3 Ala. 109 | Ala. | 1841
It may be observed, that the plaintiff in error, was the defendant in the execution referred to, and that the land now in dispute, was sold as his property. Now it may be true, that where one is seeking to recover upon a title acquired by purchase at a sheriff’s sale, he should show a judgment, yet that principle is not applicable to a case circumstanced as the present. Here, the objection is not that there was no judgment, but, that the judgment had been suspended in its operation by an injunction, which for any thing appearing to the contrary, is still in full force. The injunction did not vacate the judgment, it merely inhibited its execution, until the case should be
The record contains no entry of a judgment of non-suit, nor does it appear that an execution for the costs of a term issued against the plaintiff in error; It may then, in the absence of any thing to explain it, and under the influence of the rule, which makes all reasonable intendments in favor of the proceedings of Courts of justice, be supposed that the entry was a mere correction of a decision of the Court, not then recorded ; and serves to show that the plaintiff should not have been non-suited, and that the defendant, for some default, should pay costs, not that the costs were the consequence of setting aside the non-suit. Or, it is possible, that there is a clerical error in charging the defendant, instead of the plaintiff with costs, which the Circuit Court can correct. Be this as it may, we are strongly inclined to the opinion,, that such an entry as that shown by the record, even though in itself erroneous, must be controlled and corrected in some other manner than by a writ of error, to revise the final judgment.
This view is decisive of the case, and the consequence is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.