This case presents the question whether a certiorari will lie to reverse a judgment rendered by a justice, (without any appearance by the defendant in the court below,) in violation of the 8th section of the act relating to “ courts held by justices of the peace.” The objection did not appear on the face of the proceedings before the justice, nor by the testimony in the cause, but was taken by an assignment of error in fact. It was not denied upon the argument, that if the error could be corrected on certiorari, this was the proper mode of presenting the question. Indeed it has been expressly decided since the revised statutes have abolished the practice of assigning errors on certiorari, that a special assignment of error in fact is not within the provision, and that from the necessity of the case such errors must be corrected in the same manner as before the practice was changed by the statute. (12 Wend. 266. 15 John. 87.) It was however insisted, that the ground relied on for error was waived by the omission of the defendant below to appear and take the objection by plea in abatement.
The objection is founded upon the 8th section of the act before cited, (2 R. S. 159, [226,]) which declares that “ every action cognizable before a justice shall be brought before some justice of the town in which the parties or some one of them reside, or of an adjoining town.” The action in this case was brought before a justice residing in a different town, in direct violation of the statute; and there was no waiver of this error by an appearance, and omission by the defendant to take the objection. If it be waived at all, it must be because the defendant might have appeared and objected, but did not. With respect to errors of law the rule is that when a party does not appear, he waives nothing. And this must be an appearance in the cause, and not merely being present in the room, at the time of a trial. (5 Hill, 428. 13 Wend. 85. 2 Hill, 657. 1 Cowen’s Tr. 524, 576,3d ed.) But this must be understood to apply only to such errors and irregularities as are not cured by the act concerning amendments. (2 R. S. 424. 6 Wend. 516.)
The error complained .of in this cause, however, is one of fact; and we are referred to Graham's Pr. 956 ; 2 Bac. Abr. *323492, for authority to show that error will not lie to correct in cases that might be reached by a plea in abatement. We have also consulted 2 Bac. Abr. 221; 2 Saunders' Pl. 101, and most of the cases cited by Bacon, and by Serjeant Williams in his note. The proposition is laid down generally in Graham’s Practice, that a writ of error will not lie for an error which might have been the subject of a plea in abatement; but the language in Bacon is not quite so broad. It is in substance that a writ of error will not lie to correct an error which has been waived by an appearance of the party and his omission to plead the matter in abatement. All the cases which we have had an opportunity to examine, cited by Bacon or Saunders in support of the general proposition, were such as show that the party had actually appeared in the cause, and might have made the objection, but instead of doing so put forth some other ground of defence. I do not doubt that the facts assigned for error would have been good as a plea in abatement. But the justice had no right to try this cause at all—I mean as the facts now appear, and not as they appeared before him. Suppose the defendant had lived in another county, and the summons had been served out of the county, and the fact had not appeared on the return of the summons, there is no doubt that a plea in abatement would defeat the action in that case, and so in many other cases that might be named. Yet no one would contend that the defendant is bound to appear at his peril, and that by not appearing he waives his legal rights and becomes remediless. In this very case it was the intention of the act to prevent the abuse of calling defendants to distant parts of a county, when the convenience of neither party required it; and if we should hold the defendant to have consented to the error (for that is the meaning of a waiver) by not appearing, we compel him to submit to the very inconvenience and abuse from which the statute intended to relieve him. In 6 Hill, 631, the supreme court reversed a judgment, where the summons demanded $100 damages, but the declaration demanded only $50. The cause of action as declared on and proved was within the jurisdiction of the court. In that case *324the defendant might have appeared and pleaded in abatement to the process; but it was held that he was not obliged to do so. The decision was put on the ground of a want of jurisdiction in the justice to issue the process.
In this case, if the objection had been made, there could have been no amendment, but the action would have been defeated, for the reason that by the statute a justice of the town of Salina, where the justice resided, had no jurisdiction to try the cause. The jurisdiction was made local, by statute ; not in such a sense as to render the judgment coram non judice, as though the justice had entertained jurisdiction in an action of slander; but in a sense that rendered the judgment erroneous. The case was illegally tried, in a town where it could not lawfully be tried, and before a court that had no pretence of right to entertain jurisdiction over iti
The judgment of the county court was correct, and must be affirmed.