What purports to be a bill of exceptions appearing in the transcript in this cause shows that A. 18. YandeGraaf-f presided on the trial in the court below as special judge. The record proper of the trial court as certified to us does not show the occasion for Mr. VandeGraaff’s selection or appointment, nor the manner thereof, nor even the fact of such selection or appointment. It is utterly silent on the subject. On the theory that to the validity of the judgment it was essential that the appointment of the special judge should affirmatively appear upon the record of the trial court, and by certification of that record should for the purpose of the appeal affirmatively appear here, and that, the fact not so appearing, the judgment was void and would not support an appeal, we entered an order on May 11, 1900 (during this term) ■dismissing the appeal. Upon the further consideration of the matter invoked by the motion of the Attorney-General, we have reached a different conclusion, being now of opinion that the judgment as presented to us on the appeal is not void, or even reversible and voidable on account of the state of the record in this court in respect of the trial having been had before a person as judge who is not the regular judge of the Tuskaloosa County Court.
Formerly there was a statute which undertook to provide for the trial of causes in which the judge of the court was disqualified, by special judges. This statute was declared unconstitutional in Ex parte Amos, 51 Ala. 57; and to meet that- decision the provision was embodied in the Constitution itself, and constitutes § 18, Art. VI. of the Constitution of 1875. It is as follows: *76“If in any case, civil or criminal, pending in any circuit, chancery, or city court in this State, the presiding judge or chancellor shall, for any legal cause, be incompetent to try, hear, or render judgment in such cause, the parties or their attorneys of record, if it he a civil case, or the solicitor or other prosecuting officer -and the defendant or defendants, if it be a criminal case, may agree upon some disinterested person practicing in the court and learned in the law, to act as special judge or chancellor, to sit as a court, and to hear, decide and render judgment in the same manner and to the same effect as a judge of the circuit or city court, or chancellor sitting osa court might do in such case. If the case be a civil one, and the parties or their attorneys of record do not agree, or if the case be a criminal one, and the prosecuting officer and the defendant or defendants do not agree, upon a special judge or chancellor, or if either party in a civil case is not represented in court, the clerk of the circuit or city court, or register in chancery, of the court in which said cause is pending, shall appoint the special judge or chancellor who shall preside, try, and render judgment as in this section provided.” It is to be noted that there is no requirement in this section that the agreement of the parties or their attorneys, or of the solicitor and the defendant, or even the appointment of the clerk or register, in the absence of agreement, should be In writing, and none that such agreement as to or appointment of a special judge should be entered on the minutes or records of the court. Doubtless it would be the better practice for such agreement and appointments to be in writing and to be spread on the records; but as the letter and spirit of the organic law may be complied with and executed without any writing or record, it would seem necessarily to follow that the -integrity of judgments rendered by special judges so agreed upon or appointed, or by courts presided over by them, or even the competency of such judges to sit could not be impeached even in a direct proceeding based upon objections taken on the trial, for the want or absence of a written memorial or recordation of their selection or appointment.
*77But however that may be, reason and uniform authority concur in support of the propositions, first, that when a special judge has in fact presided in the trial of ■a cause, there being provision of law for the selection' ■or appointment of such judge under certain conditions in or for the trial of such cause, he is a cle facto judge pro hac vice even though the law require his appointment or selection to be evidenced by writing and spread upon the record, and there is no writing and no record and his judgments are not void, but at most voidable only upon direct attack, and not assailable at all collaterally ; and second, that where such judge, though not appointed or selected in writing, writing being required or 1ns appointment or'selection being required to be •entered of record and there being no record thereof, presides on the trial and judgment is thereon rendered, and no objection is made to bis competency in the court over which he so presides, on appeal all possible objections •in that connection are deemed to have been waived, and the appellate court must conclusively presume that his .selection or appointment was in all respects regular anu in strict compliance with the requirements of law obtaining in the premises; and neither party can be heard for the first time on appeal to object thereto for that the law required the selection or appointment to he in writing, .and it was not, or that the requirement was that the selection or -appointment should be recorded and it was not recorded. The bill of exceptions transcribed in the record before us shows that Mr. VandeGraaff presided ■on the trial of this cause in the court below. 'That bill of exceptions is certified to this court by the clerk of the trial court as a part of the record and proceedings, or record of the proceedings in the trial court under provision and requirement of law, and as -certified becomes a part of the record of the cause in this court. This is ■quite sufficient to overturn the prima facie presumption from the silence of that part of the record proper of the trial court, which is certified to ns that the regular judge presided on the trial and to show that Mr. VandeGraaff did preside. Conceding that the agreement for him to so preside should have been in writing, and that it is not *78shown here to have been in writing, and further that said agreement should have been entered on the records-of that court and that it is not shown here to have been, 'so entered, he was yet the de facto judge of that court in this cause, and no objection having been made in that.court to his sitting in the cause, hearing and determining it, and rendering judgment, the case stands here on this appeal on the presumption, and just as if in point of fact shown by the record here, his selection or appoint had been in writing and entered of record, and such writing and record had fully set forth the conditions: authorizing his selection or appointment as special judge to try this cause—II Encyc. Pl. & Pr. p. 793; Hunter's Admr. v. Fergguson’s, Admr, 13 Kan. 462: Railway Co. v. Rowland, 3 Tex. Civ. App. 158, 166; Schultze v. McLeary, 73 Texas, 94; Greenwood v. State, 116 Ind. 485; Feaster v. Woodfill, 23 Ind. 493; Sweeptzer v. Gaines, 19 Ark. 96; Kenney v. Phillipy, 91 Ind. 511; Winterrowd v. Messick, 37 Ind. 122; Vandever Vandever, 3 Metc. (Ky.), 137; Kennedy v. Steele, 53 Ind. 542; Schlungger v. State, 113 Ind. 295; Bowen v. Swonder, 121 Ind. 164; Lillie v. Freutman, 130 Ind. 16; Stone v. Stone, 2 Metc. (Ky.), 339; Higby v. Ayres, 14 Kan. 331; Budd v. Woolfolk, 4 Bush, (Ky.), 555; Bartley v. Phillips, 114 Ind. 189; Masterson v. Matthews, 60 Ala. 260; State v. Carroll, 38 Conn. 449; Spradling v. State, 17 Ala. 440; Harris’ Heirs v. Harris’ Admr. 41 Ala. 364.
The case of Horton v. Pool, 40 Ala. 629, is supposed to be an authority to the effect that the record of a cause in this court should show affirmatively a valid selection or appointment of a special judge trying it in the court below. It is there said by Byrd, J.: “The record should have shown affirmatively that the person chosen to preside on the trial of the cause in the court below was an attorney of the court. But without determining whether thé record so shows, we are satisfied that there is no error shown by the bill of exceptions of which the-appellant can legally complain.” Now if it was necessary for the record to show affirmatively the appointment of the special judge, it was of course necessary for-*79this court to determine whether it did, and finding that it did not so show, it would have been further necessary for this court to hold that the appointment was erroneous and reverse the judgment or to hold there had. been no appointment and therefore no judge, and that the judgment was void, in fact no judgment, and thereupon to have dismissed the appeal. But as a matter of fact this court affirmed that judgment, holding necessarily not only that it Avas a judgment and AVduld support an appeal, but further that no error was committed, in rendering it. So the conclusion must be that the learned judge delivering the opinion in that case must have meant only that as a matter of orderly practice the-record should sIioav the appointment, qualifications, etc.,, of the special judge, and not that its failure so to show these things affected the integrity of the judgment. Of this case of Horton v. Poole, it is sai’d by the Supreme-Court of Kansas (in a case Avhich curiously enough directly involved our then statute providing for special judges, the action being on an Alabama judgment rendered in a cause in which a special judge presided) in Hunter’s Admr. v. Ferguson's Admr.: The Supreme Court of Alabama by this decision substantially says, that although the record may be silent as to whether the •special judge trying the cause is an attorney or not, yet, that even where the record is attacked directly, on an appeal, no error in the record is affirmatively shown of which the party attacking the record can complain. What would the court have said if the record had been attacked collaterally, as in the case uoav before us? It is supposed [by counsel] that the court Avould have said the judgment AA’as void. The court in that case affirmed the judgment of the court, although the record Avas silent as to Avhether the special judge trying the cause Avas an attorney or not. And Avhoever heard of an appellate court affirming a void judgment? Whoever heard of an appellate court making a void judgment Aralid by affirming the same? Even on appeal the appellate court will not examine to see whether the judge trying the cause Avas legally the judge unless the question was raised in the trial court. A fortiori, a court *80will not examine sucli a question when the judgment is attacked collaterally.” (13 Kan. 473-4).
It may be, and it is so held in several.States, that the competency of a special judge for the trial of a particular cause, the authority for and regularity of his selection, etc., etc., although he is a judge de facto, can be 'tested on appeal from the judgment when the question has been duly raised on the trial; but even in such case the judgment would at most, it would seem, be voidable and reversible for error, and not Amid, and hence unappealable; and the appeal should not be dismissed, but ■considered and determined upon the question of the competency of the special judge, as Avell as upon other •questions reserved. But in any view as to that Ave are noAV clear to the conclusion that when no such question is made in the trial court, the judgment rendered is to all intents and purposes as regular and valid as if the regular judge of the court had presided on t'he trial; and the appeal from it must be entertained accordingly.
It will, therefore, be adjudged that the judgment of this court dismissing this appeal, is vacated and annulled. The motion to dismiss, as also the motion to strike out the bill of exceptions, is overruled; and the cause stands for consideration under the original submission on its merits.
TYSON, J.It appears from the judgment entry that ■on the day of the arraignment of the defendant upon the indictment, he was tried. “Capital punishment having been AAraived by consent,” no day Avas set for the trial of the case, and no special jury Avas drawn as required. For this error the judgment of conviction must be reAmrsed.—Bankhead v. The State, 124 Ala. 14. We have examined the record and find no other error.
ReAmrsed and remanded.