Saunders v. Griggs' Adm'r

81 Va. 506, 1886 Va. LEXIS 119
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 11, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 81 Va. 506 (Saunders v. Griggs' Adm'r) 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
Saunders v. Griggs' Adm'r, 81 Va. 506, 1886 Va. LEXIS 119 (Va. 1886).

Opinion

Richardson, J.,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

As has been stated, this case is here on appeal from the decree of the court below overruling the appellant’s motion to-reverse the decree of May 3d, 1881, by which Commissioner [511]*511Bryant’s report was confirmed and the appellant and others required to pay to the complainant below, the appellee here, the several sums for which, according to that report, he and his co-defendants were liable on the refunding bonds executed by them on the receipt of their specific legacies. Such motion, in the court which rendered the decree complained of, and its overruling by said court, were essential in order to enable this court to allow an appeal, because the decree was rendered upon the complainant’s bill taken for confessed. Code 1873, chapter 177, sections five and six. By the fifth section the court which gives such decree may, upon motion, reverse it “ for any error fbr which an appellate court might reverse it.” It is true this section requires that every motion under this chapter shall be after reasonable notice to the opposite party. But nowhere in that chapter is it required that the notice shall specify the errors on the face of the record, <fcc., for which the reversal is asked. Under Code 1873, chapter 178, section eight, a petition for an appeal, &c., must assign errors. Yet it is the well known practice for appellate courts not to confine themselves to the errors specified in the petition, but to reverse the decree complained of for any substantial error disclosed by the record, whether mentioned in the petition or not. It is then difficult to perceive how this court, in the case of Gunn v. Turner’s Administrator, 21 Gratt. 382, could have arrived at the conclusion counsel for the appellee contends it came to in that case; that though said chapter 177 does not require the notice of the motion to reverse a decree under sections five and six to assign the errors, yet the court will not notice any error, however substantial it may be, and however patent on the face of the record it may be, and however clearly it may be such an error' as an appellate court would reverse the decree for, unless the errors are assigned. It is true that in that particular case, Staples, J., speaking for the court, did say that the motion in [512]*512that case having been made only to reform the judgment by applying thereto certain credits, which had been inadvertently omitted, and by settling and directing at what scale of depreciation it should be discharged, according to the act for adjusting Confederate liabilities, and no motion having been made in the court below to reverse or amend the judgment for the error then for the first time assigned, to-wit: that the said judgment had been rendered upon a joint bond against the four obligors therein, and the process having been served only on three, the ground raised in this court as to the error last mentioned was not before it and no opinion could be expressed thereon. If the language used by that learned judge could be fairly interpreted to mean that an appeal from a decree of the court below, refusing on motion, made in it on reasonable notice to the opposite party, to reverse a decree made by it on a bill taken for confessed, this court wfill refuse to notice a substantial error apparent on the face of the record and injurious to the party appealing from it, simply because particular attention had not been called to such error in the court below, when the whole record is laid before this court for inspection and for amendment or reversal, we would feel constrained to disapprove the proposition. But we do not think the language susceptible of such construction. In that case the motion made in the court below was to reform the judgment by applying thereto certain omitted credits, and “ by settling and directing at what scale of depreciation it should be discharged, according to the act for adjusting Confederate liabilities.” The court below, “upon the evidence adduced,” refused the motion, and the case was appealed, but without taking any bill of exceptions showing what the evidence in support of the motion was, or what it tended to prove; and this court, in the absence of anything in the record to guide it to a different conclusion, properly affirmed the judgment of the court below, as to the motion [513]*513actually made in that court. In this court, however, the appellant went further, and assigned for error that the judgment of the court below was wrong because of the four obligors to the bond sued on process was served only on three, and the judgment was against all. In the statement of the case it is said: “ The process was executed on all the defendants except Tanquary, as to whom it was silent. The declaration was against all, and they not appearing, the office judgment was confirmed against them, including Tanquary.” This court said: “ This question raised by the second assignment of error is, therefore, not before this court, and no opinion is expressed thereon.” And the judgment of affirmance was without prejudice to the right of the plaintiffs. in error to move in the court below to reverse or amend the original judgment against them, upon the ground suggested in said second assignment of error. The ruling in that case was not based upon the untenable ground simply that the error alleged had not' been assigned in the court below, but evidently on the broader, well established doctrine that, in the absence of evidence showing affirmatively that process had not been executed on one of the parties' defendant, the court below, being a court of competent jurisdiction, and both the subject matter and parties being within that jurisdiction, the judgment “ is presumed to be right until the contrary is shown, and a party in an appellate court, alleging error in the court below, must show it in the regular way, or the presumption in favor of its correctness must prevail.” Harman v. City of Lynchburg, 33 Gratt. 37; Hill v. Woodward, 78 Va., 765. In looking to the whole record in Gunn v. Turner’s Adm’rs, the court could find nothing to overturn the presumption in favor of the correctness of the judgment below, and therefore it could but affirm that judgment. Had it been shown affirmatively that the process was not served, this court would doubtless have reversed [514]*514the judgment below. It is clear that the ruling in that case does not support the contention of the appellees here.

It is true that objections on the mere ground of irregularity cannot be made for the first time in the appellate court; but such is not the case as to objections based on grounds of substantial justice, as the necessity of these bring jurisdiction over the subject matter and the parties to the suit, a good cause of action, a valid verdict, and a proper judgment. See Powell on App. Pro. 178.

It is true that in the case at bar the notice of the motion to reverse is very comprehensive, specifying six different errors, though not specifying the error assigned in the petition for appeal, to-wit: that it was error in the court below to enter any decree for an account at the May term, 1880, when the appellant and several other defendants, obligors in the refunding bonds, had not been summoned, and were not before the court, although named as defendants in the bill and shown to be necessary parties and seriously interested in the subject matter of the accounts ordered.

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Bluebook (online)
81 Va. 506, 1886 Va. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saunders-v-griggs-admr-va-1886.