104 So. 81 | Miss. | 1925
The bill sought to enforce the delivery of the freight in question to appellee, and for the recovery of damages *161 against appellant for its alleged wrongful failure to make delivery theretofore. The chancellor gave his fiat for the issuance of a temporary injunction upon the giving of a bond by the appellee, conditioned according to law to be approved by the clerk. The bond was given by appellee, and the temporary injunction issued and served upon appellant. So far as appears of record, this was the only process issued and served in the case. There is no affirmative showing in the record that the regular chancery summons required by statute was issued and served upon appellant. The injunction writ contained no command to appellant to appear and defend the cause. At the next regular term of the chancery court of the county, the appellant failing to appear, a decree pro confesso was taken in the usual form, adjudging (quoting the language of the decree in part) "that said defendant had been duly served with process of summons more than five days before the beginning of the present term of court, and the defendant having failed to appear and answer or make defense to the suit within the time allowed by law but on the contrary wholly made default," and that therefore the allegations of appellee's bill be taken and considered as true. Thereafter at the same term of the court, the cause was set down for final hearing by appellee, "on original bill, exhibits thereto, personal service of process, decree pro confesso and oral proof." There was a trial and a final decree reciting a hearing on bill, exhibits, decree pro confesso, and oral proof, and adjudging appellee to be entitled to the relief prayed for, which relief was awarded.
The statutory method of making the oral evidence a part of the record for the purpose of appeal was not adopted by appellant, neither was any other method adopted to make the oral evidence had on the trial a part of the record for appeal. The record simply contains the original bill, exhibits thereto, fiat of the chancellor, injunction bond, and temporary injunction, the *162 return of service thereon upon appellant, order to set down, the decree pro confesso, and final decree.
Appellant contends, on the authority of Sheffield v.Friedberg,
The evidence upon which judgments and decrees of courts are founded is not necessarily a part of the record nor required to be shown by the record. The law presumes they are founded on sufficient evidence, and, in the absence of such a showing by the evidence in the record, still, if it appears from the record that the fact in question was adjudicated upon evidence deemed sufficient by the court, such adjudication cannot be impeached on appeal. And the presumption of law in favor of the correctness of judgments and decrees applies as well to judgments and orders adjudicating jurisdictional facts as to others. If the record show that the court adjudicated *163
that a fact existed, the existence of which was essential to the court's acquiring jurisdiction over the party, the record is conclusive as against attack on appeal. 4 C.J. 742, section 2675;Cannon v. Cooper,
Every fact necessary to the validity of the decree appealed from will be presumed to have been before the trial court unless the contrary appear in the record. As stated, the cause was tried on original bill, exhibits, decree pro confesso and oral testimony. It may have been shown to the court, on the trial by the oral testimony, that the required summons was duly issued, served, returned, and had been lost or destroyed. The decree proconfesso recites that to have been the fact. Will now on appeal that solemn judgment of the court be set aside on the mere absence from the record of the required summons? We think not. To do so would be treating the solemn judgment of the court with little consideration and effect.
Affirmed.