Fannin v. Durdin

McCay, Judge.

- The facts of this record do not present a case standing on the same footing as the case of Tison vs. McAfee, 50 Georgia, 382, and other cases of like character decided by this court. In these cases, my judgment was based on the idea that the judgment sought to be set aside by a motion made years after its rendition, was a decision of the court which made it, and 'that, under our law, if it was wrong, it could only be correct'ed by a writ of error to this court. As the party complaining had failed to file his bill of exceptions within the time prescribed by law, he could not cure his laches by asking the court rendering the judgment to set it aside and assign as error *477the refusal of the judge thus to correct his own errors. It is obvious that this reasoning can only apply to judgments which, in their nature, are decisions of the judge, such as motions and the like, when the mind of the judge is expressly, or by implication, upon tiie point at issue, and when the judgment is his conclusion of the law upon the facts of the case. In other words, a bill of exceptions must lie to the judgment or decision; the matter must be that which error can be assigned on. The thing complained of must be an error of the judge. As illustrative of what I mean, I might instance a demurrer, a motion to amend, a motion in arrest of judgment, a motion for non-suit, a motion to strike a plea, or any motion dr proceeding asking and involving a judgment, decree or decision of the judge that could be excepted to by bill of exceptions. In all such, cases, it is my opinion, and I think it has been the uniform ruling of this court, that the party cast is barred unless he file his bill of exceptions within the time prescribed by the statute. Indeed, the Code, in terms, so provides: section 2921. Section 4251 even goes so far as to prescribe that if the- decision be not a final one, but only interlocutory, the-party complaining shall file an interlocutory bill of exceptions. And this court has uniformly held that however erroneous such an interlocutory judgment may be, the party is concluded by it unless he file his interlocutory bill of exceptions. To permit parties to cure their laches, and do afterwards what they failed to do in the manner and at the time prescribed by law, would, in my judgment, be a judicial repeal of sections 2921 and 4250 of the Code. An error of a judge in 1869, not objected to, cannot be made the subject of a writ of error by asking the judge to correct it after the thirty days has expired, and assigning error on his refusal to do so. But as I have said the present case stands on a different footing. So far as appears from the record there was no decision of the court. The party against whose judgment the motion was taken does not seem to have objected — there was no demurrer. He met the plaintiff’s case by taking issue on the facts; a trial was had before a *478jury on that issue; a verdict was rendered, and the plaintiff in the original judgment accepted the verdict by entering up a new judgment according to the verdict; nay, upon that judgment he sued out execution, caused it to be levied, and had-money raised and assigned to the judgment by the order of the court. In all this proceeding he never asked the judgment of the judge either by demurrer, arrest of judgment, or in any of the ways by which it is usual to get a decision on which a- bill of exceptions will lie. For these reasons I do not put my decision in this case on the same grounds as I did in the .cases referred to. But I am none the less satisfied that, under the well settled rules of law, the present movant is concluded by the judgment of reduction, and is too late now to move to set it aside. As the case presents itself, the record- shows that in 1869 the defendant in the original judgment moved the court, in writing, that there-were certain reasons why the judgment of 1866 was for too much, and that it ought to be reduced. The plaintiff in the judgment failed to demur to that motion; on the contrary» he denied the facts set forth, and asked a trial by jury on the issue — a trial was had, and the judgment reduced. Thereupon the original plaintiff entered up a-new judgment, based upon the verdict, sued out execution, had it levied, sold property, and in a contest with other executions claimed, and received by order of the court, money on ■ his ft. fa. In my judgment, he cannot now go behind, all these proceedings, and move to set the judgment aside, on the ground that tiie defendant’s motion did not contain any legal ground for lessening the judgment; that it was demurrable on its face, and that no legal judgment could be entered up on it. To sustain the right of this movant it is necessary to establish the position, that under our law every judgment, no matter how bitterly it may have been fought— no matter how solemnly it may have been rendered, is always open to attack, if it appear on its. face to have been made under a wrong impression of the law: Provided, only, that the attack is made within the statute of limitations. I have shown, *479I think, that in all cases where the judgment complained of was an act of the judge, so that it might have been corrected by a writ of error, the party complaining is conclusively presumed for reasons satisfactory to himself to have acquiesced. In the case before us, however, there was no decision of the court, and a bill of exceptions would not have been good, simply because the party cast did not inovke the decision of the court. He did not demur; he did not move in arrest of judgment. On the contrary, he admitted the sufficiency of the grounds of the motion by taking issue on the -facts, and the facts having been found against him he failed to move in arrest of judgment. Nay, he himself entered up the judgment, sued out execution, aud proceeded to enforce it. As I have said, to justify a party who stands thus, in moving years after against a judgment, it is necessary to assert that any judgment now standing upon the records of any court in this state, not seven years old, or if the cause of action is not barred by the statute of limitations, may be set aside, unless upon the face of the record everything appears necessary to sustain it. If, upon an inspection of the declaration, jt appear that there was not a good cause of action, or if the pleas were demurrable, the judgment may be set aside. I do not think this is the law. Independently of proceedings in the nature of an appeal, there was, at common law, two modes of attacking a judgment not void. One was by motion in arrest of judgment, the other by motion to set aside for irregularity. These two modes are both recognized by our Code: See sections of the Code, 3587, 3589. Tidd’s Practice, 512, says an irregularity consists in omitting to do something that is necessary for the due and orderly conducting of a suit, or the doing in an unseasonable time or improper manner. In an irregularity the proper motion is to “set aside the proceedings:” Tidd’s Practice, 513. A motion in arrest must be made before the judgment is entered, and is for defects in the pleadings: Tidd’s Practice, 918, 919, 928. The codifiers are presumed to have used the words “motion in arrest” and “motion to set aside” in the sense of the common law. In that sense they are by *480no means synonymous phrases, names for the same tiling. As contended in the argument, these two phrases, motion in arrest” and “ motion to. set aside,” refer to the same thing, and are only distinguished by the fact that one is made during the term and the other within the statute of limitations. But this is an entire mistake. At common law these two motions were used for different purposes and under different circumstances. Whilst they each had the qualification as to the time of their use, as provided by the Code, except that a reasonable time was in the place of the statute of limitations, yet they were each confined to their own specific purpose, and when the case invoked that purpose the right of the party to use them was barred accordingly, as the term, or a reasonable time, had passed. The proceedings of a court are comprehended under these two heads, the pleadings and the practice. The former are the altercations of the parties, as the declaration, the pleas, the replications, etc., etc.; the latter includes all those rules adopted by the court for securing regularity and method in its proceedings. Objections to the sufficiency of pleadings were made by demurrer and by motion in arrest of judgment. Objections for violations of any of the rules of practice were by motion to set aside for irregularity. The former, to-wit: demurrers and motions in arrest, were regulated by the yules of special pleadings, and were controlled by the precise logic of that methodical and unbending system. A demurrer, if not put in at the proper stage, to-wit: before a plea to the merits, was inadmissible, and a motion in arrest, if not made during the term at which a'verdict was rendered, came too late, because within four days, the judgment was entered up, and could not, therefore, be arrested: Tidd, 928. Motions to set aside for irregularity — that is, for a violation of the rules of practice — stood on a different footing. They rested in the discretion of the court. They could not be made after the other party had acted — that is, accepted them — and their limit was a reasonable time: Tidd, 512, 515. The result of these rules was, when applied to judgments, that objections to the sufficiency of pleadings must always be *481made before final judgment, whilst objections for irregularity might be made-within a reasonable time. And this distinction was not only based on sound logic, but upon the plainest principles of justice and public policy. The pleadings in a case are the statement to the court of the plaintiff’s case and of the defendant’s reply; each party, necessarily, has full notice of them, if the rules of practice as to filing notice, etc., are complied with; they are read in open court, issue is taken upon them, and if they be insvfjioient, it is trifling with the court for the party complaining to lie still and say nothing until after judgment. Many, very many, defects that were good on demurrer are lost by taking issue and going to a jury, and all defects of pleading are cured by a judgment, if there be no arrest. In other words, objections for insufficiency of pleading in a regular suit, where there is an issue and a verdict, can only be made'by motion in arrest of judgment, that is, during the term when the verdict is had, since within four days the judgment is entered up and cannot be ,arrested. Motions to set aside for irregularity, as I have said, stand on a different footing. They are not pleadings, and do not turn on those logical and technical rules which regulate pleadings — they are questions of notice, points of practice not read in open court — no issue is taken on them; the court neither by implication or in fact passes on them, and their propriety in each case may wisely be left to the discretion of the court, having in view the principles of justice and the diligence of the parties. I have run over the doctrine on this subject in England, so as to present the subject at a glance, without reference to the authorities. But a reference to them will show that these distinctions are fully recognized.

J udgment affirmed.

Tripue, Judge, concurred, but furnished no opinion.