By the Court. —
Lumpkin, J.delivering the opinion.
We will dispose of the first and third grounds : to set aside the judgment together.
The first objection is, that an order was taken to establish the note, upon ivhich the judgment was rendered when there was no party defendant in Court to resist it $ and the third is, that ail order was taken to establish the note, which was the *507foundation of the suit, and the verdict and judgment rendered in said cause, when the original defendant was dead and no writ of scirefacias had been served upon the administrator, to make him a party.
It is probable that a misapprehension, as to the facts assumed in those two grounds gave rise to this proceeding. The action was brought originally .'against Aaron Searcy, returnable to the June Term of theCourt, 1838. At July Term, 1839, the death of the defendant was suggested. At March and September Terms, 1840, the entries on the docket are, fe no parties.” There is a hiatus as to the year 1841. At March Term, 1842, parties were made and a verdict taken. The minutes, as well as the memoranda by the Judge, on the bench docket, show these facts. At that same Term, a rule was taken to establish a copy of the note, which recites, that the suit was then pending against Aaron Searcy’s representative. Of course, then, Benjamin Searcy, the administrator of Aaron, had previously been made a party.
The difficulty in this case grew out of two circumstances; one, because the order establishing the copy note, was entered on the minutes by the Clerk, before the order making the administrator a party. But there is nothing unusual in this. A number of orders are often taken at the same term, and perhaps at the same time, and handed together to the Clerk, who transfers them to his minutes without any regard to their natural or logical sequence. We are warranted, perhaps bound, to presume that such was the case in this instance.
The second cause, in which the misapprehension originated, is the mistake of the Sheriff, as to the date of the service of the scire facias by him. It purports to have been done in December, 1842, some eight months after the order was taken making the administrator a party, and after the copy note was established, and the verdict and judgment in the case were rendered.
*508The scire facias bears date the 8th of November, 1841. Is is improbable, to say the least of it, that it should not have-been served until thirteen months thereafter. But we are not left to conjecture in this case; nor to the presumption in favor of the regularity of the various proceedings had in March, 1842, against Benjamin. R. Searcy, as the representative of his deceased brother. Benjamin R. Searcy filed an affidavit in the cause, on the 7th day of February, 1847, wherein dates were material, and in which he himself swears, that the scire facias, to make him a party, was served on the 7th day of December, 1841. And this is unquestionably true; and clears up the apparent confusion in the premises.
We conclude, therefore, that there is no foundation for the first and third grounds taken in the motion to vacate the judgment.
The second ground is, that a summary order was taken establishing!#]^:note, upon which the action was brought, as if it were jan office paper, when it was a private paper of the plaintiff,jand had not been filed in Court.
It will be noted, that the order here complained of, was passed in 1842, several years before the organization of this Court. The order was taken in pursuance of the practice which then prevailed in the Ocmulgee circuit, if not throughout the State generally. Considering that the appearance term had passed, when persons trading for this instrument, might perhaps be affected by the doctrine of lis pendens, we do not feel entirely confident that the old rule was not correct. At any rate, we are clear that we have no authority to disturb the order, under all the circumstances of the case.
The fourth and only remaining ground is, that the judgment does not follow the verdict in said cause. Whatever was irregular, had been rectified long before this application was made. A contrariety of practice obtained upon this subject. In some of the circuits, a judgment de bonis propriis,. was taken against, the administrator, in the first instance; in others, the judgment was, as it undoubtedly should have *509been, unless by way of penalty for pleading falsely, de bonis testatoris. And in others again, it was entered up in the alternative, de bonis testatoris vel non de bonis propriis. After the lapse of fifteen years, we should reluctantly interpose to set aside a judgment signed in any of these forms, even if the Court which rendered it, had not itself corrected the mistake, if indeed any were committed.
Upon the whole, we affirm the judgment of the Court below.
Judgment affirmed.