recited a judgment from which the appeal was taken, as having been rendered on the seventh day of the same month. This variance in the time of the rendition of the judgment as shown by the record, and that as it was recited in the bond, was the ground of the motion.

Per Curiam:

The objection to the bond is well taken; the appeal will be dismissed unless a sufficient bond be filed within a reasonable time, to be designated by the court.

Rule nisi.