147 S.E. 877 | W. Va. | 1929
The defendants conducted a brokerage business and the plaintiff was one of their clients. This suit involves a series of transactions between them, from which the plaintiff claims a balance due him of $378,171.77, while the defendants admit owing him only $13.51. A decree dated September 15, 1926, and entered on September 16, 1926, purported to be upon consideration of the argument and the evidence, and directed a recovery of $22,792.83 in favor of the plaintiff. On October 25, 1926, a later day of the same term of the circuit court, *195 a motion was made by counsel theretofore representing plaintiff to set aside the decree of September 16th and grant a re-argument and rehearing of the cause. On October 27, 1926, a petition duly verified by plaintiff was filed on his behalf, by new counsel, alleging that the decree of September 16, 1926, was entered "without the knowledge, consent or approval of the plaintiff, and without the matters in issue having been passed upon by the court." The petition prayed that the decree be set aside. Both the motion and the petition were ordered filed and taken under advisement. The defendants appeared to the petition but did not answer or reply to it. On October 20, 1927, an order was entered which stated that the court "having fully examined the record herein" was of opinion that the decree of September 15, 1926, was fair and just, and overruled "the several motions" of plaintiff made on October 27, 1926, to set aside that decree. The plaintiff secured an appeal from the order of October 20, 1927.
After the appeal was perfected in this Court, the defendants suggested a diminution of the record and had certified here by the clerk of the circuit court a memorandum filed with the papers in the cause on October 20, 1927, by the trial judge, and a certificate entered of record by him on March 18, 1929. The memorandum is as follows:
"Dwight v. In Chancery Hazlett
Upon finality of decree of September 16, 1926.
Nothing appears to challenge the fairness and good faith of this decree. Counsel for the petitioner assented to it. They had apparent authority to do so and therefore the petitioner is bound by it. Singer, etc. vs. Farrell,
144 Va. 395 ;132 S.E. 312 (244)."
The memorandum is not endorsed as filed and no order was entered filing it. The usual practice is to enter such an order, and it was the duty of the clerk to have endorsed the memorandum as filed. Failure in these respects, however, did not prevent the memorandum from becoming a part of the *196
record. It was placed with the papers herein and delivered to and kept on file by the proper custodian. That constituted a filing. "A paper is said to be filed when it is delivered to the proper officer and by him received to be kept on file. * * * In the absence of statute to that effect, it is not essential to the validity of the filing of a paper in a cause, that the clerk endorse upon such paper the fact of its being filed. The endorsement is nothing more than presumptive evidence of the filing." 8 Ency. Pl. Pr., 923, 927. 8 Standard Ency. of Procedure, 977, 987; 25 C. J., 1124, 1126-7; Darnell v. Flynn,
The certificate was entered upon the motion of the defendants on March 18, 1929, in the vacation of the trial court. It stated that after this cause had been submitted for decision, counsel for both parties appeared before the court, represented that "both sides" had agreed that a decree should be entered for $22,793.22, and that they were satisfied that this amount was a fair settlement; and requested the entry of the decree of September 15, 1926. The certificate further explained that the statement in the order of October 20, 1927, that the court had fully examined the record, was not intended to mean that the court had examined the evidence. The certificate proceeds as follows: "The record examined by the Court was the decree of September 15, 1926; the facts presented to me when the consent decree was entered; the filing of the motions aforesaid and the fact that nothing was presented in support of said motions. The Court has not read or considered the evidence in this case."
It is settled that a court has the inherent power to amend its records in accordance with the facts, so that the rolls shall "speak the truth." Mere lapse of time in cases not under section 5, Chapter 134, Code, does not divest the court of this right "where justice and the truth of the case require it." 7 Rawle C. L., pp. 1019-1020; 15 C. J., pp. 975-6-7; Frink v. Frink,
It is also established by "the overwhelming weight of authority" that while an appeal, when properly perfected, deprives the trial court of jurisdiction of the case it still retains jurisdiction of the record therein, and is not deprived by the appeal of its right to amend the record. State v.Wyndham,
The record as amended clearly establishes the facts that the decree of September 15, 1926, was the result of a compromise between counsel for the parties; that the chancellor refused to set aside the decree solely because of the assent thereto of plaintiff's attorneys; and that he never read the evidence in the cause or decided it upon the merits.
It is now generally held throughout the United States that the mere relation of attorney and client does not clothe the attorney with implied authority to compromise the matters in *198
litigation. "The power of an attorney is confined to the prosecution of a suit and the incidents properly connected therewith; and does not extend to the compromising and discharging of his client's cause of action, without receiving his full claim." Vail v. Conant,
Counsel for defendants contend that the decree of September 15, 1926, should be sustained as a consent decree, citingPrince's Admr. v. McLemore,
Implying a power in an attorney to consent to a judgment for a less sum than his client claims, is inconsistent with the negation of an implied authority to compromise the claim. For this reason some courts deny the right of counsel to consent to such a judgment without express authority. Freeman on Judgments (5th Ed.), sec. 1346; 2 Rawle C. L., p. 992, sec. 71; note "Confession of Judgment", 76 Am. Dec. 259. Without recognizing this inconsistency, however, courts generally declare that an attorney has implied authority to enter a consent decree.Teter v. Irwin,
Because of the motion to set aside the decree of September 15, 1926, that decree did not become final and appealable until October 20, 1927, when the motion was denied. Straley v. Payne,
The order of October 20, 1927, will accordingly be reversed, the decree dated September 15, 1926, and entered of record the following day, will be set aside, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded. *202