dissenting, said:
As the opinion of the court in this case proceeds upon the ground that the judgment of the county court is void, I am constrained to dissent. The judgment is held to be void, because no entry was made on the record assigning a reason for the^ failure of the regularly elected and qualified judge of the court to sit in the case in which the judgment was rendered; and this ruling is based upon the act of March 19, 1884, now carried into section 3049 of the Code of 188T. I do not so construe the statute. In my opinion, such' entry is made necessary by the statute only when the judge of the court is so situated as to render it improper, in his judgment, for him to preside at the trial. This seems to me to be so obviously the correct construction of the statute as to admit of no doubt. Suppose, for example, the judge from sickness is unable to attend, or for any reason is prevented from attending the court. How, in such a case, if the view taken in the opinion of the majority of the court be correct, is the court to he opened at all P And yet, if I correctly understand that opinion, an. entry of some sort on the record is essential to give authority to another county judge to hold the *5court, for a single moment, in any case. Authority from any other source, it is said, is self assumed. Surely this could not have been the intention of the legislature.
It is, moreover, assumed in the opinion that the judge of the court was present, though not presiding, during the trial. Indeed, it is said that the fact of his presence at the trial is conceded. But this, I think, is a mistake. I do not find any such concession in the record. The petition for the writ, it is true, alleges that “the said John O. Ewell, county judge of Lancaster county, was neither unable, nor did he fail to attend the said September term of said county court, hut, on the contrary, was at the courthouse of the said county on each of the days of said term ; nor, as your petitioner believes, was he, by reason of ill health, prevented from sitting daily,” etc. But of this there is no proof, nor is it admitted in the answer.
But admit the allegation to he true. Does that make the judgment void ? I think clearly not. This is not a direct proceeding to reverse the judgment, nor, as the law now is, does a writ of error lie from this court in a case of a contested election of county officers. The judgment is collaterally assailed, and being a judgment rendered by a court of general jurisdiction, acting within the scope of its powers, and proceeding according to the course of the common law, and held at the time by one of the county judges of the state, it must, I think, he held to he valid. For no principle is better established than that a judgment of such a court, when collaterally drawn in question, is not affected by errors or irregularities which do not show a want of jurisdiction, or an excess of jurisdiction, on the part of the court by which it was rendered. Indeed, as was said by Mr. Justice Miller in Cooper v. Reynolds, 10 Wall. 308, this principle has been so often held by all courts, that it takes rank as an axiom of the law; and in no court has it been more emphatically asserted than by this court. See Lancaster v. Wilson, 27 Gratt. 624; Pulaski county v. Stuart, Buchanan & Co., 28 Id. 872; Pennybacker v. Switzer, 75 Va., 671; Woodhouse v. Fillbates, *677 Id. 317; Wimbish v. Breeden, Id. 324; Wilcher v. Robertson, 78 Id. 602.
And it is equally well settled that a judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction is always presumed to be right until the contrary is shown, even when directly assailed in an appellate court. Harman v. City of Lynchburg, 33 Gratt. 37; Hill v. Woodward, 78 Va. 765. Every intendment is made to support the judgment, and the rule is that nothing shall be intended to be out of the jurisdiction of a superior court—that is, a court of general jurisdiction—but that which specially appears to be so. Broom’s Leg. Max., 952; 1 ¡Smith’s Lead. Cas., notes to Crepps v. Durden. The county court of Lancaster county is a court of that character. Kempe’s Lessee v. Kennedy, 5 Cranch, 173; Pennybacker v. Switzer, supra. And it is hardly necessary to say that the correctness of a judgment, when assailed, must be determined upon the facts apparent on the face of the record; for the court will not look outside of the record to consider anything which is not properly a part of the record. The case of Roanoke Land and Improvement Company v. Karn & Hickson, 80 Va. 589, is an authority upon this point.
These familiar principles, it seems to me, are decisive here. Strange to say, the record of the proceeding in the county court is not before us. A copy of it is not exhibited with the petition, or produced at all. It is conceded, however, that the record, if here, would not show affirmatively that Judge Ewell was unable or failed to attend the court, or that he was prevented from sitting during the whole or any part of the September term, 1887, at which the judgment was rendered, or that he was so situated as to render it improper for him, in his judgment, to preside at the trial. Upon these points, it is said, the record is silent. In his answer, however, to the petition for the writ, he distinctly avers that he was not so situated as to render it improper, in his judgment, for him to sit in the case, nor is it pretended that he was. What, then, must we presume, independently of the averments in the answer ? Clearly, I think, *7that he was unable to attend, or for some reason was prevented from attending, the court during the trial; and if such was the fact, and my construction of the statute be correct, then there was no necessity for an entry on the record to authorize Judge Blakey to preside, as he did. The maxim, omnia praesumuntur rite esse acta applies, and with conclusive force and effect. Woodhouse v. Fillbates, 77 Va. 317. It matters not, therefore, whether, in point of fact, Judge Ewell was present at the trial or not. The record of the proceedings does not show that he was, and, for reasons of public policy, nothing dehors the record can be considered. Ereem. Judgm., secs. 124-132; Ex parte Easton, 95 U. S. 68. And even if the rule were otherwise, the result in the present case would be the same.
In short, my opinion is, that the provisions of the statute above referred to are directory merely, and that the county court having undisputed jurisdiction of the case in which the judgment was rendered, a failure to comply with the requirements of the statute could not affect the validity of the judgment in this collateral proceeding. The writ of prohibition cannot be permitted in a case like this to take the place of a writ of error or of an appeal, though they are in some cases concurrent remedies. Board of Supervisors of Culpeper v. Correl, 20 Gratt. 484, 522.
Moreover, independently of these considerations, the case is not a proper one, in my opinion, for a prohibition, so far as the judgment of the county court is concerned. That judgment is a final judgment, and nothing further remains to be done under it; not even the collection of costs, for it very properly gave no costs to either party. West v. Ferguson, 16 Gratt. 270. What, then, is there to be prohibited? Blackstone says the writ of prohibition is “directed to the judge and parties of a suit in any inferior court, commanding them to cease from the prosecution thereof upon a suggestion that either the cause originally, or some collateral matter arising therein, does not belong to that jurisdiction, but to the cognizance of some other court.” 3 Bl. Comm. 112. Accordingly, it has been long settled that *8prohibition will not lie after the cause is ended, Hall v. Norwood, Sid. 165; United States v. Hoffman, 4 Wall. 158; Ex parte Easton, supra.
It is true the judgment of the county court was affirmed by the circuit court of Lancaster county, and that Gresham, the plaintiff in error here, was adjudged by the latter court to pay the costs of the proceedings, not only in that court, but in the county court also; which judgment of affirmance was ordered to be certified to the county court. It is also true that the petition for the writ of prohibition prays that the county court be prohibited from enforcing the last mentioned judgment as well as its own judgment; nor can it be denied that the circuit court, in rendering judgment for costs in the county court, exceeded its jurisdiction, inasmuch as costs, eo nomine, are not recoverable at common law, and there is no statute authorizing the recovery of costs in a contested election case in a county court. West v. Ferguson, supra. But this does not affect the validity of the judgment of the circuit court any further than the provision therein respecting the payment of costs in the county court, since the principle is well established that a judgment may be partly void, because the court, in rendering it, exceeded its jurisdiction, and yet valid to the extent that it is within the jurisdiction of the court. Ex parte Lange, 18 Wall. 163; Wade v. Hancock & Agee, 76 Va. 620. And the present case, I think, comes within this principle.
I therefore dissent from the opinion of the court.
Judgment reversed and writ allowed.