(dissenting). Under section 730 of the Civil Code of Practice the Estill circuit court, when Tharp dismissed his appeal, should either have proceeded to trial on the appeal, or should have rendered judgment for the original judgment and costs. It was irregular for it to remand the appellee to the judgment rendered in the county court and direct that court to carry out its judgment. The purpose of the statute is that the case shall be tried de novo in the circuit court, and, if the appeal is dismissed, that a judgment de novo be rendered there. If this was an appeal from the judgment of the Estill circuit court, a different question would be presented; but no appeal was taken from the judgment of the Estill circuit court, and the time of taking an appeal is long passed. Although the judgment was erroneous, still, if it was not void, the obligors on the appeal bond are bound by their covenant to satisfy and perform it. The Estill circuit court had the parties before it. It had jurisdiction of the subject-matter. A judgment may be ever so erroneous, and yet this will be no defense to an action to enforce it, if it can be deterined from the judgment what the court determined; for, the court having jurisdiction -of the parties and the subject-matter, its judgment is conclusive upon the parties unless- set aside. In arriving at what a *328judgment means, or what is its effect, the court will look not at the entry .on the order book, but will consider also the record in the case; and if, from the whole record, what the court determined can be satisfactorily ascertained, the judgment will be enforced. Stewart v. Troutman, 7 S. W. 535, 9 Ky. Law Rep. 752. In Freeman on Judgments, section 45, the rule is thus stated: “If the entry of a judgment be so obscure as to not express the final determination with sufficient accuracy, reference may be had to the pleadings and to the entire record. If, with the light thrown upon it by them, its obscurity is dispelled, and its intended signification made apparent, it will be upheld and carried into effect.” When the circuit court adjudged that the appellee be remanded to the judgment rendered in the county court, and directed that court to carry out its judgment, it in effect determined that Tharp should pay the amounts adjudged against him. m the county court. Its adjudging the county court to carry out its judgment was in substance the same as its rendering a judgment that Tharp should pay these sums. There is no uncertainty at all as to what the court meant. The action of the county court in carrying out its judgment was under and in pursuance to the judgment of the circuit court; and if Tharp failed to pay the judgment of the county court he has not satisfied or performed the judgment of the circuit court. In 23 Cyc. 670, the rule is thus stated: “According to the modern doctrine a judgment is to be tested by its substance, rather than its form, and the form is not very material, provided that in substance it shows directly, and not inferentially, the judicial character of the act, the nature and scope of the adjudication, *329and its application to the controversy before the court. ’ ’
By section 763 of the Code of Practice a void judgment may not be reversed in this court until a motion to set it aside has been made in the court which rendered it and overruled. If an appeal had been taken from the judgment in controversy, certainly it could not be held that the appeal did not lie until there was a motion in the circuit court to set aside the judgment as void; for it dismissed the appeal and gave judgment for costs. It put an end to the action and set the parties out of court. For the court to say the appeal is still pending, when it was in express terms dismissed, is for it simply to shut its eyes to the record. For this reason the ease of Bennett v. Thompson, 10 Bush, 365, is not applicable; for in that case the appeal was not dismissed, but remained pending in the circuit court. The opinion is expressly nested on the ground that the appeal had not been dismissed. The judgment of the county court there had been set aside by the appeal, and the judgment of the circuit court, reversing it, added nothing to what in law had already been done. Not so here; for here the appeal is determined. Nor can it be maintained that so much of the judgment of the circuit court as remanded the parties to the judgment of the county court and directed the county court to enforce its judgment is void. The circuit court, under the statute, was authorized to re-enter the judgment of the county court, and its judgment that the county court should enforce its judgment was a determination that the defendant should pay fee sums fixed by. the county court. The difference is a matter of form, not of substance. Section 730 of the Civil Code of Practice is to be read in connection with section 134: “The *330court must, in every stage of an action, disregard any error or defect in the proceedings, which does not affect the substantial rights of the adverse party; and no judgment shall be reversed or affected by reason of such error or defect.” There is nothing in section 730 to take from circuit courts, in appeals from inferior, courts under that chapter, their character of courts of general jurisdiction. Section 730 is merely a remedial statute, and is directory. It is not mandatory, in the sense that a departure from its provisions will render the judgment of the circuit court void, where the variance from the statute is only in a matter of form, and the relief granted by the circuit court is not in substance. greater than it had a right to give.
The rule is universal that statutory prescriptions in regard to the mode of proceeding’ by public functionaries are directory when they are not of the essence of the thing to be done. If this rule is applied to election officers, sheriffs, and the like, how much more should it be applied to statutes regulating the proceedings of the superior courts of justice. It has been held that á provision requiring the court to give its reasons for its opinion on the record or to state in writing the grounds upon whch it grants or refuses a new trial, or a statute requiring the court to instruct the jury in writing and number the instructions consecutively, are directory, and that a failure to comply with the statute would not render the judgment void. 2 Lewis’ Sutherland, Statutory Construction, section 620; 20 Am. Eng. Encyc. of Law, 689. In Blimm v. Commonwealth, 7 Bush, 320, this court held that a statute requiring 10 days’ notice of a special term of court was directory, and that a term held after 8 days’ notice was not void. How *331much greater reason is there for applying this rule to the regulations of the Code of Practice as to the form in which a judgment shall be entered? If the judgment-in this case is void because it does not conform to section 730 of the Civil Code of Practice, are all other judgments void which do not conform to other provisions of the Code? If not, what is the line of distinction? The circuit court has the same jurisdiction in a bastardy case as in any other case appealed to it, precisely the same jurisdiction that this court would have if the case were brought here; and there is no more reason for holding the judgment of the circuit court void which did not conform to the provision of the Code than there would be for holding a judgment of this court void which did not conform to some provision of the Code regulating this court. The language of the Code is not on its face mandatory, but permissive. It simply gives the appellee, if the appeal is dismissed, an option to proceed to trial or have judgment entered for the amount of the original judgment. There is nothing in it purporting a mandatory limitation on the power of the circuit court. In Sebree v. Commonwealth, 115 Ky. 740, 25 Ky. Law Rep. 121, 74 S. W. 716, where the same question arose under the same section of the Code, this court said: “Appellant suffered judgment by default in the county court. Upon appeal to the circuit court he did not file an answer controverting the allegations of the statement filed by the auditor’s agent, nor did he make or offer any defense to the merits of the case. Up to this time the allegation that he had omitted to list his property for taxation for the years mentioned stands confessed. The circuit court dismissed the appeal, which left the judgment of the county court taxing the prop*332erty in effect. We think it would have been more regular, upon the state of the record, for the circuit court to have affirmed the county court’s judgment; hut the form of the order is not material, as the result is the same in either ease-. ’ ’
For these reasons, I dissent from the opinion of the court.