By the Court,
Savage, Ch. J.The judge erred in non-suiting the plaintiff. The declaration is certainly right in charging the false return to have been made when the exe*588cution was returnable ; and there can be no doubt that a re-. turn, made long after the return day, may be given in evidence under such a declaration. This is not controverted. For this purpose the return, when actually made, has relation to , ‘ _ . _ . , i i n the return day of the writ. It is however undoubtedly true that no cause of action existed, until the return became matter of record ; and from the memorandum of the clerk upon , the execution, it appears the return was not in fact made until the 8th of August, 1831. The suit was commenced in October afterwards, as the plaintiff offered to show. The judge refused this evidence, because the declaration bore a caption of July term, 1831. This declaration was the commencement of the suit, and is a substitute for process. I know of no case where the time of issuing the writ becomes important, in which it is not allowed to prove it. By the caption, the cause of action is supposed to have existed before the July term; but where the question is one of fact, to be inquired into at the circuit, whether the suit was actually commenced at that time, it is equally proper as to show the time of issuing a capias. The capias is supposed to have issued when it is tested, but it is always proper to show the true time of issuing it, when the cause of action accrued subsequent to the teste. The teste of the writ and the caption of the declaration, for this purpose, are matters of form, and should be moulded to advance substantial justice. In the case of Paul v. Graves. 5 Wendell, 76, it appeared on the face of the declaration that the cause of action arose subsequent to the caption of the de- ■ claration, which is taken upon the record for the time of the commencement of the suit; and we allowed the plaintiff in that case to do by pleading the same thing which the plaintiff in this case offered to do by evidence, to wit, to tell the truth, to show that the suit was in fact commenced after the cause of action arose. Fictions of law should never be allowed to defeat the substantial rights of parties. “In fictione juris sem-per subsistit esquitas.”
Nonsuit set aside ; new trial granted. •