16 Mo. App. 176 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1884
delivered the opinion of the court.
The record shows the following facts: The plaintiffs filed their petition praying that certain conveyances be set aside for fraud. Two of the four defendants answered,
The statement of the controversy seems to announce its only possible conclusion. The judge’s memorandum on the docket was no record, or any part of a record. As evidence, it was entitled to no more weight than his oral statement would have, after the event. In arraying this against the highest form of evidence, the traditional verity of the record seems to have been lost sight of. The record was conclusive, and could not be thus contradicted at a subsequent term. The plaintiffs were not prejudiced
The plaintiffs contend that, as a proposition of law, the demurrer ought to have been sustained; from which it follows that the record should have been amended, so as to show that it was sustained. If the proposition of law be correct, then there was error in the judgment of the court-But error can not be corrected by impeaching its record. An appeal, or writ of error, is the instrumentality for such-a purpose. The judgment is affirmed.