Ballard v. Thomas & Ammon

19 Va. 14
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 14, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 19 Va. 14 (Ballard v. Thomas & Ammon) 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
Ballard v. Thomas & Ammon, 19 Va. 14 (Va. 1868).

Opinion

Joynes, J.

This is a motion by Thomas & Ammon against Baker, late sheriff of Grayson county, and his sureties, to recover the sum of $420, levied for them by the County court of said county on the 25th of [18]*18June 1861. At September term 1861, Baker was removed from office for his failure to give a new bond, had been required of him upon the petition of some of his sureties. Judgment was rendered for plaiatiffs, and various errors are assigned in the petition.

The first error assigned is, that there was no proper evidence before the Circuit court that any levy had been laid by the County court. - The ground of the objection is, that the only evidence that a levy had been made, was a book produced before the Circuit court as the original order book of the County court. It has not been contended that the order book of the County Court, if authenticated as such, was not competent evidence of its contents, to the same extent as a certified copy would have been; and such an objection, if made, could not have been sustained. The usual mode of proving the record of another court, is by the production of a certified copy. But the copy is not produced in such cases, because it is better evidence than the original. It is received only on the ground of convenience, as a substitute for the original record. The reception of a copy avoids the inconvenience of removing the original record from place to place; and as one court will not take judicial notice of the records of anothor, the certificate supplies the necessary authentication. But the original, if properly authenticated, is equally admissible, and is, in its nature, the highest evidence. Gray v. Davis, 27 Conn. R. 447.

The objection was, that it did not sufficiently appear that the book produced was the order book of the County court. To prove that fact, the plaintiffs examined one Thomas, who was asked if he was not the deputy clerk of the County court of Grayson. The question was objected to, and does not appear to have been answered by the witness. The court thereupon [19]*19;asked the witness if there was not an order in the hook appointing him. deputy clerk, to which he replied in the affirmative, and if he had not qualified as puty clerk, to which he also replied in the affirmative. The witness then said, in reply to a further question from the court, that the hook produced was the order book of the County court. The court thereupon declared that it would receive the book without further proof, as the genuine order book of the County court, and as coming from the proper custody.

There was no error in this decision. The questions put to the witness by the court were not objected to. The answer showed that the"'witness had been appointed and qualified as deputy clerk, and the court might well have inferred that he also acted as deputy •clerk. In this view, the proof was as complete as if the clerk himself had produced the book and proved its authenticity. But even if the witness was. not deputy clerk, or was, not proved by any competent evidence to be such, he might still be able to identify the order book of the County court. He professed to identify it, and it was for the court to judge of the credit due to his testimony. The book was before the •court, and it could judge of its genuineness from inspection. In such a case it is, hardly possible that there could ever be a mistake, and' in this case there is not a particle of evidence to raise a suspicion that the book was not in fact what it was represented to be.

The next error assigned is, that the County court had no authority to lay the levy, the justices not having been summoned for the purpose.

The record does not show that the justices had not been summoned. It is silent on that subject. The real question, therefore, is, whether it is necessary, upon this motion, that the record should show affirmatively that the justices had been summoned.

The court which lays the county levy is not a special [20]*20tribunal created for that particular purpose. It is the ordinary County court. That court is a court of general jurisdiction. Harvey v. Tyler, 2 Wall, U. S. R. 328. Before the court can lawfully proceed to lay the levy, all the justices must have been summoned for the purpose, or a majority of the justices must be present. If all the justices have been summoned, the levy may be laid, provided a sufficient number be-present to form a court for ordinary purposes. When the court is about to lay the county levy, the first question to be determined is, whether the justices have all been summoned, or, if they have not been summoned, whether a majority of’them is present. And when the court proceeds to lay the levy, it in effect determines these questions, and decides that the justices have been summoned, or that a majority of them is present. The propriety of that decision cannot be called in question in any collateral proceeding.

In Cox & al. v. Thomas’ adm’x, 9 Gratt. 323, a motion was made in the Circuit court by the representative of' Thomas, late sheriff, to recover from Cox, his deputy, for his default in not paying over money received by him upon an execution issued from the County court. The plaintiff in the execution had obtained a judgment in the Circuit court against the representative of' Thomas, and in this motion Cox sought to impeach that judgment, on the ground that the Circuit court had no jurisdiction to render it, inasmuch as the statute only authorizes the motion of the execution creditor to be made in the court from which the execution issued.

But this court overruled the objection; Judge Allen delivering the opinion of the whole court, said: “ In the case of the Marshalsea, 10 Coke 76 a, it was resolved, that where a court has jurisdiction of a cause but proceeds erroneously, no action lies against the party who sues, or the officer who executes the precept [21]*21of the court. But if the court had no jurisdiction, the whole proceeding is coram non judice, and actions will lie against them without regard to the precept. If the court has cognizance o± the cause, advantage cannot he taken of an erroneous judgment collaterally. Bor though the error be apparent, the judgmeut remains in force until reversed. Drury case, 8 Coke 139; Tarlton v. Fisher, Dougl. R. 671. The only question, then, would seem to be, whether the subject matter was within the jurisdiction of the court; if it was, if the .jurisdiction of the court extended ‘ over that class of eases, it was the province of the court to determine for itself whether the particular case was one within its jurisdiction. The Circuit court is one of general jurisdiction, taking cognizance of all actions at law between individuals, with authority to pronounce judgments, and to issue executions for their enforcement. The jurisdiction of this court to take cognizance of all controversies between individuals in proceedings at law need not (as in the case of courts of restricted and limited jurisdiction), appear on' the face of the proceedings. When its jurisdiction is questioned, it must decide the question for itself. BTor is it bound to set forth on the record the facts on which its jurisdiction depends. Whenever the subject matter is a controversy at law between individuals, the jurisdiction is presumed from the fact that it has rendered the judgment.

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19 Va. 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ballard-v-thomas-ammon-va-1868.