Action commenced by warrant before a justice of the peace, under the act of Assembly, to recover money which, it was alleged, the defendant, Jones, as a constable of the county of Gates, had collected upon a claim which the plaintiff had given him to collect. The suit was against Jones and the sureties on his bond. It was admitted that Jones had collected the money in April, 1842, and that the plaintiff had demanded it of him previously to the commencement of this suit. For the purpose of showing that Jones was one of the constables of Gates in the year 1842, and that the other defendants are bound as his sureties, the plaintiff offered in evidence the minute docket, in which was the following order of the court in relation to Jones's appointment to the office of constable, to-wit: "Ordered, that Ezekiel T. Jones be appointed constable for the county of Gates by his giving A. R. Jones, Jesse White, and Joseph Hurdle, sureties." The minutes of Gates County Court at February Term, 1842, show that at the meeting of the court on Monday morning there were four justices on the bench; that during that day a variety of business was transacted, without any change having taken place as to the number or particular persons who held the court. On Tuesday morning the minutes notice the opening of the court, but do not record the number or names of the justices holding the court during that day. On Tuesday the order above recited was made. The plaintiff offered to prove by a witness who was present when the election was held in January, 1842, for a constable in Jones's district, that Jones received a majority of the votes and was declared duly elected; and by the clerk of the county court the plaintiff offered to prove that the poll-keepers of this election district made their return to the February Term, 1842, of Gates County Court, of the election of Jones as one of the constables of Gates County; that this return, together with the returns of the election of other constables by the people of that county, were (328) handed in to the justices on the bench, and that the said returns were lying about the courthouse after the adjournment of the court; that he (the clerk) did not consider them records or papers that were necessary to be filed among his records, and that they had been lost or destroyed. The court ruled that the evidence offered was inadmissible; that the evidence furnished by the minute docket did not prove the appointment of the defendant Jones to the office of a constable, and that the bond which had been taken in pursuance of the order was a nullity. *Page 246 In submission to the opinion of the court, the plaintiff suffered a judgment of nonsuit to be entered, and appealed to the Supreme Court. In Harris v. Wiggins, ante, 273, the question presented by this case was incidentally decided. The record of the county court did not show that any of the contingencies mentioned in section 4, chapter 24, Rev. Stat., upon which depended the right and power of the county court to appoint a constable, had occurred. In other words, it did not appear by the record that there was any vacancy to fill, upon which alone depended the power of the county court. And we held that it must so appear on the record, or the record must contain such matter as will judicially authorize the inference that such was the fact. The only evidence of the appointment of the defendant Jones as a constable contained on the records of Gates County Court is the following:
"Ordered that Ezekiel Jones be appointed constable for the county of Gates by his giving A. R. Jones, Jesse White, and Joseph Hurdle, securities."
(329) The record does not show what magistrates were on the bench on Tuesday when this order was made, nor how many; nor is there anything on the record showing there was any vacancy in any captain's district to be filled; nor is there anything to show that E. Jones, the defendant, had been elected by the people in any district whatever; nor is there anything upon the record from which either state of things could be judicially inferred. To supply the deficiency the plaintiff offered to prove by parol that Jones had been elected by the people in the district in which he lived; and by the clerk of the county court, that the poll-keepers had made a return of the election in this district to the February Term of that court; that this had been handed up to the justices on the bench, and that the return so made, not being deemed by him of any moment, had been thrown by and was lost or destroyed. The court rejected the testimony, and, we think, rightly. We see no reason to doubt the correctness of the opinion, expressed in the case of Wiggins, that the record of the county court, where the appointment was made, must contain in itself the evidence that a case had occurred in which the court had the legal power to act in the appointment of a constable, or it must contain matter from which it may judicially appear. Here it was offered to prove by parol that there was a vacancy, which had been filled by the people, and that the court acted upon that appointment and did nothing more than prove the security and take the bond of the defendant Jones. This would be, not simply to supply the record by parol evidence in parts *Page 247 where it is deficient, but to contradict it. The record is that Ezekiel Jones be appointed a constable, making the appointment of Jones the act of the court. Suppose that, instead of the evidence offered it had been proposed to prove by witnesses that a majority of the magistrates of the county were present when the appointment was made, would it have been received? We think not, because it would destroy that absolute verity which is attached to every record. If such evidence were admissible, records which now speak for themselves would be rendered as (330) uncertain and as unsatisfactory as evidence as facts resting in memory alone. S. v. McAlpin, ante, 140. It is to avoid this uncertainty and to render stable the rights resting on them that the principle has been adopted that records are considered of such authority that no evidence is allowed to contradict them. 1 Phil. on Ev., 218. To supply a part of the record by parol is to admit that a record may exist in parol. Nor is the plaintiff in this case without remedy. Every court has power over its own records, to make them speak the truth, to make them state facts as they actually exist. Had the evidence offered in the Superior Court been laid before the county court of Gates, where the record is, and they had been satisfied of the truth, it would have been in their power, and it would have been their duty, to have made an entry, nunc pro tunc, showing that Jones had been elected by the voters of his district; nor is it too late now to have it done.
Freeman v. Arkell, in 9 E. C. L., 159, was pressed upon us analagous to the present. We do not think so. That was an action for a malicious prosecution; and the magistrate who granted the warrant against the plaintiff swore that the evidence of the defendant was reduced to writing and returned by him to the clerk of the court or his deputy, and the clerk proved that a bill of indictment was sent to the grand jury and returned by them ignoramus, that it was usual in such cases to throw away or destroy the depositions taken by the magistrates, and that he had looked for them in this case and could not find them. The court held the parol evidence of their contents to be admissible. We think it was so held very rightly. The only question was whether the best evidence in the power of the party as to what the defendant had sworn to in instituting his prosecution should be received. The lost affidavits were not necessary to give the court jurisdiction of the case, and its power over the subject-matter was original and complete. They were merely necessary to fix the guilt of the defendant. Establishing them by parol neither contradicted the records of the court, nor were they used (331) to supply any matter in which the records were incomplete.
PER CURIAM. Affirmed.
Cited: Leak v. Comrs., 64 N.C. 135. *Page 248