The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The plaintiff brought this action in a magistrate’s court to recover the amount due on certain merchandise alleged to have been sold and delivered to the defendants by the plaintiff in pursuance of the terms of a certain instrument in writing, a copy of which is set out in the “Case,” signed by the defendants and one Elaun, as agent for the plaintiff company. The defendants filed their answ.er in writing, in which they set up the following defenses : 1st. A general denial. 2d. A denial of the corporate character of the plaintiffs. 3d. A denial of any legal contract for the sale of such merchandise. 4th. They set up an affirmative defense alleging that the instrument of writing above referred to was “an order and not a contract, and the same had been duly countermanded before its acceptance by the plaintiff, and that the said order was without consideration, and that if it should be found that there had *586 been any consideration, that same had failed.” After the testimony on the part of the plaintiff was closed, the defendant moved for a nonsuit, “on the ground that the plaintiff had failed to prove the corporate existence of itself,” which motion was refused by the magistrate.' The defendants thereupon proceeded to introduce their testimony, and at its close, the magistrate rendered judgment in favor of the defendants upon the following grounds: “ist. That the instrument marked ‘Ex. A,’ or a part of it, was an order, and not a contract. 2d. That the countermanding of the order, as stated by Mr. Chapman, was not contradicted.” From this judgment the plaintiff appealed to the Circuit Court, where the appeal was heard by his Honor, Judge Klugh, who overruled certain of the exceptions to the magistrate’s judgment, but sustained others, and rendered judgment reversing the magistrate’s judgment, and directing that the plaintiff have judgment for the amount claimed, with costs. From this judgment of the Circuit Court the defendants appealed to this Court .upon the several exceptions set out in the record, which, excepting the ninth, abandoned at the hearing, should be included in the report of the case.
*589
*591
Exception nine having been abandoned at the hearing, need not be further noticed.
A¥e are unable to perceive how this question can be raised under this appeal. The “Case” shows that when the plaintiff closed its testimony before the magistrate, the defendants moved for a nonsuit, basing their motion solely on the ground “that the plaintiff had failed to prove the corporate existence of itself.” That motion was refused, and there was the end of the matter, unless this adjudication of the magistrate had been overruled, and this does not appear in the “Case.” Indeed, we must assume that this question was never presented to, or considered by, or passed upon by the Circuit Judge, for we do not perceive how the question could have got before him properly. It was certainly not raised by any of plaintiff’s exceptions for the purpose of the appeal from the judgment of the magistrate, and it does not appear that the defendant asked the Circuit Judge to sustain the judgment of the magistrate upon the ground that the plaintiff ought to have been nonsuited. The Circuit Judge in his judgment makes no allusion t‘o any such point. It is true, that when the magistrate refused the motion for a nonsuit, an exception to such ruling was noted by defendants’ *592 attorneys, but it is quite common for counsel in the progress of a case to ask that certain exceptions be noted, but do not afterwards make such exceptions the basis of any point which is raised by a subsequent appeal. These two exceptions must, likewise, be overruled.
The judgment of this Court is, that the judgment of the Circuit Court 'be affirmed.
