Section 13, chapter 113, Public Laws 1927, provides for summary assessment of liability of stockholders in insolvent banks, Corp. Com. v. Murphey, 197 N. C., 42, 147 S. E., 667; and further: “Any stockholder may appeal to the Superior Court from the levy of assessment.” No time is designated in the statute for taking the appeal. Hence, we must proceed by analogy to1 the practice in other like cases so as to effectuate the purpose and intent of the law. S. v. Carroll, 194 N. C., 37, 138 S. E., 339.
Whether it was the intention of the General Assembly that the rules governing appeals from justices’ courts should apply to appeals from such assessments need not be decided on the present record. Higdon v. Light Co., 207 N. C., 39, 175 S. E., 710. “Where an appeal is expressly or impliedly given, the courts may look to other general statutes regulating appeals in analogous cases and give them such application as the particular case and the language.of the statute may warrant, keeping in view always the intention of the Legislature”—Walker, J., in Cook v. Vickers, 141 N. C., 101, 53 S. E., 740.
That the appeal should be taken “within a reasonable time” is all the appellant could claim. Blair v. Coakley, 136 N. C., 405, 48 S. E., 804. We agree with the trial court that a delay of nineteen or twenty months is too long.
Affirmed.