Caldwell v. Bell & Graham

3 Ark. 419
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 3 Ark. 419 (Caldwell v. Bell & Graham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Caldwell v. Bell & Graham, 3 Ark. 419 (Ark. 1841).

Opinion

Lacy, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The points raised by the assignment of error, present, first, the question of the power and authority of the Judge who presided at the trial, to try and determine the cause; and, secondly, a variance between the declaration and the record adduced in evidence. The record shows that Ihe Judge who presided upon the trial, was specially commissioned for that purpose; and it nowhere contains any statement or presumption by which his power or authority can be questioned. This Court is therefore bound to presume that he acted in obedience to his authority.

The doctrine of presumption or intendment of law, in favor of the judgments and decrees of the Circuit Courts, has been so often stated by us, that it is deemed unnecessary to add any thing further in support of it. He who impeaches the opinion of the Court below, must make it appear in what the error consists. If he fail to do so, the in-tendment of law operates to affirm the proceedings.

This case was tried upon the issues of mil tiel record and nil debut. The declaration avers that the defendant below was indebted, on a judgment of a sister State, in the sum of two hundred and seventy-three dollars and fifty-eight cents, in debt, and the sum of nine dollars and thirty-two cents, as costs. The record offered in evidence corresponds with the sum laid in damages, but there is no given sum adjudged as costs.

There were three executions that issued upon the judgment. In the first, the amount of costs stated is ten dollars two and a half cents; in the second, ten dollars and seventy-three cents; and in the third, eleven dollars forty-three and a half cents. The inquiry now is, does' the record offered in support of the declaration correspond with it, or is there such a variance as will be fatal upon an objection to it as evidence?

It is a general rule, that the contract must be stated correctly; and if the evidence differ from the statement, the whole-foundation of the action fails, because the contract is entire in its nature, and must be proved as laid. Ist Chilly's Pl., 334.

In debt on judgment, care must be taken that there be no variance between the declaration laid and the judgment offered in evidence. Such variance is in general fatal. A party is bound by his own allegation to strict proof of a written document. Any variance that affects its sense, or changes its legal tenor and effect, will be fatal. 3 Starkie Pl., 4; P. 15, 87; Dyer and another vs. Stevens, 6 Mass. R., 387; Smith vs. Drew, 5 Mass. R., 514. In Thompson vs. Jameson, 1 Cranch, 383, it was held, in an action of debt on a decree in chancery, for J5860 12s. Id., with interest from a certain day to the date of the decree, if the declaration be only for the principal without the interest, the variance is fatal. So it has been ruled in Rositee vs. Downs, 4 Con. R., 291.

Each execution shows a different sum as costs, and neither corresponds with the averment made. The variance between the allegation and the proof offered in support of it, was therefore fatal; and the judgment of the Circuit Court must be reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded, with leave for the parties to amend their pleadings, if asked for.

After which, at the same term, Trapnali. and Cocke filed the following petition for re-hearing:

The defendants in error, William Bell & Co., pray the Court for a re-hearing of this cause.

The judgment rendered by the Pulaski Circuit Court is reversed for the alledged variance between the declaration and the record produced in evidence, the admission of which was objected to by the defendant, in the Circuit Court, and a bill of exceptions taken to the judgment of the Court overruling the objection.

It is stated, in the opinion of this Court, that the cost, alledged in the declaration, is $¡9 32, and that there are only three executions contained in the record, and that the costs stated in neither of them accord with the declaration. The Court will see,, by reference to, and a re-examination of, the record, that there were four executions issued, instead of three; and that, in the first, which was issued upon the judgment, the costs are stated to be f>9 32, and is in exact correspondence with that allegation of the declaration.

For this, the defendants in error pray a re-hearing of the cause.

The re-hearing having been granted, and the case reconsidered,

Ringo, C. J.,

In the opinion heretofore delivered in this case, the Court inadvertently overlooked the fact, that the transcript of the record produced and offered as testimony by the defendants in error on the trial of this case, to support, on their part, the issue joined on the plea of nul tiel record, contains four instead of three executions, issued upon the judgment therein mentioned; and, proceeding upon such mistaken view as to this fact, stated that three executions, only, appeared, by said transcript, to have been issued on the judgment therein mentioned, and that the costs, as stated, in no one of them, correspond, in amount, with the sum stated in the declaration, as having been adjudged to said defendants, and decided thereupon, that there was a variance, in this respect, between the allegations in the declaration descriptive of the judgment upon which the suit is founded, as to the costs, and the testimony adduced in support thereof, for which the Court ought to have sustained the objection of the plaintiff in error to its admission on the issue joined, and excluded it from the case, when, in fact, the first one of the four executions contained in said transcript, and issued on the judgment therein mentioned, contains an amount corresponding, exactly, with that stated in the declaration as having been adjudged to the defendants in error for their costs, which is stated, on the face of said execution, to have been adjudged to the defendants “for their costs in that behalf expended, whereof the said Caldwell and Boits'are convict, as appears to us of record.” Upon this fact being made known to the Court by the petition filed for a re-hearing, the same was granted; and the case having been again heard, and the opinion and judgment of this Court pronounced therein re-considered, we still entertain the opinion that there is a material variance between the allegation in the declaration, as to the judgment for costs, and the judgment contained in the transcript offered as testimony on the trial, on account of which the motion of the plaintiff in error to reject it ought to have been sustained, and the transcript rejected, notwithstanding the exact correspondence between the amount stated in the declaration and in the first execution as having been adjudged to the defendants for their costs, as before mentioned.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ark. 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caldwell-v-bell-graham-ark-1841.