This application is for a
certiorari,
as a substitute for an appeal claimed to have been denied by the Judge.
Skinner
v.
Maxwell,
Notwithstanding the petition must be denied, it may serve the end in view, to pass upon the points presented, as has been sometimes, though rarely, done by the Court, upon sufficient cause to justify it.
McBryde
v.
Patterson,
The publication required by chapter 108, Acts. 1889, is
“
once a week for four weeks.” This, it appears from the petitioner’s application, was made, for it avers the daily publication in a newspaper from August 3 to August 31, 1891, and a publication on the four Mondays, August 3, 10, 17 and 24, was a publication “ once a week for four weeks” prior to the term of Court beginning Monday, August 31. But if the requirement is construed to mean publication “for four weeks,” still there was a compliance under our statute
(The Code,
§§ 596 and 602), for, “excluding the first day (August 3) and including the last day,” August 31, there was publication made for twenty-eight days, or “four weeks.” The same construction has always been given to the statute
(The Code,
§ 200) requiring personal service “ ten days before the beginning of the term,” for- service before midnight of Friday, the tenth day before Court, has always been held sufficient.
Taylor
v.
Harris,
Nor is there any force in the further objection, that “ a copy of the summons and the proper title of the action was not made in the publication.” The publication as set out in the petition is a substantial publication of the summons and a full compliance with the statute.. It contains everything that is in the summons, and the additional matter in the publication, at the most, was mere surplusage. We cannot conceive how the defendant could have been prejudiced thereby.
Motion denied.
