mony before master: adjournments, without-notice. Leaving out of question tbe sufficiency of tbe notice given by tbe master to bring tbe parties before him, and assuming that he made a clerical mistake in reporting that he began taking the testimony on the twenty-fifth of October, instead of the thirty-first, his record discloses that, while adjournments were had from time . to time until November 4th, there is none on . or after that date, and yet the further taking of testimony was resumed November 11th (written October 11th, but probably another clerical mistake), when Bullock and Ohampion testified. There was no adjournment made to the eleventh, nor was there any notice given to the parties in interest that such taking of testimony would be resumed, nor did they waive it by an appearance without such adjournment notice or appearance, it was clearly error to receive such testimony. Parties can not be expected to know, at their peril, that testimony may be taken at the master’s office, when neither an adjournment nor notice advises them of it.
bonD; judgment, without notice. 2. It appears that pending the hearing, a paper purporting to be a bond to answer any judgment Champion might recover was “filed” in the cause, and after the master’s report was confirmed, the court rendered judgment against the persons purporting to be SIlreties on the bond. The bond does not appear to have been acknowledged before the court or judge. It is manifest that these persons never were in any sense before the court. They were not parties to the cause, and were not given any notice of the proceedings against them. If the signatures were forgeries, or if the paper had never been delivered, these persons were given no opportunity to avail themselves of such defense. “It is an acknowledged general principle that judgments and decrees are binding only upon parties and privies. The reason of the rule is founded in the immutable principle of natural justice that no man’s right should be prejudiced by the judgment or decree of a court, without an opportunity of defending the right.” Hollingsworth v. Barbour, 4 Pet. 466. To argue, that, by the terms of the bond, they consented to become parties, to submit to the jurisdiction of the court and to the rendition of the judgment by it, is to assume they have con■sented. As to whether they have consented is the very point which the court had no power to determine in their absence. Whether a bond so “filed” in a cause can be enforced at all without a new and independent action, it is unnecessary to decide at this time. Bor these reasons the cause is reversed and remanded for trial anew.
Smith, O. J., and Laughlin and Hamilton, JJ., concur.