
    O. S. CAUSEY v. EMPIRE PLAID MILLS.
    
      Practice — Appeal—Dismissal for Failure to Print Judg-ment — Reinstatement.
    Rule of Court No. 28, requiring' the judgment to be printed in every appeal, will not be enforced when the record wag; printed before its adoption, and in a case where the judgment appealed from was simply that plaintiff take nothing by-his writ.
    MotioN to REINSTATE appeal, dismissed for failure to,, print the judgment below as apart of the record.
    
      Messrs. L. M. Scott and Shaw <& Scales, for plaintiff' (appellant).
    
      Messrs. Fuller, Winston dc Fuller, contra.
    
   Montgomery, J.:

The appeal was dismissed for a failure on the part of the appellant to comply with Rule 28. The printing was done before the amendment, requiring the .judgment in all cases to be printed, was made the rule. Before the amendment, it would not have been necessary to print, as a part of the case on appeal, a judgment like the one in this case. The rule required the printing “ of so much and such parts of the record as may be necessary ’to a proper understanding of the exceptions and grounds ■of error assigned.” Upon the response of the jury that the plaintiff was not the owner and entitled to the possession ■of the property claimed in the complaint, there was a simple judgment that the plaintiff take 3)othing by his writ ■and be taxed with the costs of the action. To determine the matter raised on the appeal, the inspection of the judgment would not be necessary. In Wiley v. Mining Go., 117 N. C., 489, the judgment was such a one as was required to be printed before Rule 28 was amended. It ■covered five pages of manuscript, and one of the exceptions ■of the appellant read, “ Eor that the said report and judgment based thereon do not properly regard the rights of the minority stockholders ; for other reasons appearing on 'the face of said judgment.”

Eor the reasons above set forth, the petition of the appellant in this case to reinstate the appeal is granted.

Appeal Granted.  