Page:1862 Territory of Dakota Session Laws.pdf/158

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CHAP. VIII.]
CIVIL PROCEDURE.
141

the undertaking and the sufficiency of the sureties must be approved by the court in which the judgment was rendered or order made, or by the clerk thereof; and the clerk shall indorse said approval, signed by himself, upon the undertaking, and file the same in his office, for the defendant in error.

Proceeding must be commenced within three years,— with exceptions.Sect. 528. No proceeding for reversing, vacating, or modifying judgments or final orders, shall be commenced, unless within three years after the rendition of the judgment, or making the final order complained of; or, in case the person entitled to such proceeding be an infant, a married woman, a person of unsound mind, or imprisoned, within three years, as aforesaid, exclusive of the time of such disability.

No proceedings to reverse, &c., of justice, shall stay execution unless plaintiff execute undertaking.Sect. 529. No proceeding to reverse, vacate, or modify any judgment rendered, or final order made by a justice of the peace, shall operate as a stay of execution, unless the clerk of the district court shall take a written undertaking to the defendant, executed on the part of the plaintiff in error, by one or more sufficient sureties, to the effect that the plaintiff will pay all the costs which have accrued, or may accrue on such proceedings in error, together with the amount of any judgment that may be rendered against such plaintiff in error, either on the further trial of the case, after the judgment of the court below shall have been set aside or reversed, or upon and after the affirmance thereof in the district court. The person entitled to such proceeding shall have the same time for prosecuting the same, before he is barred, as is provided in section five hundred and twenty-eight, unless the said judgment has been paid off or satisfied prior to the commencement of such proceeding.

When judgement is reversed.Sect. 530. When a judgment or final order shall be reversed, either in whole or in part, in the supreme court, the court reversing the same shall proceed to render such judgment as the court below should have rendered, or remand the cause to the court below, for such judgment; and the court reversing such judgment, or final order, shall not issue execution in causes that are removed before them on error, on which they pronounced judgment, as aforesaid, but shall send a special mandate to the court below, as the case may require, to award execution thereupon; and such court, to which such special mandate is sent, shall proceed in such cases in the