West v. . Ratledge

15 N.C. 31
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1833
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 15 N.C. 31 (West v. . Ratledge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West v. . Ratledge, 15 N.C. 31 (N.C. 1833).

Opinion

Daniei, Judge.

After stating the case proceeded: In deciding the question, whether a variance between the writ and declaration can, after verdict, be taken advantage of by the defendant in arrest of judgment, it becomes necessary to make some observations upon the^ law and practice of the courts in England, as well as the law and practice of the courts of this State, and also on the decisions that have been made in this court on the subject. In England, when a person is about to commence a suit, the usual course of proceeding is, *33 in the first place, to execute a warrant to an attorney of the court to have' the writ issued, and the pleadings in the cause made up. The attorney then gives instructions for the original; these instructions are contained in a paper called thr praecipe, in which he sets forth the cause of action. Formerly, the practice was to take the warrant and the praecipe to the chancery, where the original writ was caused to be made out by the Master of the Rolls ; which original recited the action as, stated in the praecipe. The original is a mandatory letter in parchment from the King, tested in his name, and sealed with the great seal. It is directed to the sheriff or other returning officer of the county where the plaintiff intends to lay the venue, and is made returnable to the court either of the King’s Bench or Common Pleas, at Westminster. If the sheriff return on the original non est inventus, the original is then left on file in the court, and a judicial writ or process issues, called a special capias ad respondendum, which is grounded upon the original. If the sheriff return on the capias, non est ire- ventus, the plaintiff then may issue an alias, and a plurics, and so on into outlawry, to compel an appearance by the defendant. When the defendant appears in court in consequence of the service of the original, or an arrest on any process which issues upon it, the plaintiff then files his declaration, and serves a copy on the defendant, who defends either by demurrer or plea. If be pleads to the action, then the whole of the pleadings to the making up of the issue are completed in the Superior Court at Westminster. A nisi prius record is then made out and transmitted to the court of nisi prius, or the assizes of the county where the venue is laid, that the issues may be there tried by a jury. When a trial takes place, and a verdict is rendered, it is entered on the nisi prius roll, or some paper attached to it which is called the postea, and delivered to the party in whose favor the verdict is rendered, who returns it into the Superior Court, at Westminster, where the record belongs; and on notice being given to the adverse party, a motion is then made for judgmentwhich, if no *34 cause is shown to the contrary, is rendered by the court upon which issues the execution.

In modern times the practice of commencing suit by original purchased but of Chancery, has been tacitly waived by the profession. The practice is now, for the attorney to leave the praecipe and a memorandum of bis warrant at the Filazcr’s office, and the Filazer thereupon issues a capias ad respondendum, in the first instance, keeping the praecipe as instructions for the original, if it afterwards becomes necessary, by a writ of error being brought after a judgment by default, on demurrer, or on plea of nul tiel record: for the want of an original is aided after verdict, by Slat. 18, Elisa. c. 14. If a writ of terror should be brought, for the want of an original, in any of those cases where the defect is not cured by the Statute of Elizabeth, the plaintiff may, by a petition to the Master of the Rolls, obtain an original and move the court where the record is, to amend by adding the. the original, which is always granted. So that the record is complete, when in obedience to the writ of certi-orari, it is transmitted into the Court of Errors. Tiio plaintiff in error will then have nothing in the record Upon which he Can assign errors, and will fail in his effort to reverse the judgment. (1 Saund. 318, a. Archb. P. K. B. 73.) By the rules of the common law, great nicety and exactness were acquired in the proceedings and pleadings in a suit; small errors and inacilracics were always suro to be fatal to the party making them; as for instance, in bailable actions, the declaration should always correspond with the writ in the names of the parties, and in the cause of action, (Bingham v. Dickie, 1 Eng. C. L Rep. 276. Archb. Pra. 68, 69, 124,) and if there was a variance in these, or in the sum demanded, between the writ and declaration, it would be fatal.— (Archb. 68.) The Legislature has from time to time, endeavored to remedy what it considered an evil, and has passed several statutes of jeofails and for the amendment of the law, to prevent justice being strangled in a net Of forms and technicalities. The Legislature, further to aid the administration of justice passed *35 the statute 5 Geo. 1 c. 13, (in the year 1718.) The statute is as follows :

" An Act for the amendment of writs of error, and "for the further preventing the arresting or reversing " of judgments after verdict.

"Whereas great delay of justice hath of late years "been occasioned by defective writs of error, which, " as the law now stands* are not amendable: For remc- " dy whereof, Be it enacted, &c. that all writs of error " wherein there shall be any variance from the origin- " al record or other defect, may and-shall be amended " and made agreeable to such record by the respec- " tive courts where such writ or writs of error shall be "made returnable; and that where any verdict hath " been or shall be given in any action, suit, bill, plaint' "'or demand, in any of his Majesty’s courts of record " at Westminster, or in any other court of record' within "England or Wales, the judgment thereupon shall not "be stayed or reversed for any defect or fault, cither in “ form or substance in any bill, writ, original or judici- " al, or for any variance in such writs from the declara- " tion dr other proceedings : Frovided, nevertheless, That " nothing in this act contained shall extend or be con-"strded to extend to an appeal'of felony or murder, or "to any process upon any indictment or presentment, "or information of or for any offence nr misdemeanor " whatsoever.” (S Vol. Brit. Stat. 43.)”

It the aforesaid statute is in-force in this state, it cures-the defect in this case arising from a variance between the writ and declaration. It becomes us now to enquire, whether it is in force or not. When this country was first settled, it was foreseen that the establishment of courts of justice was absolutely necessary for- the well being of the society of people who were about to inhabit it.

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.C. 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-v-ratledge-nc-1833.