We think it is too strict an interpretation of the record of the proceedings before the magistrate, to hold *80that the defendants are thereby estopped from the exercise of a right to plead to the merits of the action in the superior court. The acts and agreements of the parties, as set forth in this record, are to be construed in view of the legal effect properly attributable to judgments in civil actions originally cognizable before magistrates, when they are removed by appeal to the court above. Under Gen. Sts. c. 120, § 25, which is a reenactment of Rev. Sts. c. 85, § 13, an appeal lies from the judgment of a magistrate rendered upon a default. Holman v. Sigourney, 11 Met. 436. Ball v. Burke, 11 Cush. 80. And, in all cases of appeal, whether on a judgment by default or otherwise, it is expressly provided by the same section of the General Statutes that the case “ shall be entered, tried and determined in the court appealed to, in like manner as if it had been originally commenced therein.” Under this provision there can be no doubt that, unless there is some waiver or stipulation to vary the rights of parties, an appeal opens the whole case as to the law, the facts and the judgment. Nor can the fact that a defendant was defaulted before the magistrate be allowed to have any operation on the rights of a party on the trial of his case in the court above, if due effect is given to the above cited provision. The appeal, of itself, takes off the default, and restores the defendant in the court above to his right to answer to the merits of the case.
There is nothing in the record now before us from which any waiver of this right can be fairly implied. After the default, the case stood for the assessment of damages. Upon this question, it was the right of the defendants, as well as of the plaintiff, to be heard before the magistrate. Gen. Sts. c. 133, § 2. By their default, the defendants had only admitted that the plaintiff had a good cause of action. The agreement that the case should stand open until a particular day, for the purpose of an assessment of damages, was only an arrangement for the further and final disposition of the case before the magistrate, which did not operate as a waiver or surrender of the defendants’ full right of appeal. Certainly there is nothing to show that it was so intended or understood by the parties at the time, nor is there *81anything in the nature of the transaction which warrants the conclusion that any such legal effect is necessarily to be given to it.
But it is suggested that the peculiar nature of the record in this case, as made up by the magistrate, is such as to preclude the defendants from availing themselves of their right to open the merits of the case on the appeal. But we do not think this is the legitimate construction of the language of the record. The judgment appealed from, and which is described as “ that judgment,” includes not only the assessment of damages, but also the judgment on the default that “ the plaintiff has a right to maintain her action.” It is the entire adjudication, embracing all the interlocutory as well as the final conclusion of the court, which constitutes the judgment from which the appeal was taken.
In the case of Commonwealth v. Hagarman, 10 Allen, 401, no question was raised as to the right of the defendant to plead anew on the trial of the case in the appellate court. The single question there decided was as to his right to withdraw his plea of guilty before the magistrate, so that it should not be used as evidence against him on the trial in the court above; in other words, to strike it from the record. But it was not held that the whole case was not open to the defendant before the jury. On the contrary, the case was tried as upon an issue of not guilty, and, no evidence being offered on either side except the confession of the defendant on record by his plea of guilty before the magi trate, the jury were properly instructed to render a verdict against the defendant. Exceptions sustained.