25 Ala. 563 | Ala. | 1854
The judgment entry in this case shows that the defendants, Kennedy and Merritt, withdrew their plea, and remained undefended, saying nothing in bar or preclusion of the plaintiff’s action, &c., and the court proceeded to render judgment against them for the damages in the declaration mentioned. The declaration which is in the record, and which we must regard as the one on which the judgment was predicated, is not in the name of Bolling Young as guardian of Chappell, but is filed by John R. Chappell in his own name. This is an error of the clerk in introducing the name of Young, and may be amended by recurring to the declaration, and could be amended in this court. It therefore furnishes no ground of reversal.—Patterson & Hinson v. Burnett, 6 Ala. 844; Clay’s Digest, pp. 321,-2, §§ 50—54.
The appearance of the defendants, and withdrawal of their plea, is, as we have often decided, a waiver of any defect in
The demand is on a promissory note; and upon a default, or nil dicit, it is competent for the court to render judgment without the intervention of a jury, — the amount of the note, with the interest which has accrued, being the amount to be recovered. The court will look to this, rather than to the amount of damages laid in the conclusion of the declaration. Tf interest has been miscalculated, it must be regarded as á clerical misprision, and may be here corrected.
There are some old decisions which hold that, when the recovery exceeds the damage laid in the declaration, the judgment is erroneous. — See Dinsmore v. Austill, Minor’s R. 89; Flournoy v. Childress, ib. 93; Derrick v. Jones. 1 Stew. 18. But, although we do not find that these decisions are expressly overruled, this court, in cases like this, has frequently departed from them, and by repeated decisions has held, that where the principal and interest on a note constitute the sum •to be recovered, the court may render judgment for the same irrespective of the ad damnum clause in the declaration.—See McWhorter v. Standifer, 2 Porter 519; Elliot v. Smith & Co., 1 Ala. 74. The earlier decisions, so far as they apply to cases like the present, must be considered as overruled.
It results from what we have said, that the judgment of the Circuit Court must be here corrected, and affirmed, at the costs of the appellants.