Opinion by
Judge O’RearReversing.
This is a proceeding’ against appellee to list omitted personal property for five years before the filing of the statement. The trial in the county court resulted' in a judgment in favor of the Commonwealth, finding that personal estate, varying from $6,000 to $9,000, liad been omitted for the years stated, giving the exact amounts found to have been omitted each year, and directing it to be listed as of those years. After the adjournment of the term at which the judgment was rendered, the Commonwealth gave notice to the defendant that it would on the succeeding county court day move the court to correct the judgment in certain particulars because of clerical misprision in entering it. At the time and place-specified in the notice the motion was made and heard, and the judgment corrected in accordance with the notice. The defendant prayed and was granted an appeal from each of these judgments.
Appeals from judgments of the county court to the circuit court must be prosecuted within sixty days from the rendition of the judgment. In this,, case the appeal was prosecuted within sixty-days after the *539last-named judgment, but not until after sixty days after the rendition of the first-named judgment. In the circuit court the Commonwealth moved to dismiss the appeal, which was overruled, and upon a trial on the merits the circuit court dismissed the proceeding of the Commonwealth upon the ground that it had failed to make out a case. If it be deemed that the appeal tried in the circuit court was from the first judgment, which found the fact to be that appellee had omitted to list his property for taxation, and causing it to be listed, then the appeal was not prosecuted within time. On the other hand, if the appeal was prosecuted from the last judgment, which was to correct the clerical misprision, then the only thing to be considered on that appeal was whether there had been in fact a misprision of the clerk in the entering of the judgment, and whether the judgment so entered at last was in conformity to the one that should have been entered as indicated by the court’s records, It may be as well to say here that there is nothing in this record to show that the correction of the judgment as made in the last judgment was not justified by the state of the record.
Appellee contends, and such must have been the view taken by the circuit court, that the judgment from which he appealed was the one fixing his liability to be assessed upon omitted property; that both the judgments in the county court are for the same thing, but that neither of the judgments became final or conclusive against him until the last one was rendered; that until the' last one was rendered, and thereby it became a final judgment affecting his property rights, he had not the right of appeal, and therefore had full sixty days from that time in which to perfect it under the statute. While a motion for a *540new trial operates to suspend a judgment in the action in which it is pending until the motion is acted upon and overruled, this rule doe's not apply to motions to correct judgments for misprision of the clerk. The proceedings are radically different. A motion for a new trial involves the setting aside of the judgment altogether and a re-examination of the facts at issue. A motion to correct a judgment for clerical misprision involves only the correction of the court’s records. It admits the binding validity of the judgment. The matter that was at issue at the trial is not disturbed, and in no event can again be inquired into or re-examined under a proceeding to correct a judgment for a misprision of the clerk. Sec. 518 of the Civil Code of Practice allows the court in which a judgment had been rendered to vacate or modify it after the term by granting a new trial for any one of numerous causes set out. It also allows a judgment to be vacated or modified for clerical misprision. Sec. 519 allows the proceedings to correct misprisions of the clerk to be by motion upon reasonable notice to the adverse party, or his attorney in the action; but the motion to vacate a judgment because of its rendition before the action regularly stood for trial, which is a clerical misprision by an express provision of the Code (sec. 517), can not be made after the expiration of the first three days of the succeeding term. There is no limitation to the proceeding to correct a judgment for mere clerical misprision in other respects, save such limitation as would apply to the bringing of original actions for the same cause. (Smith v. Mullins, 3 Metc., 182.) A clerical misprision is either a mistake or a fraud perpetrated by the clerk of the court, which is susceptible of demonstration by the face of the record, and relief for actions upon *541either of these grounds is by statute fixed at five years from the time the mistake of fraud was committed, or five years from the discovery thereof, not exceeding ten years at the outside.
It would follow from this, if appellee’s contentions were correct, that he might have at least five years and two months within which to prosecute an appeal from the county court, or seven years within which to prosecute an appeal to this court from the circuit court, where the clerical misprision existed in the case. For his argument is that, so long as there is a clerical misprisiop in the entry of the judgment if is not a final judgment, and therefore the right of appeal has not attached, and the limitation against it can not run. Our view of it is that the judgment of the court fixing the rights of the parties may be appealed from at any time after it is rendered. Tin right of appeal is not affected at all by the fact whether there has been a misprision of the clerk in the entry of the judgment, nor whether there exist grounds for a new trial of the action. The appeal may be prosecuted, notwithstanding a motion may-then be or may thereafter be allowed also in the court rendering the judgment to correct the misprision. The only limitation upon this is that contained in sec. 516, Civil Code Practice, which is that a misprision of the clerk shall not be a ground for an appeal until the same shall have been presented and acted upon in the circuit court. This does not mean that there can not be an appeal upon the merits of the action until the misprision has been acted upon by the court, but only that the latter ground can not be reviewed upon appeal until it has been presented to the lower court for correction. Under these views the practice would be that the right of appeal *542for any ground, except that of the misprision itself, is not affected by a clerical misprision, and that the appeal may be prosecuted nevertheless. This necessarily sets in motion the statute of limitation, as it affects the prosecution of appeals.
As to the proceedings to correct clerical misprisions, except in the instance indicated in sec. 519 of the Civil Code of Practice the five-year statute of limitation would apply to the motion in the trial court. After that court has acted upon the motion, the right of the party aggrieved to prosecute an appeal, where an appeal lies, will be regulated by the statutes governing appeals. We conclude that the circuit court erred in dismissing the complaint of the Commonwealth, and the appellee should be allowed to elect which of the appeals he is prosecuting before the circuit court. If it be the one from the judgment first rendered, the .appeal should be dismissed; if it be the one from the judgment last rendered, the judgment should be affirmed.
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and cause remanded for proceedings not inconsistent herewith.
Petition by appellee for extension of opinion overruled.