announced the opinion of the Court:
The defendants in error by their counsel insist, that the writ of error in this case should be dismissed, because it is a writ of error and supersedeas to two separate judgments rendered in separate and distinct causes. There is nothing in this position. The judgment on a forthcoming bond is not considered ás brought up by a supersedeas to the first judgment, see Moss et al. v. Moss’s adm’r, 4 H. & M. 303; but the two judgments constitute one proceeding, so far as granting a super-sedeas is concerned; and if the judgment on the forthcoming bond has been rendered before the supersedeas is issued, and the error exists in the first judgment, the petition ought to pray a supersedeas to both judgments; and they should be both embraced in the supersedeas. Monroe v. Webb’s ex’rs, 4 Munf. 73; McCormick v. Bailey supra. So far have the courts gone in holding, that it is proper for the appellate courts to try the whole mat*789ter in one case, that an appellate court may properly extend the supersedeas first awarded to the judgment subsequently obtained on the forthcoming bond. See Bell v. Bogg, 4 Munf. 260. We must therefore consider this case on its merits.
Syllabus i.Did the circuit court err in reversing and annulling the judgment obtained by default some four years and five months previous to this notice and motion to reverse it? The motion was made under the 5th section of chapter 134 of the Code of West Virginia, page 637, which among other things provides, that “ the court, in which there is a judgment by default, may on 'motion reverse such judgment for any error, tor which an appellate court might reverse it if the following ^section was not enacted: * * * . Every such motion shall be after reasonable notice to the opposite party, his agent or attorney in fact or in law, and shall be within five years from the date of the judgment.”
The proceedings in this case were all regular and within the five years; and the question properly presented to the circuit court was, whether this judgmentby default ought to be reversed. The reasons for reversing it assigned in the notice were, that there was no service of process on the three defendants, residents of. Cabell county. The sheriff of Cabell county returned the process sent him, executed on these three parties,and to this return he appended his name “D. J. Smith,” but not his official character, and it no where appears on the face of this return, that he was the sheriff of Cabell county. But this defect the circuit court of Kanawha county permitted to be cured by permitting th§ sheriff of Cabell county on this motion to reverse, to amend his return according to the facts sworn to by him, and to append thereto his signature in his official cháracter, he stating, that he had failed to sign it in that way to the original return by inadvertence. In this the_ circuit court did not err, as was expressly decided by this Court in Capehart’s adm’r v. Cunningham’s adm’r, 12 W. Va. 250,
syllabus 2.But was the process in this case so served on these defendants living in Cabell county, as to justify tbe clerk at rules in entering up an office-judgment against them, and the court on their not appearing entering up the judgment by default against two of them, F. D. Beuhring and the intestate, Albert Laidley, of the plaintiffs in error ? The amended return of the sheriff only showed, that he had served upon them a writ not in any manner signed by the clerk of the court. Some courts have held, that a writ not signed by the clerk or proper officer is an absolute nullity, and a judgment rendered on such writ would, if this were so, be absolutely void (see Stoyton v. Newcomer, 1 Eng. (Ark.) 453; Smith v. Assanassieffe, 2 Rich. (S. C.) 334; Foss v. Issett, 4 Ia. 77); but some of these cases, which apparently hold such a writ absolutely void, are capable of being interpreted to mean only, that they are voidable. The great weight of authority is, that such a writ not signed by the clerk is not absolutely void, but is voidable only, and being voidable, if after its service a judgment was rendered by default, such a judgment would be valid, unless set aside by proper proceedings in the case or upon a writ of error. But none of the authorities hold such a writ to be a good and valid writ. They all hold, that by proper proceedings it may be quashed as insufficient, or the judgment rendered on it as liable to be reversed, unless the defendant by his appearing and pleading or in some other way has waived this defect. See Lovell v. Sabin, 13 N. H. 37; Huntley v. Harvey et al., 37 Vt. 107; Rudd, surv., v. Thompson & Barnes, 22 Ark. 363; Parsons v. Swett, 32 N. H. 79; Ripley v. Warren, 2 Pick. 392.
These and other cases were reviewed by this Court in Ambler, Trustee v. Leach et al., 15 W. Va. 677; and the conclusion of the court was thus expressed by us in the syllabus of that case: “ A writ otherwise regular is not absolutely null and void if its date is blank and it is not signed by the clerk. Such writ is voidable, and *791may be avoided by motion to quash if made by the defendant; but if not so avoided, or in some other manner, in the suit, and a judgment is rendered against the defendant by default on such writ, and such judgment is not set aside by motion to the court or by writ of error it is valid and binding.” The inference to be drawn from this decision is clearly, that in the judgment of this Court a judgment obtained by default on the service of such a writ, as was served on the three defendants residing in Cabell county, ought to be set aside on a motion made to the circuit court, such as was made in this case, and if refused by such court', then by this Court on writ of error such judgment by default would be reversed. This is the inevitable conclusion to be drawn from that case • for when a judgment is obtained'by default, the statute of jeofails has no effect on such judg-. ment, and the Appellate Court will look into the writ and all the other proceedings. Hatcher v. Lewis, 4 Rand. 152.
Cases have been reversed for defects in the writ far less serious than the omission of the clerk to sign the writ at all, a defect so serious, that some courtsj as we have seen, have held it to render the writ absolutely void. While such is not, we hold, the effect of-such an omission, it is nevertheless a serious defect, much greater than defects, which have been held sufficient to reverse judgments by default. Thus an omission in the writ to claim the charges of protest was held in Hatcher v. Lewis sufficient to reversea judgment.by default. In Rudd, surv. v. Thompson and Barnes, 22 Ark. 363, the court says: “ It has been the practice of this court to reverse judgments by default in cases,.where the summons was without the official seal of the clerk, and such writs were not treated as void.” Much more should a judgment be reversed, when rendered tíy default, and the clerk had failed to sign the writ or authenticate it in any manner.
The plaintiff in the original suit endeavored to have *792this fatal defect in the writ cured by the clerk’s asking |eavjng 0f the court, when the motion to reverse the judgment was being tried, to be permitted to amend the writ served on the defendants residing in Cabell county by signing his name thereto ; but the court properly refused to permit him to make this amendment. If it had been permitted, the amended return of the sheriff would have been thereby rendered false. The sheriff of Cabell, as he stated, had served the summons on these defendants by leaving with them severally an office-copy of the writ without the name of the clerk signed thereto. This would not have been a copy of the writ such as the statute requires to be given to the defendant as a service of the summons. So that if this amendment of the writ had been allowed, its only ef-feet would have been to have compelled the sheriff to have again amended his return according to the facts; and- this would have shown, that there had never been a proper service of the writ as amended on any of those defendants.
There is a great difference between the amendment of a return of a summons and of the writ by the clerk. The sheriff’s amendment of his return simply shows the actual facts, as they had always existed ; and the courts have been very liberal in permitting a sheriff to amend his return, as it obviously promotes the ends of justice and wrongs no one. So liberal have the courts been in permitting sheriffs to amend their returns, that in Woodsworth, &c., v. Mill et al. 4 Gratt. 90 the court actually permitted a sheriff to amend his return on an execution, after an action based on the execution had been commenced against him and his sureties. But the amendment by a clerk of a summons issued by him is a very different thing, as its effect is to make false the return of the sheriff on such summons. It is therefore not as in the case of the sheriff’s amendment of his return to bring before the court the actual facts, as they had really always existed, but the very reverse. Ac*793cordingly no such liberality in amending writs has ever existed, as has always existed in the amendment of returns by the sheriff on process either mesne or fi'nal.
It is true, our code chapter 125, section 14, page 601 does allow the court to permit the plaintiff to amend the summons by inserting therein the true name of the defendant, where there has been a misnomer. But as the same section takes from the defendant the right to plead a misnomer.in abatement, it is obvious, that both parties by such.an amendment remain in the same position., as if no amendment of the writ was made. The only effect of such an amendment being to cause the right name of the defendant to appear in the judgment, which is simply a convenience, as he would be equally bound by'the .judgment, if rendered against him by his wrong name. The next section i. e. section 15 of chapter 125 of the Code, page 601, goes further and gives the power to the court to amend the writ in any case, when the defendant has pleaded in abatement any defect in the writ or return or any variance in the writ from the declaration, But it should be observed that the court is only permitted to allow such amendments of the writ, when the defendant has been served with process, has appeared and pleaded in abatement. As after such plea had been disposed of, a new process could be issued and served corresponding with the proposed amended process, the only effect of this is to save all this trouble, and the defendant being actually in court and therefore knowing of the amendment, the statute wisely declares, that he need not be formally served with process, but he shall be treated, as though served with the amended process; and even then, that this amendment under these circumstances may not operate as a surprise or injustice to the defendant, the section we have referred to says, it shall be done only on such terms as the court deems just. Thus careful has our statute-law been in the few cases in which it permits a summons to be amended.
It seems to me therefore, as the defendants never *794appeared in the original suit, the court in it would c]ear]y have had no power before the rendition of the original judgment in this case to have permitted the clerk to have amended the writ served on the defendants resident in Cabell, county, by signing his name thereto after the service of the summons on them; and much less could the court, more than four years after the final judgment had been rendered, authorize the clerk to so amend this summons, especially when on his statement it was doubtful, whether this writ addressed to the sheriff of Cabell county was ever really issued by the clerk at all, or whether it was taken out of the office without his authority or that of his deputy. The circuit court was therefore fully justified by reason of this error alone in the original suit in reversing the judgment, it had entered by default of all the defendants, and in remanding the cause to rules to be there correctly proceeded with.
We will pass over the second and fifth errors assigned in the notice of the motion to reverse the original judgment, as they were much less serious errors if errors at all; they are merely objections of form, and as tíhe case must for the reason before assigned in accordance with the judgment of the circuit court be remanded to rules, these supposed errors, if they be really errors, may be readily corrected, so that it is unnecessary, that we should consider them, as it is not probable, that the circuit court will be in this case likely to be called upon again to act upon them.
We will now consider the third error assigned in said notice. If it be an error, it is one of substance affecting the rights of the parties to this suit and is incapable of correction. This alleged error in the original judgment and proceedings is, that this is an action of debt based on “writing under seal,” as the declaration shows, brought jointly against the obligors in such sealed writing and the assignors of such writing, improperly called endorsers. It is insisted, that these parties by putting *795their names on the back of this writing under seal and by its subsequent protest did not become liable to be proceeded against jointly with the original obligors in an action of debt; but that the protest was of no avail to affect their liability, which by virtue of their putting their names on the back of a common law obligation was that of assignors at most, that is,' that such assignors could only at most enter into a collateral obligation to be responsible for the debt; in case the plaintiff after the exercise of due diligence failed to make the debt out of the obligors in the sealed writing.
Syllabus 5The. plaintiffs in the original suit insist, that by our statute-law this writing being on its face payable and negotiable at a bank, though it was under seal, was nevertheless mercantile paper liable to be protested, and that the endorsers of it incurred the same responsibilities and were liable to be proceeded against in the same manner, as if they had endorsed a similar note drawn by the makers and signed but not sealed by them.
The question in dispute is : What is the true charac ter of a paper promising to pay money to a particular person or his order payable and negotiable at a particular bank in this state, when said writing is under the hand and seal of the makers and endorsed by the payee ? Is such a paper under our law mercantile paper, which should be protested; or is it simply a common law obligation, a bond, and are the endorsers of it simply assignors, and, not endorsers ? There can be no question, that such a paper prior to the passage of our Code in 1868 was not commercial paper but was a mere bond, on which a joint action , of debt against the drawers and the endorsers, or more properly speaking the obligor and the assignors, could not have been maintained. It was so expressly decided in Mann v Sutton, 4 Hand. 253. The opinion of the court in that case is very short; and as it is important that we take a correct view of the grounds of this decision, I shall quote the opinion, as they cannot otherwise be stated more briefly and clearly. The court says:
*796“ The instrument, which is' the foundation of this action, is a single bill under seal, by which F. F. Sutton promises to pay. to W. Sutton or order, six months after date, negotiable and payable at the Farmers Bank of Virginia the sum of $3,000.00. There are several endorsers and a joint action of debt is brought against the obligors and endorsers. A demurrer to the declaration was put in, and sustained by the court below. The simple question is, can this action be sustained?
‘'Upon general principles there could not be the doubt of a moment. The contracts of the obligor and the different endorsers are several, distinct, and of different grades. The obligor has bound himself by a sealed instrument; the endorsers by their hands merely. The defence cannot be the same.
“ But we have an act of Assembly, which authorized the holder of a foreign bill of exchange protested to commence and prosecute an action of debt for principal, damages, interest and charges of protest, against the drawers and endorsers jointly or against either of them separately; and we have another act saying, thatnoies made payable at the Virginia or Farmers Bank, shall be placed on the footing of foreign bills of exchange; and as this obligation is made negotiable and payable at the Farmers Bank, it has been supposed, I presume, that this authorized the joint action. The conclusion to which we have come in the matter differs toto eoelo from this. The act says notes made negotiable, &c., shall be on the footing of bills of exchange.
“This is not a note, but a specialty; differing in dignity, in the .mode of defence, indeed, in all the legal'consequences flowing from it. It is a general rule, that these new remedies, innovating on the settled doctrines of the common law, shall be taken strictly. But the most liberal and latitudinous construction, it seems to us, could not extend the act of Assembly in the case before us. We are clear, that the judgment be affirmed.”
The statute-law remained unchanged after this decis*797ion, till our Code was passed in 1868, except that its provisions were extended to such notes payable at any bank or savings-institution, and on such notes an action o'f debt was authorized against all liable by virtue thereof or any intermediate number of them. See Code of 1860, ch. 144 secs. 7 and 11, p. 629. The tenth section of said act in the Code of 1860 was as follows:
Syllabug 4“ 10. An action of debt may be maintained upon any note or writing, by which there is a promise, undertaking or obligation to pay money, if signed by the party who is to be charged thereby or his agent.”
The eleventh section in the Code of 1860 was :
“ 11. Upon any such note, which on its face is payaable at a particular bank, or at a particular office thereof for discount and deposit or the place of business of a savings-institution, or savings-bank, and upon any bill of exchange, whether such note or bill be payable in or out of the State, if the same be protested, an action of debt may be maintained and judgment given jointly against all liable by virtue thereof, whether drawers, endorsers or acceptors, or against any one or intermediate number of them for the principal and charges of protest, with interest thereon from the date of such protest and in the case of such bill for the damages also.”
It is not disputed, that under these provisions of the Code of 1860 an action of debt, such as was brought in the case before us, would not lie against the maker or more properly obligor and the endorsers or more properly assignors jointly of any note under seal, and that the decisions and reasonings of the court in Mann v. Sutton, 4 Rand. 254, above stated, would be conclusive of the case, if this suit had been brought prior to the passage of the Code of 1868. But it is insisted, that the alterations made in these two sections in the Code of 1868 entirely, changed the law and made both the reasoning and decision in Mann v. Sutton, 4 Rand. 254, no longer good or law.
The changes made in these two sections of the Code of *7981868 were these: in the 10th section after the words “an actjon 0f debt” were inserted the words “or assumpsit,” and after the words “any note or writing” were inserted the words “whether sealed or not.” In the 11th section the only change made, is in the phrase “an action of debt may be maintained,” which is made to read “an action of debt or assumpsit may be maintained,” that is, the words “or assumpsit” are inserted after the word debt.
The apparent object of the Legislature in making these alterations in these two sections was simply to permit an action of assumpsit to be. brought in certain cases, where under the common law and the Code of 1860 only an action of debt could be brought; and it would not seem, that anything else was intended by these changes. "We certainly can not suppose it was the purpose of the Legislature by these changes to alter the character of the obligations of parties to any contract. If this had been their -purpose, they certainly ought not to have permitted these new provisions to have operated upon and affected contracts, which had already been made. Such legislation would have clearly been unconstitutional, violating the obligation of contracts. If it had by these changes been intended to change the character of the obligation, entered into by one who endorsed a bond, from a collateral obligation to be responsible for the debt, if it could not be made out of the obligor or maker of the bond by the use of due diligence, into a direct obligation to pay the debt, for which he might be sued in debt at once, as contended, then such legislation would have been null and void, unless it was confined to contracts made after the passage of the Code of 1868. It was however perfectly general and applied equally to contracts made before as well as after the passage of the law. If, as we understand, these changes merely gave an additional remedy in enforcing certain contracts without in any manner altering the rights of the parties to the contracts or their liabilities) then such legislation was legitimate and proper; but if it did affect, as is *799claimed, the rights and liabilities of parties, it was improper, unless confined to future contracts in its operation, which it was not by its words. These considerations greatly strengthen our conclusion, that the only object of these changes was to give an additional remedy, and not to change the liabilities of parties either as to past or future contracts.
These statutes were merely remedial. The only change in the 11th section is, we have seen, by the insertion of the words “or assumpsit” to allow a joint action of assumpsit to be brought against the makers and endorsers and other parties to negotiable paper, or against any intermediate number of them, when such a joint action, if brought under the law as it was previously, could only have been brought in debt. For while at common law assumpsit would lie against any one of the parties, as the drawer of a bill, the maker of a note, or the endorser of either, if negotiable, yet no joint action of assumpsit before this change in this 11th section could ever have been brought sgainst any two of them,' as a maker and endorser or two separate endor; ers. This, I conceive, was the whole purpose-of the Legislature in this change made in this 11th section.
It was contended by the counsel for the defendants in error, that a much more fundamental change in our law was effected by these alterations. It is not claimed, that this fundamental change is produced by the alterations directly made in this 11th section, for it is obvious, that standing alone the alteration made in this 11th section could have no greater or different effect than we have attributed to it. But it is claimed, that when this 11th section in the Code of 1868 says, that a joint action of debt may be brought against the maker and endorsers of any such note, that it meant a very different thing from the same language in the 11th section of the Code of 1860. It is claimed, that the words “any such note” in the Code of 1860 in this 11th section referred to the note spoken of in the preceeding section, *800which was “any note in writing by which there is a promise to pay money; ” and therefore clearly it did not extend to or include a sealed instrument or bond. But this preceding section also referred by the words “any such note” in the 11th section in the Code of 1868, had been greatly changed, and by that section a note had in effect been defined to mean “a writing whether sealed or not, by which there is a promise to pay money; ” and on “any such note” the 11th section gives a joint action against the maker and endorser, and thus it has a very different meaning and effect from this 11th section in the Code of 1860. >
Now it is true, that this 10th section of the Code of 1868 is awkwardly worded, and standing by itself it might be understood by one, who did not know that the word note meant always an unsealed writing, that the author of this section supposed it might mean a sealed writing. But whatever doubt may be created as to the meaning of the words “any such note” by the awkward language of this 10th section, it would seem to be effectually removed by the fact, that the 7th section, as contained in the Code of i860, and which defines what is to be considered as mercantile paper in this State, was re-enacted in the same words in the Code of 1868. It would therefore seem clear, that under the 7th section, as contained in the Code of 1868, no writing under seal but only certain promissory notes could be protested. When therefore the 11th section speaks of such notes being protested, it interprets itself and shows clearly, that by such notes is meant such notes only as under the 7th section could be protested, that is, certain promissory notes, excluding of course all writings under seal.
We are therefore satisfied, that no joint action lay against the obligors or makers of the writing sued on in this case and the endorsers or assignors of it; and therefore the original judgment in this case entered against the several parties jointly was erroneous, and it was properly reversed by the circuit court on the motion.
*801The fourth ground of error assigned in the notice of this motion was, that this writing or note was not payable at a particular bank. On the face of the writing it was payable at the Bank of Huntington ; and there is apparently no basis for this assignment of error. But in argument before this Court it is insisted, that the Bank of Huntington is an unincorporated bank, and though there is no evidence of this in the record, and the evh dence on which the court acted, when it entered the original judgments, does not appear, yet it is said, that this Court knows judicially whatjbanks have been incorporated in this State, and thus judicially knows, that the Bank of Huntington is not an incorporated bank.
In answer to these positions it is urged, that the notice of said motion did not inform the parties fairly, that this fact, that the Bank of Huntington ivas not a chartered bank, would be urged as a reason for reversing said judgment, nor does the record show, that it was relied on, when the motion was acted on by the circuit court, and that unless a party, who asks a court to reverse a judgment by default on notice and motion under the statute, specifies in his notice a particular ground of objection, he can not rely upon such ground before the circuit judge or in the Appellate Court.
The case of Coffman v. Sanger, 21 Gratt. 263, strongly supports these views. I am however not satisfied in my own mind, that the views taken by the court in that case are sound.. And if it was necessary in this case to consider this alleged error and several others, which were not mentioned in the notice except as included under the phrase “ errors apparent on the face of the record,” I would consider the point, whether this Court has a right to look into such errors apparent on the face of the record, but which were not specifically mentioned in the notice. But this is itself an important question, and as it is really unnecessary for us to consider any of these alleged errors not specifically named in the notice, we *802will not do so, as our right to do so may be regarded as questionable.
For'the reasons, which have been assigned, I am of the opinion, that the judgment of the circuit court of Kanawha county rendered on the 27th of June, 1879, reversing and annulling the previous judgment by default, which had been entered by the said court, and also the judgment rendered by said court on December 18, 1879, reversing and annulling a judgment upon a forthcoming bond on an execution issued on said judgment by default should both be affirmed, and the defendants in error should recover of the plaintiff in error their costs in this Court expended and $30.00 damages.
The Other Judges Concurred.JUDGMENTS ÁEEIRMED.