OPINION DENYING A PETITION POR A REHEARING.
*405The opinion of the court was delivered by
Mason, J.:In the original opinion in this case it was. stated that one objection made by the plaintiff in error to the order of the district court amending the record .of its judgment was that the purported correction did not accord with the real facts, and was not supported by sufficient evidence. In a motion for a rehearing. it is truly said that this statement is incorrect, and that the only objections made to the order were based on the contention that the district court had no jurisdiction to make it.
This court was mistaken in supposing that counsel for the plaintiff in error were relying upon a claim that the first journal entry showed the actual proceedings that took place and that the second one did not. This mistake resulted from their having filed here an affidavit tending to impeach the second entry and support the first, and from the circumstance that at the oral argument the question of fact was the subject of some controversy. This affidavit, however, was presented in resistance of the motion of the defendant in error for leave to file a supplemental transcript, and the oral discussion referred to was only incidental. Neither upon the final submission of the cause here nor in his motion in the lower court to set, aside the order amending the journal entry did the plaintiff in error raise an issue as to what was actually done at the time judgment was rendered. At the hearing of that motion affidavits were offered and rejected the contents of which are not shown, but the motion itself was based on purely jurisdictional grounds. The plaintiff in error stands upon the proposition that the district court had no power after the expiration of the term at which the judgment was rendered to order a change in the record of the judgment of its own motion and without notice to him. If his contention is sound he has done nothing to waive its benefits and is entitled to a reversal of the order.
*406In support of his position the plaintiff in error cites a number of .decisions which are quite beside the question, bécause they refer to actual changes in the action of the court, while we are concerned here only with an alteration in the record made of such action. He also relies upon the language of the first sentence of section 569 of the civil code (Gen. Stat. 1901, § 5055), which reads:
“The proceedings to correct mistakes or omissions of the clerk, or irregularity in obtaining a judgment or order, shall be by motion, upon reasonable notice to the adverse party or his attorney in the action.”
This language has obvious reference to the third subdivision of the preceding paragraph, which by the context is shown to have relation to the vacation or-modification of judgments or orders actually made, and not to -the correction of mistakes made in attempting correctly to register them. Whether it has any application to the matter of rectifying errors made by the clerk in recording, orders need not be decided. If so, the method pointed out for accomplishing that purpose' is not exclusive. A court of record has- an inherent power over its own records which includes the authority to require the correction of any errors that •may creep into them. This power is not lost by lapse of time or the expiration of a term of court. The duty of a court to see that its records speak the truth is an affirmative and active one, and it is not a jurisdictional prerequisite to its performance that one party should invoke it by motion or that the other should have notice before action is taken. (See 17 Encyc. PL & Pr. 912, 913, and 914, note 2.) The proposition, is thus stated in the syllabus to Balch & wife v. Shaw, 61 Mass. 282:
“Courts of record have power, at any time, as well after, as during, the term at which any entry is made, of their own motion or on the suggestion of any party interested, and without notice to any one, to correct the mistakes and supply the omissions of their clerks or recording officers, so as to make the record conform to the truth of the case; and are the exclusive judges *407of the necessity and propriety of so amending and extending their records, and of the proofs and of the sufficiency of the proofs on which to proceed.”
In Lewis v. Ross, 37 Me. 230, 59 Am. Dec. 49, it was said, citing Batch & wife v. Shaw, supra:
“On general principles, it is competent for a court of record, and incident to its authority, to correct mistakes in its records, which do not arise from the judicial action of the court, but from the mistakes of its recording officer. In doing this, it may regulate its own action upon its own sense of responsibility and duty, and proceed upon suggestion, or on motion of those interested, or upon its own ‘certain knowledge and mere motion.’ It would not be an adversary proceeding, in which, of necessity, there should be parties, or in which notice would be required.” (Page 235.)
In applying this principle in Strickland v. Strickland, 95 N. C. 471, the court said:
“The court did not enter the judgment it intended to enter, nor that authorized by what appeared in the record. Such errors may be corrected at any time, and after a long while, upon motion, or the court may and ought to correct them ex mero motu as soon as it sees them. This is necessary and proper, to the end the record shall speak the truth. The object is to make the record show what the court, in fact, resolved, intended, and in contemplation of law did.” (Page 473.)
The further citation of authorities is unnecessary. The power referred to is undoubted, and is essential to the prevention of injustice. The manner of its exercise is necessarily committed to the sound discretion of the court, and must be governed by circumstances. Unquestionably, as suggested in the original opinion, it would ordinarily be better practice that a notice should be given. Possibly conditions might arise in which a failure to give notice would tend to show an abuse of discretion. In the present case the omission to give notice affords the plaintiff in error no cause of complaint. As already stated, a notice was not necessary to confer jurisdiction to make the order, and it is manifest that its absence affected no substantial *408right of the plaintiff in error. His motion to strike out the new entry was based solely upon technical grounds, and raised no issue as to what the record should say in order to speak the truth; but the fact that it was filed, noticed, argued, submitted and decided shows that he had abundant opportunity, if he cared to exercise it, to seek a remedy for any real wrong he believed he had suffered. As was said in Balch & wife v. Shaw, 61 Mass. 282:
“Surely a court of record need not give notice to all the world to come in and show cause why it should not make its record conform to the truth of the case. Any party who supposes he can show such causé should apply to the court to have the record set aside or expunged, after it is made.” (Page 285.)
The motion for a rehearing is denied.
All the Justices concurring.