— By an act passed in 1822, it is provided that appeals shall lie from justices of the peace, to the respective Circuit or County Courts, under the same regulations as thereto*266fore prescribed by law, for taking appeals to the Circuit Courts. (Aik. Dig. 261.) Again, it is enacted that the judges of the County Courts, within their respective Counties, shall have full power concurrent with the power of the judges of the Circuit Courts, to grant writs of certiorari and supersedeas returnable to the County Courts, under the same regulations now in force, relative to granting the aforesaid writs by judges of the Circuit Courts, (Aik. Dig. 246.) Here is a clear delegation to the County Courts, of the right to revise the judgment of justices of the peace, either on appeal or by certiorari.
But it is possible that in questioning the appellate jurisdiction of the County Court, the plaintiff would be understood as insisting that the justice of the peace had no original jurisdiction, of the case, stated in the notice, and that the primary jurisdiction, if vested in any tribunal, pertains to the Circuit or County Court.
The act of 1824, [Aik. Dig. 175] authorities the plaintiff, in an execution issued by a justice of the peace, to give notice to the constable or his sureties, and move for a judgment against him or them, before the justice of the peace, for failing to return the execution, or to pay over the money collected on the same. And a statute passed in 1834, gives a similar remedy against a constable and his sureties, for a failure to make the money on an execution, before the return day of the same. [Acts of Legislature commencing its session of 1833.]
By an act of 1829, [Aik. Dig. 176] the Circuit or County Courtis invested with the jurisdiction, to try on notice and motion, a suggestion against a constable and his sureties, that the constable’s return on an execution is false; or that he has failed to make the money on the same, as with due diligence he might have done. These are all the legislative acts relating to the subject.
Neither of these statutes embrace the grounds of the motion as disclosed in the notice, and but for the great indulgence accorded to proceedings before justices of the peace, it would have been the duty of the County Court to sustain the motion to *267quash* But the act of 1819, [Aik. Dig. 261,] in aid of that jurisdiction, declares that in cases of appeal from judgments of justices of the peace, the court before whom such appeal shall be brought, shall proceed to try the same, according to the justice and equity of the case, without regarding any defect in the war-ant, capias, summons, or other proceedings of the justice of the peace before whom the same was tried. This court has always given to this statute, a liberal construction, in advancement of its object, [Perry v. Brown, Ala. Rep. 55; Smith & Hill v. Cobb, 1 Stewt. Rep. 62; McGrew v. Adams & Elliot, 2 Stewt. Rep. 507; Thomson v. Pierce, 3 Stewt. Rep. 427; Morrison, Administrator, v. Morrison, 3 Stewt. Rep. 444; Hager v. Thompson, 2 Porter’s Rep. 48.]
Though the statutes cited do not authorise the proceeding against the constable and his sureties, for failing to “execute” a ca sa, yet as the court was to try the case de novo, on an issue to be made up, at, or before the trial; and the defects of the warrant are not to be regarded, it was competent for the defendant in error, to have amplified in his statement, the ground of his motion. This was done, and the statement alleges with sufficient particularity, the delivery of the ca sa to Patterson, its amount, date, &c., the suretyship of Rosser and Forniss, and the refusal to execute and return the casa. It was needless to have alleged the failure to “ execute” the process, the failure to return it, being recognized as sufficient, yet the employment of this term can, at most, be regarded as surplusage, and was not a proper cause of demurrer. The County Court, then, did not err in refusing to quash the proceedings before the justice of the peace or to sustain a demurrer to the statement.
We cannot ascertain from the judgment whether the plaintiffs were, by the judgment of the County Court, charged with ten per cent, damages on the amount of the execution, in addition to interest. If they were, that court mistook the law, for the statute is very explicit in declaring, that a judgment for a failure to return final process, shall be rendered against,the constable and his sureties, for the amount for which the same issued, with in*268terest thereon, from the clay on which the judgment was rendered, to the day of making the motion, together with the costs of the motion. [Aik. Dig. 175.]
The sum claimed by the defendant in error, it appears as well from the judgment of the County Court, as from other parts of the record, exceeded twenty dollars. In fact, the parties themselves seem to have so considered it, or an issue was very unnecessary. This being the case, a judgment could not have been regularly rendered without the intervention of a jury, [Aik. Dig. 260] unless that mode of trial may be regarded as waived, by not asking for it.
The County Court also erred, in giving a judgment against Holley and Hobbs, neither of whom were parties to the case in that court. ■
The consequence is that the judgment is reversed, and the case remanded.