Harvey v. Payne

CHIEF JUSTICE SIMPSON

delivered the opinion of the court:

This appeal is prosecuted to reverse a judgment of the circuit court, which was rendered against the appellant, in an action brought against him by Payne.

No petition is copied into the record, and it is insisted, on behalf of the appellant, that the judgment must be deemed erroneous, inasmuch as it was not authorized by anything contained in the record.

*452The summons which was issued by the clerk and served on the appellant, commanded him to answer a petition which Payne had filed against him; and the account which was filed with the petition is copied and made a part of the record. The judgment also states that the debt claimed in the plaintiff’s petition is the amount adjudged against the defendant. There is enough, therefore, in the record to establish the fact that the plaintiff in the action filed a petition, which was before the court and acted upon when the judgment was rendered, but has been since lost or mislaid, and for thát reason has not been copied into this record.

It is a well settled legal principle, that the inferior court must" be presumed to have done right until the contrary appear. Everything necessary to sustain its judgment will be presumed which is not inconsistent with the facts stated in the record. The legal presumption is always in favor of the correctness of its decision. (Venable vs. McDonald, 4 Dana, 336; Kimberlin vs. Faris, 5 Dana, 533.)

As the petition upon which the judgment was rendered has been lost, and we are, therefore, unable to determine that its allegations were insufficient to authorize the judgment that was rendered in the action, the presumption in favor of the, correctness of the judgment must prevail; from which the conclusion arises, that the facts set forth in the petition were sufficient to authorize the judgment.

As the defendant failed to appear at the trial, and the action was founded on contract, the court had a right to try the cause and render a judgment.

The record, therefore, independently of the effort to amend it, contains enough to sustain the judgment appealed from.

Wherefore, the judgment is affirmed.