This is an application by the plaintiff (appellant) for a certiorari. It is alleged in the petition that plaintiff served on the defendant a ease on appeal and defendant filed a counter ease. That the Judge who presided at the trial was requested to name a time and place for settling the case, and he appointed as the place a town which is not in the Thirteenth Judicial District and is at a great distance from the place of trial. The plaintiff further alleges that in the ease on appeal as tendered by its counsel there were cer
The statement of the Judge in the case on appeal as'to what occurred on the trial must be accepted in this Court as importing verity. We always take it as absolutely true. Stale v. Reid, 18 N. C., 377, 28 Am. Dec., 527; Stale v. Gooch, 94 N. C., 982. If there is any exception to this rule it has not yet been presented in any case which has come to this Court, though it must be true that if the ease is tried and the exceptions are noted during the course of the trial, in accordance with the provisions of The Code, sec. 412 (2), the case will be heard here upon the exceptions as thus settled, for the statute virtually so directs. The Code, sec. 550. But the rule as first above stated does not extend to exceptions taken to the refusal of the Judge to grant a prayer or to the granting of a prayer for instruction, nor to the assignments of error in the charge of the Court, which alleged errors, by the express terms of the statute, are deemed to have been duly excepted to. Clark’s Code (3 Ed.), sec. 412 (3). It follows from that provision of the law that the formal assignment of errors relating to such matters may be made for the first time in the case on appeal as tendered by the appellant and it has so been frequently decided by this Court. McKinnon v. Morrison, 104 N. C., 354. See also, Clark’s Code (3 Ed.), p. 513, where the cases will be found fully collected and classified. The Judge, therefore, has nothing to do with the appellant’s assignment of errors, which is solely the act of the appellant and must be treated as his assignment. This being so, it is not of course subject to the control or revision of the Judge.
While we decide that the plaintiff upon the foregoing principles is entitled to the writ of certiorari for the purpose of
The principles we have thus laid down are well supported by the case of Lowe v. Elliott, 107 N. C., 718, in which the present Ghief Justice pointedly states the law upon the subject. That case has since been approved. State v. Black, 109 N. C., 856, 14 L. R. A., 205; Broadwell v. Ray, 111 N. C., 457; Bernhardt v. Brown, 118 N. C., 700, 36 L. R. A., 402; Bank v. Sumner, 119 N. C., 591. See also, Boyer v. Teague, 106 N. C., 571, and Whitesides v. Williams, 66 N. C., 141.
It is alleged in the petition that the place appointed by the Judge for settling the case on appeal was outside the district, and owing to this fact and the great distance from the place of trial to the place so appointed, counsel did not attend. This perhaps is the cause of the defect in the case, as counsel no doubt would have insisted on their right to have the assignment set out in the case if they had been present. The law requires the case to be settled within the Judicial District where it was tried (The Code, sec. 550), and this must be
The writer of this opinion concurs fully in the views of Justice Douglas who files the concurring opinion, as to the right procedure in correcting cases on appeal by the writ of certiorari, and he also thinks that such rules of the Court only should be adopted as are necessary for the proper and orderly transaction of the business of the Court and when adopted should be enforced, not harshly or too rigidly but with due regard to the hearing of cases upon their merits. But he does not think the question is presented by this application, and for that reason it is not decided nor even discussed.
The answer to the petition does not meet its allegations in such a way as should induce us to withhold the writ. Pursuing the course, therefore, suggested in Lowe v. Elliott, supra, a certiorari will issue and the case be remanded, so that appellant’s exceptions and assignment of errors may be inserted in the case on appeal, and so that the Judge may, not re-settle the case (Boyer v. Teague, supra), but make such amendments and corrections in the same as he may deem proper.
To that end let a copy of the petition and the original case on appeal, tendered by the appellant and used as an exhibit in this Court, be transmitted to the Judge with the writ for his information.
It is so ordered.
Petition allowed.