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After you file your Notice of Appeal This is called designating the record. In most civil appeals, the appellant must pay for both the record that is sent to the appellate court and for his or her copy of the record, and the respondent must pay for his or her copy of the record.
A notice of appeal is the paper you file in the superior court where your case was decided to let the court and the other side know that you are appealing the courts decision. Filing a notice of appeal begins the entire appeals process.
The perfecting of an appeal shall not stay enforcement of the judgment or order in the trial court if the judgment or order appealed from appoints a receiver, unless an undertaking in a sum fixed by the trial court is given on condition that if the judgment or order is affirmed or the appeal is withdrawn, or dismissed,
2022 California Rules of Court (1) Except as provided in (2) and (3), a notice of appeal must be filed within 60 days after the rendition of the judgment or the making of the order being appealed.
Section 916 of the California Code of Civil Procedure states the general rule: the perfecting of an appeal stays proceedings in the trial court upon the judgment or order appealed from. While this seems to imply that in most cases, the filing of an appeal stays the judgment, in fact, the opposite is true.
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(a) Notice of appeal (1) To appeal from a judgment or appealable order in a limited civil case, except a small claims case, an appellant must serve and file a notice of appeal in the superior court that issued the judgment or order being appealed. The appellant or the appellants attorney must sign the notice.
2022 California Rules of Court. A settled statement is a summary of the superior court proceedings approved by the superior court. An appellant may either elect under (b)(1) or move under (b)(2) to use a settled statement as the record of the oral proceedings in the superior court, instead of a reporters transcript.
Also, keep in mind that filing an appeal does NOT stop the trial courts order. Unless you ask the trial or appellate court to postpone (stay) the trial courts order, you must do what the trial courts order requires you to do during the appeal.

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