Enders' Ex'ors v. Burch

15 Va. 64
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1859
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Va. 64 (Enders' Ex'ors v. Burch) 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
Enders' Ex'ors v. Burch, 15 Va. 64 (Va. 1859).

Opinion

*MONCURE, J.

It is a rule of the common law, that during the term wherein any judicial act is done the record remains in the breast of the judges of the court and in their remembrance, and therefore the roll is alterable during that term as the judges shall direct; but when that term is past, then the record is in the roll and admits of no alteration, averment or proof to the contrary. 3 Tho. Co. Lit. 323, 1 Rob. Pr. 638 (old). The consequence of this rule, until altered by statute as herein after mentioned, was that no execution could be issued on a judgment until the end of the term at which it was rendered; at least, unless directed by the court to be issued at an earlier period, for special cause. By the act of 1 Rev. Code 1819, p. 508. § 79, it was enacted, that “all judgments by default obtained in the office for want of appearance or plea, in which no writ of enquiry shall be awarded, and which shall not be set aside on some day of the next succeeding term; and all non-suits and dismissions obtained in the office, and not so set aside, shall be considered as final judgments of the last day of the term; and executions may issue thereupon accordingly.’’ However long the term might last-, such office judgments did not become final until the last day thereof; and no executions could issue thereon, even by the express order of the court, until the end of the term.

Such was the state of the law on the 6th day of March 1834, when an act was passed reciting, that “whereas the protracted session of the Circuit superior court of Hen-rico, on account of the chancery business thereof, subjects parties who have obtained judgments on the common law side of the said court, to considerable inconvenience, from the delay of issuing executions on their said judgments until the close of the court,” and enacting, “that it shall be lawful for the judge of the said court, by an order to be entered *on the records of said court, on the sixteenth juridical day after the said court shall have commenced its session for the trial of civil causes, at each term thereof, to direct that execution may issue on judgments rendered on or before the said sixteenth day of said term, and that all office judgments, non-suits or dismissions obtained in the office and not set aside, on or before the sixteenth day of the said term, shall be considered as final judgments of the said sixteenth day, and executions may issue thereupon accordingly: provided, that nothing herein contained shall deprive the court of the right heretofore exercised, of directing executions to issue at an earlier period, for special cause.” Sess. Acts 1833-4, p. 69, ch. 46, § 2.

On the 15th daj- of March 1836, an act was passed containing a similar provision in regard to the Circuit superior court of law and chancery for the county of Spotsyl-vania, except that it adopts the fifteenth instead - of the sixteenth juridical day of the term. Acts 1835-6, p. 36, ch. 50, § 3. By-section 10 of that act, a change was made of the said act of March 6th, 1834, substituting the twenty-fourth for the sixteenth day of the term in regard to the county of Hen-rico.

Thus stood the law when the present Code was enacted, which applies to this case, and contains the following provisions on the subject:

P. 652; ch. 171, § 44. “Every judgment entered in the office in a case wherein there is no order for an enquiry of damages, and every non-suit or dismission entered therein shall, if not previously set aside, become a final judgment, if the case be in the General or a Circuit court, of the last day of the next term, or the fifteenth day thereof (whichever shall happen first) ; and if it be in a County or Corporation court, of the last day of the next quarterly term, and have the same effect by lien or otherwise as a judgment rendered in the court at such term,” &c.

*§ 45. “If a defendant against whom judgment is entered in the office shall, before it becomes final, appear and plead to issue, it shall be set aside, unless an order for enquiry of damages has been executed ; in which case it shall not be set aside without good cause. Any such issue may be tried at the same term, unless the defendant show good cause for a continuance.”

P. 674, ch. 177, § 21. “Any court, after the fifteenth day of its term, may make a general order allowing executions to issue on judgments and decrees, after ten days from their date, although the term at which they are rendered be not ended. Eor special cause it may, in any particular case, except the same from such order, or allow an execution thereon at an earlier period.”

Under these provisions of the Code, the fifteenth day of a term of a Circuit court which consists of more than fifteen days, is, in effect, the last day of the term as to [749]*749cases on the office judgment (locket in which there is no order for an enquiry of damages, and in which the office judgment •shall not have been set aside on or before that day. The office judgment in such cases becomes as final, to all intents and purposes, on that day, as if it were in fact the last day of the term. The court has no more power over it on a subsequent day of the term than at a subsequent term, and a motion to set it aside would be just as much coram non judice in the one ease as the other. It has all the properties of a final judgment. An execution may forthwith be issued upon it, without any order of court, general or special, for that purpose. It can be corrected, set aside or reversed, only by proceedings in error in the same or a higher court. If the defendant has been taken by surprise,' and has just ground for relief against the judgment, he can obtain it only in a court of equity.

That this is the true construction of the law, is*plainly indicated both by its letter and its spirit. The law expressly declares, that every judgment entered in the office, &c., shall ‘‘become a final judgment of the last day of the next term, or the fifteenth day thereof, whichever shall happen first;” thus putting the two days upon precisely the same footing in regard to office judgments which become final on one or the other. And it further expresslj’ declares, that such judgment shall •‘have the same effect, by lien or otherwise, as a judgment rendered in the court at such term.” The act of March 6, 1834, in which, as we have seen, the provisions of the Code on the same subject have their origin, expressly declared that office judgments, &c., not set aside on or before the sixteenth day of the term, “shall be considered as final judgments, of the said sixteenth day, and executions may issue thereupon accordingly.” Thus using the same language which had been used in 1 Rev. Code 1819, p. 508, § 79, which declared that office judgments, &c., not set aside during the term, “shall be considered as final judgments of the last day of the term, and executions may issue thereupon accordingly.” It would be difficult to place a different construction upon the same words occurring in these two laws in pari materia. There can be no doubt about the construction of the act of 1819, and it would seem there ought to be none about the construction of that of 1834, or of the provisions of the Code.

Again: The preamble of the act of 1834 sheds light upon the meaning of the legislature, and supports the above construction. It recites the mischief designed to be remedied by that act, to wit, the great inconvenience to which parties were subjected by the protracted session of the Circuit superior court of Henrico, on account of the chancery business thereof, from the delay of issuing executions on their judgments until the close of the court.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Va. 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/enders-exors-v-burch-va-1859.