— The judgment-entry found and certified in this record shows that the verdict of the jury was rendered, and the judgment and decree pronounced, on the 4th day of March, 1882. The appeal was prayed and taken April 5th, 1882. Excluding the first day, and including the .last, there were thirty-two days between the rendition of the judgment and the grant of the appeal. The statute (Code of 1876, § 3954) requires that such appeals shall be taken “ within thirty days after the determination of such contest.” An application was made to the Circuit Court for a manda/mus, to compel the judge of probate to change the date of his judgment and decree, so as to make it bear date March. 6th, 1882; but the application was denied. An appeal from that ruling was then prosecuted to this court, and the judgment of the Circuit Court was affirmed. We held, that the final judgment establishing the will was correctly dated March 4.- — Lanier v. Richardson, 72 Ala. 134.
The present case comes before us on a motion to dismiss the appeal, as not being taken in time, and we are requested to review our former ruling. We have carefully studied the able argument of counsel, and have examined the authorities referred to: Two of them arose on judgments pronounced on *367verdicts rendered.- — First National Bank v. Gary, 14 So. Car. 571; Humphrey v. Havens, 9 Minn. 318." The others arose in chancery and probate cases, where the judgment of the court remained locked up in the breast of the presiding justice, until it was formulated and formally rendered. The cases from South Carolina and Minnesota are scarcely reconcilable with our rulings in Lanier v. Richardson, supra. The other cases, growing out of chancery and probate decrees, are certainly correct, and would be so ruled by us. This, from the nature of the question. Until the decree is pronounced in such cases, there is nothing to foreshadow or indicate what it will be.
When, however, there is a trial by jury, in a common-law proceeding, and the jury returns a general verdict, the judgment, not being arrested, follows the verdict, as the conclusion follows the premises in any other syllogism. “ It is therefore considered,” is the language of the court, and of the law, in such cases; and if, on a proper verdict rendered, the judge trying the cause should, without setting aside the verdict, or other sufficient reason, refuse to render judgment thereon, he would be compellable to proceed to give judgment, although what particular judgment he should render would probably not be commanded. This, because mandamus, as a rule, can compel the exercise of the judicial function, but does not command what judgment shall be rendered.
The system and practice in our common-law courts of general jurisdiction, we think,' furnish a safe analogy and guide in eases like the present. The statute directs, that the minutes of those courts must be read each morning in open court. Code of 1876, § 546. This must mean, that the minutes made by the clerk, of the court’s proceedings during one day, must be read on the morning of the next succeeding day. Now, in practice, these proceedings are generally entered up after the adjournment of the court for the day; frequently, during the night, after judicial hours; and often finished up during the next morning, before the court, convenes. Tet the judgment bears date, and should bear date, of the day the proceedings were had in the court. Such, we think, has been the universal custom since our judicial, system was organized. Such was the rule, when our judgments operated liens on lands, without the issue of executions. — Pope v. Brandon, 2 Stewart, 401; Morris v. Ellis, 3 Ala. 560; Campbell v. Spence, 4 Ala. 543; Mansony v. United States Bank, Ib. 735; Quinn v. Wiswall, 7 Ala. 645; Bliss v. Watkins, 16 Ala. 229; Cunningham v. Fontaine, 25 Ala. 644; Dow v. Whitman, 36 Ala. 604; Pearson v. Darrington, 21 Ala. 169; Ala. Coal & Nav. Co. v. State. ex rel., 54 Ala. 36; Holtzclaw v. Ware, 34 Ala. 307.
*368One view of this question, it seems to us, renders our solution of the statute we have referred to, almost unanswerable. Many of our Circuit Courts — probably, a large majority of them — have limited terms, of so many days, or so many weeks. All will admit, that any judicial act, done after the expiration of the prescribed term, would be coram non judice. Courts are required, and usually sit, each day of the entire term. The public service demands it. The minutes of the last day’s proceedings must be entered up, and it is common knowledge, as well as an irresistible inference, that this service is frequently not completed, until after the close of judicial hours of the last day; nay, frequently until after midnight of that day. Are all such judgments and orders void, because they were not entered and approved within the. term the statute prescribes ? If a record were to come before us, showing it was rendered one or two days after the statutory' termination of the term, we would certainly pronounce it void. Would not this be the inevitable result, if we were to hold that judgments, written up after judicial hours, can take effect only as of the next judicial day ? We think a judgment, following a verdict, takes effect as of the day the verdict was rendered, unless there is something in the record showing it was not pronounced on that day. The judgment in this cause shows it was rendered on the same day the jury returned their verdict in the morning.
It would seem this ruling works no hardship in this case. On the very same day — March 4th — on which the verdict was rendered, as we must suppose, counsel entered into a written agreement, made part of the record, that the contestants be allowed sixty days within which to prepare their bill of exceptions, and have it signed. This certainly tends strongly to show the contest was then considered at an end in that court. Would it be contended the sixty days did not commence to run until the Monday following ?
Appeal dismissed.