11 W. Va. 169 | W. Va. | 1877
delivered the opinion of the Court:
The president, directors and company of the Farmers’ Bank of Virginia, on the 5th day of July 1869, sued out of the clerk’s office of the circuit court of Fayette county a summons in an action of debt against “ James Montgomery and S. H. alias Samuel Carrick for $150.00, costs of protest $2.85, and damages $300.00.” The plaintiff filed its declaration and note in said office at rules on the first Monday in August 1869.
On the 23d day of August 1870 the defendants filed the plea of statute of limitations, “ that the action was not commenced within five years next after the cause of . the said action arose;” and on the same day the defendants moved to dismiss the case. The court sustained the plea of limitation, and dismissed the case. The order of dismissal of August 23, 1870, is in the following language: “This day came the parties, by their attorneys, and the defendants filed the plea rf statute of limitations, which plea was sustained. It is therefore ordered that this suit be dismissed and that the defendants recover of the plaintiffs their costs in this behalf expended, in- ■ eluding an attorney’s fee of $5.00.”
On the 31st day of March 1874, the plaintiff filed in its behalf the affidavit of Alexander F. Mathews in the
On the 4th day of September 1874 the plaintiffs filed in the clerk’s office a memorandum, stating the judgment in favor of the defendants on the statute of limitations, but alleging as follows: “ That the office judgment was not set aside by any plea at the term after its confirmation, so that the bank claims that upon the adjournment of the term, there was an absolute judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, and the clerk will therefore issue execution for the debt in favor of the plaintiffs, affidavit having been filed as required by law.”
On the 2d day of October 1874 the plaintiff sued out an execution against James Montgomery and Samuel H. Carrick for the sum of $108.22. The copy of the execution gives the date June 20, 1875. ,
The defendant, Montgomery, gave the plaintiff notice of a motion to be made on the second day of the August term of said circuit court, to quash said execution, upon the ground that there was no judgment, which notice was accepted August 9, 1875, and docketed August 28, 1875.
On March 28, 1876 the court did quash said execution, on the ground that it issued more than two years after the date of the judgment. On the same day the said court upon the motion of the plaintiff moved the court to confirm the office judgment of September 1869, ■which was done in the following order: “The judgment entered in the office in this case, at the September term rules 1869, having become a final judgment on the last day of the February term 1870 of this court, and the plaintiffs having filed an affidavit in this cause that there is due from the defendants to them upon a demand
To that order a writ of error and svjpersedeas was awarded by this Court, September 12, 1876.
The record of this case shows great irregularity, but such is the history of it as near as can be culled from the record, essential for the adjudication of it in this Court.
The defendants say they are aggrieved by. the said judgment of March 28, 1876.
The authority for said judgment the appellee claims is by virtue of section 46, chapter 125 of the Code. This Court has at this term pronounced what it believes to be the proper construction of that section of the statute, in the case of Hunter v. Snyder’s ex’r. I understand from the opinion in that case that if the affidavit required by the said 46th section,¡is filed during the first term of the court after the office judgment at rules, or at any time during the following vacation of the court final judgment may be entered during that term in court on or before the 15th day thereof, or during that vacation by the clerk. But if the affidavit be not made during that termj or during the following vacation, then the clerk has no authority to enter up final judgment, but the .plaintiff must prove his case before the court, before judgment is given him. The language, in part, of Judge
For the foregoing reasons the said judgment of the circuit court of Fayette county of the 28th day of March 1876, is reversed with costs to the plaintiff in error against the defendant in error, the president, directors and company of the Farmers’ Bank of Virginia.
JudgmeNt Reversed.