Clark v. McClaughry

jBy the Court,

Cowen, J.

The statute of 1836, ch. 526, p. 794, (3 R. S. 392, 2d ed.,) declares, section first, that judgments of the common pleas on appeal or certiorari,from a justice’s court, shall be final and conclusive, except for the purpose of granting a new trial by the common pleas in a proper case. The second section provides that, at any time within thirty days after the record of judgment shall have beep filed, the first judge, or in his absence any other judge of the court below, who was present at the trial or • hearing, may, in his discretion, grant a certificate that, in his opinion; the cause is a proper one to be carried to the supreme court; in which case, and in no other, a writ of error may be brought. Here the thirty days passed before the certificate was obtained, and the only question, so far as regularity is concerned, arises out of the objection that the limitation does not run till notice of filing the record shall be served. The statute says nothing of notice; and in the construction of the various statutes of limitation, its necessity in order to their running, has been uniformly denied. They run even against a fraud, unless, perhaps, it be perpetrated with the direct view to defeat the statute. That is not shown in the case at bar; and there was an indifference manifested on the part of the plaintiff in error, which rather leads to a distrust of his intenion to bring error, except for the purpose of delay. The utmost he can pretend is surprize, from the circumstances that the engrossment and signing of the bill were not completed, which depended entirely upon himself; and the delay of which, in any view, was not incompatible with the regular perfecting of the judgment.

*629Then, it is supposed we may relieve on terms. 1 do not believe we can relieve at all where the thirty days are allowed to elapse, unless in the single case of a fraudulent filing of the record with a view to defeat the writ; and then the motion would belong most properly to the court below. Such a perfecting of the judgment would be irregular, and should doubtless be set aside. Perhaps we might disregard it, in a strong and clear case of fraud. This is far from being such a case. The plaintiff in error himself, procured an ante dated certificate from the judge. The fraud lies in the wrong quarter ; and to this moment we are not informed what the errors complained of are. Surely when the party comes for terms he should, at least, after what has transpired here, show a clear and strong case of error in the court below. , It is not. enough that he has been neg. ligent and suffered himself to be surprized by regular practice. The general opinion of the attorney and the certificate of the judge that there was error, both come with less authority than if the latter had not been ante dated. The motion is granted.