By section 988 of the charter, as amended by Laws 1906, c. 658, § 14, it is provided that—
“an appeal taken but not prosecuted within six months after the filing of the notice of the appeal, unless the time within which to prosecute the same shall have been extended by the court, shall be deemed to have been abandoned and no agreement between the parties extending the time within which the said appeals may be prosecuted shall vary the provisions hereof.”
This provision, requiring such an appeal to be prosecuted, is not complied with by merely filing the notice of appeal. The evident intent was that the appellant should have the appéal in such a condition that it can be heard within the time fixed. If an agreement between the parties is not sufficient to justify a continuance of the appeal, certainly the neglect of the respondent to consent to the set*533tlement of the papers upon which the appeal is to be heard cannot have that effect. There is nothing, in the affidavit of the appellant’s attorneys to show that he was not fully conversant with this provision, and the only excuse is that the corporation counsel did! not return the galley proof of the papers to be used on the appeal, as he had prepared them for a year and a half, which is obviously no excuse.
The time within which to prosecute this appeal has not been extended by an order of the court. The appeal was taken more than two years and a half ago, and the provision of the section of the charter to which attention has been called is mandatory. For that reason the appeal should be dismissed.
Motion to dismiss appeal granted, with $10 costs.