Appellant brought his action of ejectment to the March term, 1912, of the circuit court of St. Clair, defendants (appellees) being duly served. Upon the minutes of that term there appears an entry in due form reciting a jury and verdict for plaintiff, and thereupon a judgment that plaintiff have and recover of defendants the land described in the complaint. At a subsequent term defendants showed to the court that the entry purporting to be a judgment had been spread upon the minutes by the clerk after the term of the court, had expired and moved that it be expunged. It was so ordered. In a separate proceedings by way of counterstroke, plaintiff showed to the court a written indorsement upon the summons and complaint purporting to be- the verdict of a jury
In its ruling on defendants’ motion the court was right. In Wynn v. McCraney,
We have reached the conclusion, however, that on plaintiff’s motion he should have had judgment upon the verdict in the form of a judgment nunc pro tunc. The verdict had been written upon the complaint and signed by the foreman as .we have stated. This fact was not denied and was made plain, by the complaint and the jury’s indorsement thereon. It could not well be denied because the records of the court showed that at the .same term defendants had moved the court to-set aside the verdict and to grant a new trial on the ground that error had been, committed, and that it was thereupon considered and adjudged by the court that said motion be overruled. This verdict and this record did not estop the defendants as by a judgment. There was no record of plaintiff’s right as a thing adjudicated for the reason that no judgment, had been entered to that effect. “It is the judgment of the court and not the finding of the jury which binds the parties. The adjudication is not in the verdict, but in the judgment adopted by the court.”—Lorillard v. Clyde,
The quasi record of the verdict, and the memorial of the court’s subsequent action in passing upon the motion to set aside the verdict, the last, if not- the first, incontestable as far as it went, and explicably on the assumption that a verdict had .been rendered, did not of themselves establish plaintiff’s right of recovery, because a verdict, until it has passed into' judgment, is liable to set aside by an order arresting judgment or
In Moody v. Keener,
Ormond, J., differing from the rest of the bench, thought the writing conclusive under the circumstances. He observed, with much force as it appears to us, that the writ was a paper in the custody of the clerk, was in possession of the jury, and, in the absence of any proof calculated to discredit it, the inference could not be resisted that the writing upon it was made by the jury-in accordance Avith the uniform practice to reduce verdicts to writing (although a verdict may be delivered to the court ore tenus), and Avas in fact their verdict. In the case before us the fact that the writing indorsed upon the summons and complaint purported to be a verdict signed by the foreman of a jury, that there was nothing to indicate that it was not what it purported to be, and that the parties and the court subsequently proceeded in the cause as upon a verdict found, is quite enough to authenticate the writing as a quasi record, and to induce the irresistible conclusion that it was in fact the verdict of the jury.
It may be noted that plaintiff’s motion was not made under the statute (section 4140 of the Code) Avhich requires the amendment of clerical errors or mistakes in final judgments, upon the application of either par
It follows from what has been said that the ruling and judgment of the .court in the cause numbered 647 should be affirmed, while the ruling and judgment in the cause numbered 645 should be reversed and remanded. It is accordingly so ordered.
