Allison's v. Wood

52 S.E. 559, 104 Va. 765, 1906 Va. LEXIS 143
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 18, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 52 S.E. 559 (Allison's v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allison's v. Wood, 52 S.E. 559, 104 Va. 765, 1906 Va. LEXIS 143 (Va. 1906).

Opinion

Whittle, J.,

delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.

■On May 25, 1873, tbe defendant in error, Wood, executed a bond for $140.00, payable one day after date to Allison, plaintiff in error’s "testator, at wbicb time botb tbe obligor and obligee resided in Washington county, Virginia. Allison died in tbe year 1879, and tbe same, year Wood removed from Washington county and settled in tbe Valley of Virginia, where be remained until tbe year 1883 or 1884, when be became .a resident of tbe State of North Carolina. After bis removal to North Carolina it was bis custom to make occasional trips to Virginia, varying from a week to a month in duration, for tbe purpose of dealing in live stock.

Tbe bond was found among Allison’s papers after bis death, and in the year 1901 bis executors, taking advantage of one of Wood’s periodical visits to Virginia, instituted an action of debt thereon against him in tbe Circuit Court of Culpeper county. There was a verdict and judgment for tbe defendant, and tbe plaintiff brings error.

[767]*767We axe met at the threshold of the inquiry by a motion to dismiss the writ of error on the ground that the sum in controversy is less than $500, which, it is alleged, was the minimum amount of which this court had jurisdiction at the date of the judgment.

The judgment was rendered December 8, 1903, at which date the debt amounted to about $400. Two days thereafter, on December 10, 1903, by an act of the General Assembly, which took affect from its passage, the jurisdiction of the court was enlarged so as to include,eases in which the matter in controversy amounted to $300, exclusive of costs. The Circuit Court adjourned for the term on December 19, 1903. The question to be determined, therefore, is, whether section 3455 of the Code (fixing the jurisdictional amount of this court at $500, which was in force on December 8, 1903, when the judgment was rendered), or that section as amended (reducing the minimum jurisdictional sum to $300, which became- effective on December 10, 1903, two days after the judgment was rendered, but nine days before the court adjourned), is to govern the right of appeal in this instance.

The amended statute (Acts, 1902-3-4, p. 590 — sec. 3455 Va. Code, 1904) provides, that “No petition sail be presented for an appeal from, or writ of error or supersedeas to, any final judgment, decree or order . . . which shall have been rendered more than one year before the petition is presented, . . nor to a judgment, decree, or order of any court where the controversy is for a matter less in value or amount than three hundred dollars, exclusive of costs.”

The act, it will be observed, deals with writs of error to ■final judgments, and by the rule of the common law no judgment becomes final until the end of the term at which it is rendered.

The rule is thus stated in the case of Baker v. Swineford, 97 Va. 112, 33 S. E. 542: “At common law no judgment became final until the end of the term at which it was rendered, regardless of the duration of the term, and until final [768]*768no court could direct an execution to issue on it. Section 3600 of the Code, however, confers on courts authority to direct executions to issue on judgments under the conditions therein set forth, but such judgments do not thereby become final so as to deprive the court, during the term, of the power to correct, or if need be, annul them if erroneous.”

It is true that for certain purposes .a judgment takes effect from its date: e. g., it constitutes a lien on the real estate of the judgment debtor from that time (Va. Code, 1904, sec. 3567) ; and with respect to the limitation on appeals, this court, in accordance with the language of the statute, has held that time is to be computed from the date at which the judgment was rendered. Buford v. North Roanoke Land Co., 94 Va. 616, 27 S. E. 509.

But a different principle obtains in determining the right of appeal. During the term of the court at which the judgment is rendered, the trial court is clothed with exclusive jurisdiction over it, and may, in its discretion, modify, amend or annul the same, and the jurisdiction of this court does not attach until after that jurisdiction of the trial court has terminated.

The due and orderly administration of justice demands the observance of the line of demarcation between the jurisdiction •of trial courts and the jurisdiction of this court, and, in the .absence of special statutory provision to the contrary, the jurisdiction of the former must cease before the jurisdiction of the latter accrues. The tendency of the rule is to prevent the confusion which might otherwise result from investing different tribunals with jurisdiction Over the same subject at the same time.

But there is another quite sufficient reason why the right of appeal in this case is controlled by the amended act. The statute is remedial in its nature, and its language is sufficiently comprehensive to apply as well to judgments rendered before as to those rendered since its passage.

The rule of construction in such case is thus stated in 2 Cyc., [769]*769pp. 553-4: “Generally, a provision imposing .a pecuniary limitation upon appellate jurisdiction, without an express exception made to exempt particular cases from its operation, applies to causes pending before the adoption of the provision, upon the principle that the right is a mere privilege and not a vested right. Even when judgment is rendered before the passage or taking effect of the act, the pecuniary provision applies if appellate proceedings have not already been instituted. But such general provision is not applicable to cases in which appeals have been perfected or writs of error sued out before the adoption or taking effect of the act.”

See also Idem, p. 521, n. 92, where it is said, that the right of appeal depends upon the law in force at the time the appeal is granted, and not when the judgment was rendered.

That is the view taken by this court in the case of McGruder v. Lyons, 7 Gratt. 233, where it is held, that “the act of the Code limiting appeals to the Court of Appeals to $200, applies to cases decided before the act went into effect, where the application for an appeal is made since.” The case arose under Ch. 182, sec. 3, p. 683 of the Code of 1849, which, on the point involved, is substantially the same as the present statute. In construing it, Judge Allen observes: “The words are general, and as they merely apply to the remedy, they extend to and comprehend all petitions to this court, or a judge thereof in vacation, for an appeal, writ of error or supersedeas, whether the judgment, decree or order was prior to or after the 1st July, 1850, when the new Code took effect.”

• We are, therefore, of opinion that the objection to the jurisdiction of this court is not well taken.

On the merits, the defendant rested his case upon the presumption of payment from lapse of time. Whereupon, to repel that presumption, the plaintiff offered in evidence a copy of the record in an action at law, and an ancillary attachment proceeding, instituted in March, 1881, in the Circuit Court of Rockingham county, Virginia, against Wood, on the bond in [770]

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Bluebook (online)
52 S.E. 559, 104 Va. 765, 1906 Va. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allisons-v-wood-va-1906.