Williams v. Thompson

JUDGE HARGIS

delivered the opinion of the-'court.

This was an action by the appellant to vacate a judgment' against him and for a new trial. The petition states in substance that Thompson was liable for a large sum as Poston’s, surety, and that they agreed, in contemplation of Poston’sinsolvency, and with the design to prefer Thompson in exclusion of other creditors, that Thompson should buy a lot: of mules from Poynter, the són-in-law of Poston, and execute his note for them, and Poston was them to procure the-assignment of the note from Poynter, m ord’er that Thomp— *327son might set off against it the sum he might be compelled to pay for Poston as his surety; that this agreement was carried out, and shortly afterwards Poston became insolvent, and made an assignment for the benefit of his creditors; that Hanson and wife brought an action against Poston, &c., under the act of i8j$6, and that the appellant was appointed receiver therein of Poston’s estate, and the note for $$,440, executed by Thompson to Poynter, and assigned by the latter to Poston, came to his hands, and that he instituted suit on it by cross-petition in that action against Thompson,, who died pending the action, and that, by agreement of counsel for appellant and Thompson, it was revived by consent against his administrator; that the cause was heard on the cross-petition, and it was dismissed, from which the appellant appealed, and the administrator, in violation of the consent to revive the case, which, by mistake, was not entered of record, appeared in the Court of Appeals, and fraudulently caused the appeal to be dismissed, on the ground that the action had not been revived against him.

To this petition 'a demurrer was filed and sustained, and from that judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

It is not necessary to decide upon the validity of the cause of action, as we are of the opinion that the grounds relied on to vacate the judgment are insufficient. (See sec. 522, Civil Code.)

While it was bad faith to demand a dismissal of the appeal by the administrator in violation of the alleged agreement, still, if an order of revivor had been consented to, the record should have been corrected and certified to this court on the former appeal, before its submission on the motion to dismiss it. ■

*328It appears from this record that when the appellee made the motion to dismiss the former appeal, the appellant obtained a continuance on the affidavit of his attorney showing that the order of revivor, by mistake, had not been entered of record, and according to the case of Speed v. Hann, this was the proper mode of procedure. In that case it was held that a clerical misprision in entering a judgment is amendable by the court of original jurisdiction after a writ of error had been sued out, and affirmed the judgment after the record was corrected, (1st T. B. Mon., 18, 19.)

It was said in the case of Gentry v. Hutchcraft, 7th T. B. Mon., 244, in reference to Craig v. Horine, 1st Bibb, that ‘ the court, after maturely deliberating on the consequences which might follow from any rule which might be adopted, came to the determination that the absence of the exhibits might be supplied, but that .it must be done by application’ to the court that tried the cause.” And it was held that, as lost exhibits might thus be supplied, that “the defect in the record occasioned by the loss of process may also be supplied and corrected in the same way.”

It therefore seems that hitherto the practice in this court has been, that when it is suggested that the record is defective by reason of' a clerical misprision, time will be given by this court to have it corrected and brought up by certiorari, and we are satisfied that a sufficient remedy is afforded the parties by this rule, which also protects them against unnecessary delays.

In this case the appellant allowed almost three years to pass by before he took the original appeal, or looked into the record sufficiently to discover that the order of revivor had not been entered according to the agreement, and that, .after obtaining a continuance, apparently for the purpose of *329.supplying the record, he fails to allege that he made any effort to do so, or had any reason for such failure. The proceedings in this case vindicate the rule laid down in the authorities cited, which, in our opinion, are conclusive of .the question under consideration.

Wherefore, the judgment sustaining the demurrer- is ■affirmed.