The amended petition for
recordari
avers that there was no service of summons upon the defendant or its agent. If so, the judgment could be set aside at any time upon motion before the Justice of the Peace who tried the cause, or his successor in office.
Whitehurst
v.
Transportation Co.,
At common law and up to the adoption of the Code of Civil Procedure the writ of
recordari
served a double purpose, either as a substitute for an appeal lost without
*320
default of the petitioner or as a writ of false judgment where the Justice did not haAm jurisdiction or when judgment was taken without service of process. The original Code of Civil Procedure of 1868, by section 296 (now
The Coda,
§544), abolished writs of error and substituted appeals, but did not provide for writs of
certiorari
and
recordari,
as was pointed out by the Court in
Marsh
v.
Williams,
63 N C., 371. And thereupon the Act of 1874-75 (now
The Code,
§545) was enacted, as follows: “Writs of
certiorari, recordari
and
supersedeas
are hereby authorized as heretofore in use. The writs of
certiorari
and
recordari,
when used as substitutes for an appeal,” etc. From this it would seem that the writ of
recordari
was authorized to the extent it had been “heretofore in use,” and extended to cases other than “ when used as substitutes for an appeal.” But we are not without express decisions upon the point. In
Weaver
v.
Mining Co.,
Nor is there anything in Whitehurst v. Transportation Co., supra, which militates against these authorities. In that case, the Justice’s judgment having been docketed in the Superior Court, the defendant brought an action in that Court to have the judgment sot aside on the ground that process had not been served in the case in which judgment had been rendered. This Court held that the Court below properly dismissed the action, since relief could have been had by a motion in the cause before the Justice to set aside the judgment. But it was not held that the defendant might not also have had relief by another proceeding in the cause; i. e., by an application for a recordari.
As to the other allegation; in this application, of fraud and collusion between the Justice and others, inasmuch as final judgment had been rendered relief could only have been had on that ground by an independent action.
Navassa Guano Co.
v.
Bridgers,
The defendant had its election. Had it proceeded by a motion in the cause before the Justice and appealed from the refusal, the finding of fact by the Justice would not have been conclusive, as would be the findings upon a similar motion in the Superior Court.
Finlayson
v.
Accident Asso
*322
ciation,
In reference to the argument made by defendant's counsel as to the words in
The Code,
§<376, providing for an appeal in fifteen days after notice of judgment in cases where “the process is not personally se'rved,” it is proper to say that those words apply only in cases where the service is by publication and have no application when the summons is personally served on the agent or officer of a corporation under
The Code,
§217 (1);
Clark
v.
Manufacturing Co.,
The Court below should have found the facts
(Collins
v.
Gilbert,
