2 Watts 490 | Pa. | 1834
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This writ of error brings up singly the judgment on the scire facias against Compher, at the suit of the administrators of Anawalt. It does not profess to remove from the court below the original judgment; nor, indeed, could a writ of error issue for that purpose, as more than seven years had elapsed from the rendition of the judgment. The only question, therefore, is, whether the judgment in the scire facias is erroneous ; and it clearly is not so on its face, having been entered after the return of two nihils, which, by long established practice, warrants a judgment; though, it must be confessed, it is a practice liable to abuse. The refusal of the court below to open this judgment, was a matter resting in their discretion, and not assignable for error.
If we were at liberty to look behind the scire facias, and examine the original judgment, there is nothing apparent on the record which would enable this court to declare that there was no judgment against Compher. There was a general appearance by the attorney marked on the docket, opposite both defendants, and the subsequent proceedings, as far as the award, went on without discriminating between them. The case of Erdman v. Stahlnecker, 12 Serg. & Rawle 325, has been relied on by the plaintiff in error as an authority to take the case out of the operation of the rule, that a general appearance by attorney is an appearance for both defendants, as well the one who is not served with process, as the one who is. But the striking feature of that case was, that although there was a general appearance, yet the plaintiff, by his declaration, had excluded from the suit the defendant, who was not served with process, by the use of what, in our practice, is a substitute for the English proceeding of civil outlawry. In the present case no narr. was filed, the case occurring before the act of 1820, which required a declaration to be filed by the plaintiff before he takes out a rule of arbitration. Looking at the case therefore as a c.ourt of error, it is beyond our power to grant relief.
The .case,‘however, as it stands in the court below, appears fraught with the most striking injustice to Compher. The sheriff comes to
So strongly impressed is this court with the propriety and justice of granting such relief to the plaintiff in error in this case, that he is permitted to withdraw his writ of error, in order that he may make application to the court below for that purpose.
The other case between the same parties stands on a similar footing with the present, and the same order is also made in it.
Judgment stayed, with leave to plaintiff in -error to withdraw his writ of error.