4 Ga. 157 | Ga. | 1848
By the Court
delivering the opinion.
1. The motion in the Court below was to set aside the judgment and execution against the plaintiff in error, because, after granting a rule nisi for a new trial, returnable to the next Term with a supersedeas, the presiding Judge had, in vacation, when there was no order to that effect taken and entered on the minutes, considered and dismissed the rule, and directed the execution to issue. This motion was refused by Judge Warren, and hence this writ of error. We think the motion to set aside the judgment and execution, ought to have prevailed. The order at Chambers to dismiss the rule, and directing the execution to proceed, was irregular and void, and the supersedeas was not for that reason thereby dissolved. The supersedeas was operative until the rule for anew trial was legally disposed of. We have already decided this question.
It appears, further, from this record, that at the time when application was made to set aside this judgment and execution, an order was passed directing the order of the Judge (Taylor) at Chambers, dismissing the rule nisi, and also the entry on the motion docket before referred to, to be entered on the minutes, nunc pro tunc. This order could not cure the irregularity. Judge Taylor had no authority in this case to pass the order in vacation dismissing the rule and directing the execution to issue. It was illegal and void. It could not be made legal and valid by an ex post facto amendment of the record. And as the entry on the motion docket was no part of the record, at any time, it could not be made so by an order nunc pro tunc. An act', wholly without authority, cannot be sanctified by subsequently doing what, being done antecedent to it, would have given authority for that act)
Let the judgment be reversed.