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General
Treat v. Jemison
87 U.S. 65220 Wall. 652·Supreme Court of the United States·1874
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Opinion
Treat v. Jemison.
A judgment affirmed for want of such an assignment of errors as is required by the twenty-first rule; there being in the record no plain error not assigned and such as the court thought fit to be noticed by it without a ' proper assignment.
Error to the Circuit Court for the District of California.
Rule twenty-one of this court provides that the brief of the counsel for the plaintiff in error shall contain, 11 in the ■order here Stated,”—
1. A statement of the ease, &c.
“2. An assignment of'the errors relied upon, which, in cases brought up by writ of error, shall set* out separately and specifically each error asserted ^and intended to be urged.”
■ And the rule further declares that “without such an assignment of errors counsel will not be heard, except at the request of the court, and errors' not assigned according to this rule will be disregarded, though the court at its option may .notice a plain error not assigned.”
■ With these rules, officially published in form when first made, and long in force and generally acted on at the bar, the'present case was'brought up here and submitted. The briefs were elaborate, but contained no such assignment of 'errors as by the rule is prescribed.
Mr. N. Bennett, for the plaintiff in error; Messrs. Foote, Houghton, and ^Reynolds, ’contra.
14 Wallace, xi.
[MAJORITY — The CHIEF JUSTICE:]
The CHIEF JUSTICE:
■ The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed. There is no such assignment of errors in this ease as is .required by the rule, and' we do not see in the record any error that ought-to be noticed without an- assignment.