90 Va. 267 | Va. | 1893
delivered the opinion of the court.
. At the trial of this action the facts were agreed, and the forfeiture adjudged by the court. The defendant in the action
There is no bill of exceptions in the case, and no evidence certified in the record, and no motion to set aside the finding of the court (a jury being waived), and no exception taken and certified by the court throughout the proceedings.
There is nothing, therefore, by which this court can review the judgment. The case must be heard and considered in this court upon the errors apparent upon the face of the record. If no exceptions are taken to any supposed errors of the court which tries the case, these acts are not in the record, and cannot appear in the transcript thereof, and the party aggrieved remains as at common law, without relief. 4 Min. Inst., 728, 729. And this applies to the action of the court in refusiug to set aside the judgment and grant a new trial, because the same is contrary to the law and the evidence. The evidence cannot be reviewed by the court because it is not in the record and is not made a part of the record by bill of exceptions in any form, and a deposition taken in such case is not a part of the record, although copied in the transcript and certified by the court, and certified by the clerk; it is not the province of the clerk to add anything tó the record. Cunningham v. Mitchell, 4 Rand., 189; Bowyer v. Chestnut, 4 Leigh, 1.
In the case of the Roanoke JLand and Imp. Co. v. Kain & Hickson, 80 Va., 592, this subject is fully considered and the authorities controlling this question cited and approved. In that case the deposition taken in the cise, and certified by the clerk, and affidavits filed in the case, and notices copied and certified by the clerk, were not considered by this court.
This court saying of these, they are not made a part of the record by the court, and it is not the province of the'clerk to make anything a part of the record; his province is to copy the record as it is. Citing Judge Green as saying in Cunningham v. Mitchell, supra, that “the certificate of the clerk that these papers were the evidence upon which the judgment was
Mr. Minor says, 4 Min. Inst., 742: “The record proper is-nothing but the formal allegations or pleadings on either side,, the issue, the impannelling of the jury, the verdict, and the judgment.” See also Magarity v. Shipman, 82 Va., 806.
There is no question better settled in this court.
It follows that the agreed facts copied in the record by the clerk and certified as the facts upon which the judgmeut rested - cannot be considered here, and that the case cannot be reviewed here. We can, therefore, perceive no errors in record by which the judgment can be reversed. See also Scott v. Lloyd, 9 Pet., 418, opinion of Chief Justice Marshall; Lawrence v. Comm’th, 86 Va., 579; Offlendinger v. Ford, 86 Va., 920; Fry v. Leslie, 87 Va., 275.
In the case of Newberry v. Williams, cited by counsel as the most recent adjudication upon the subject (89 Va., 298), it was-held that as there was no objection-to the verdict at the proper-time, this failure to object must be considered as a waiver-of the exceptions taken during the trial.
Decree aeeirmed.