Den ex dem. Mickle v. Dunham

Ewing, C. J.

In this case the plaintiff was non-suited at the Circuit, lor want of confession of lease, entry and ouster. The defendants have moved that tho judgment be not, according to the stipulation of tho consent rule, entered against the casual ejector, but that the 11011-suit be set aside, because the certificate of the clerk of this court subjoined to the transcript, that the samo contains a true copy of the declaration and pleadings in the cause, bears date prior to the next preceding Circuit Court of tho county in which the venue is laid. This objection to tho date of the certificate, or perhaps more correctly speaking, to the time of sealing *178the transcript, is founded on the practice of the Court of K. B. in England, and on the ancient practice of this court prior to our statute passed in 1799, and now in force, relative to the Circuit Court. The change, however, which that statute introduced in the mode of making up the Nisi Brius record or transcript, removed the cause and reason of the practice referred to, and, therefore, saves the certificate in this case from the force of the objection raised against it.

A view of the English practice, compared with our statute, will lead satisfactorily to this conclusion.

The proceeding whereby the issue to be tried, is transmitted from the Court of King’s Bench to the Court of Nisi Brius, which is called the Nisi Brius record, and is equivalent to what we denominate the transcript, is made up in the former court in the following manner, and contains the following matters. In the first place, a placita which is .always of the term in which issue is joined. Then a copy of the pleadings to issue, preceded by a memorandum, or entry of the time of the filing of the bill or declaration; Then an award of the venire. Then another placita of the term preceding the Assize or Nisi Brius Court, at which the cause is intended to be tried, and which of course will be precisely similar to the first placita, where the cause is to be tried in the vacation next after the joining of issue. Then follows the jurata, as it is called, or a clause setting forth the time and place where the issue is to be tried, and the time and place at .which the jury process is made returnable, and is to this effect: “ The jury between A. B. plaintiff, and C. D. defendant, of a plea of trespass on the case, (or whatever the form of action may be) is respited before our Lord the King at Westminster, until-(the return day of the distringas juratores,) unless his Majesty’s justice assigned to take the Assizes, in and for the county of-shall first come on-(the day of Assizes) at-(the place where they are to be held,) in the said county, according to the form of the statute,” &c. And then is added the *179sciendum, which is an entry of the time of delivery to the sheriff of the jury process. When the Nisi Prius record is thus prepared, which is done by the attorney, ho carries it to the Nisi Prius office, where if is examined, sealed and passed. The jurata, as already remarked, is to state the time and place of trial, and the time and place of the return of the jury process, and so rigorous is the rule of practice in this respect, that in the case of Crowden v. Rooke, 2 Wils. 144, the record was made up for trial at a certain time, the cause did not then come on to be tried, the plaintiff’s attorney omitted to have the jurata altered, and the cause being tried at a future day, it appeared on the face of the jurata and postea, that the trial was had after the day of the return mentioned in the jurata, and for this reason the verdict was set aside. Hence if it happen that the cause is not tried at the time first mentioned in the jurata, it becomes necessary, when it is to be brought on again for trial, to'have the day of Nisi Prius and the return day of the distringas erased, and the new day of trial and return inserted; and, of consequence, to have the record again examined, sealed and passed at the Nisi Prius office.

Our mode, however, of making up the Nisi Prius record or transcript, is much more simple, and the matters to be contained in it are much fewer in number. The statute directs “ that when a cause is to bo tried at a Circuit Court, a transcript of the declaration and pleadings in the cause, with a proper plaeita, and nothing more, shall be made and sent under the seal of the Supreme Court to the said Circuit Court.” Rev. Laws 464. A. jurata is neither requisite nor admissible. The time and place at which the issue is to be tri ed, are not sot forth on the face of the transcript. No incongruity can therefore exist, as in the case of the Nisi Prius record, between it and the postea in respect to the time of trial. Hence the transcript, if the trial does not take place when at first expected, needs no alteration to prepare it for trial at a future day, and therefore when once *180sealed, needs not again to be re-sealed. When onee properly made out and sealed, i-t contains all that is requisite whensoever the trial may occur, unless when some matter happens after the joining of issue; or after the transcript has been made out, which for the sake of regularity or congrnity ought to appear on the face of the transcript. Thus, it is said, that if one of several plaintiffs or defendants dies after issue joined, the cause of action surviving, and a suggestion is made, that a proper entry should appear on the transcript so as to direct the judge at the Circuit, between whom the issue is to be tried; and so of other matter. And hence it has been argued that the certificate of the transcript should bear date, and be sealed subsequent to the last preceding term of this court. But admitting that these matters ought to be inserted in the transcript, no other consequence results than that the plaintiff should cause his transcript to be made out after they have occurred, so as to contain them, or, if once made out, and the cause not being tried, they after-wards occur, he may then have occasion to procure another transcript, and in this respect as in any other, if the transcript omits what it ought to contain, he may expose his verdict to jeopardy. But it by no means follows, when no such extraordinary occurrence has taken place, that the transcript may not be certified and sealed at any time after issue joined, or that the cause being once carried, to trial, the plaintiff is obliged to procure another, with the exception of the date, exactly like the former, or to perform the idle task and incur the useless expense of simply changing the date of the first.

Motion to set aside non-suit refused.