Bank of Old Dominion v. McVeigh

73 Va. 530, 32 Gratt. 530
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedDecember 11, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 73 Va. 530 (Bank of Old Dominion v. McVeigh) 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
Bank of Old Dominion v. McVeigh, 73 Va. 530, 32 Gratt. 530 (Va. 1879).

Opinion

Burks, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Want of jurisdiction in the court below of the proceeding by motion in which the judgment complained of here was rendered is assigned by the Bank of the Old Dominion as one of the errors in said judgment.

[534]*534The entry on the records of said court, 22d July, 1871 , . , / . , , . . , , ’ on which the motion was based, is in these words:

The Bank of the Old Dominion v. McVeigh & Cham- . ■ a berlam & al.
“ Judgment, by consent, in favor of the plaintiff for ten thousand seven hundred and sixty dollars, the debt in the declaration mentioned, with interest thereon from the 1st day of January, 1866, till paid, and costs.
“Execution on the judgment to be stayed for ninety days, and in the event of an appeal being obtained and perfected in the case of the Bank of the Old Dominion v. James H. McVeigh & Son & al., decided at this term, then this judgment to await the decision of the court of appeals, and abide the result thereof in the said case; provided the appeal bond in that case be sufficient to secure the amount of both judgments.
“ H. O. Claughton, p. q.
“ Brent & Wattles, p. d.”

Now, if this entry be a judgment at all (and it is insisted by the learned Counsel for the bank that it is), it is a judgment by consent or confession, not absolute, but on the terms and conditions set out in the agreement annexed. In such a case, under the agreement, which is a continuing one, it is competent for the court which rendered it to deal with it in a summary way and see that its terms are complied with. It is said in 1 Tidd’s Practice, 560, that when a judgment is confessed upon terms, in the king’s bench, it being in effect but a conditional judgment, the court will take notice of it and see the terms performed; but when the judgment is acknowledged absolutely, and a subsequent agreement made, this does not affect the judgment; and the court will take no notice of it, but put the party to his action on the agreement.

We do not doubt, therefore, that the corporation court [535]*535of the city of Alexandria had iurisdiction of the proceed-J .... . ing by motion to modify the judgment under the agreement of the 22d July, 1871, of record, if indeed there any such judgment. .

This brings us to consider the question raised by the petition of James H. McVeigh (who must, on said petition, be treated as a plaintiff i'n error), whether there ever was any such judgment. He insists that there was no such judgment, and that the court erred in treating the entry of the 22d July, 1871, as a judgment at all; that it was only an executory agreement of the parties by. their counsel for a judgment, which in fact was never rendered, and that instead of recognizing and sanctioning it as a judgment as against him, the court should have treated it, in the proceedings which were had, as a mere agreement, and should have given judgment thereon accordingly as of the 8th day of January, 1879.

It would seem to be sufficiently clear that the entry referred to, taken in connection with the record of the case in which.it was made, has the requisite certainty of a judgment as to parties, amounts, dates, &c. The caption, giving the style of the case, plainly describes the plaintiff, but not so the defendants. They are described generally as “ McVeigh & Chamberlain & al.” But as the bill of exceptions shows that the entry was made in said case of “The Bank of the Old Dominion v. McVeigh & Chamberlain,” we may look to the declaration and process in the suit to see who the defendants were. Thus looking, we find the writ commencing the suit was against James H. McVeigh and James Chamberlain, trading under the firm name of “McVeigh & Chamberlain,” and William E. McVeigh. The declaration is against the same parties, and the writ was served on all except Chamberlain, as to whom it was returned not found. The defendants, therefore, referred to in the caption to the entry were the defendants already named, except Chamberlain, he never [536]*536^av*n£ been before the court at any time, and the plaintiff, in fact, conceding that he was not embraced as a party in entry of the supposed judgment. The amount recovere<^ ^ recover7 i* be, with interest, corresponds accurately with the amount and interest in the declaration demanded.

the objection urged against considering this entry as a judgment is not so much for uncertainty as for the alleged absence of expression of judicial action. It is essential to a judgment that it be a judicial determination, an adjudication by the court. If this appear, the form is-not so material. Consideratum est per curiam, &c., is the old technical formula and the one generally followed; but a literal observance of it, although advisable, is not indispensable ; language of like import will suffice.

Now, what is meant by this entry: “ Judgment, by consent, in favor of the plaintiff for ten thousand seven hundred and sixty dollars, the debt in the declaration mentioned, with interest thereon from the 1st day of January, 1866, till paid, and costs ” ? It is an order entered by the court in a pending cause, by the consent of the parties, to be sure, but nevertheless an order of the court, it matters-not by whom it was drawn, whether by clerk or counsel, and the language of the order is the language of the court. If it had been intended as a mere agreement of parties for a judgment, the language would have been different. It is not, that judgment is to be, or may be, or shall be rendered by the court, but it is the actual rendition of the judgment itself. And what difference is there in meaning and legal effect between the language employed, “judgment, by consent, for the plaintiff,” &c.? and the usual formula, “ it is considered by the court, by consent of parties, that the plaintiff recover the sum,” &c.? ' The meaning is the same. The term “judgment,” as used, imports judicial action—determination—adjudication—and “judgment, by consent, for the plaintiff for the sum ” (named), is an [537]*537adjudication that the plaintiff recover that sum. And so it has been considered and treated by the parties and by the corporation court. In the agreement annexed, it styled a “judgment,” on which “ execution is to be stayed, &c.” The motion of the McVeighs in the court below was a motion, in express terms, “to set aside the judgment entered in the cause on" the 22d day of July, 1871, same being a judgment in favor ©f said Bank of the Old Dominion,” and the corporation court acted upon it as a judgment, referring to it as “ the judgment rendered in this court at the July term, 1871.”

Adjudged cases, some of which were cited by learned counsel in argument, in which the question whether particular entries amounted to judgments or not, was presented and decided, are numerous, and the decisions conflicting. We do not deem it necessary to review them, as we are of opinion, for the reasons already stated, that the entry in question here was intended to be a judgment, and has all the essential qualities of a judgment.

The main contention in this case springs out of the agreement already set out, which was annexed to the judgment. The record shows that the bond, called in the agreement an “ appeal bond,” was never given.

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Bluebook (online)
73 Va. 530, 32 Gratt. 530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-old-dominion-v-mcveigh-va-1879.