64 So. 569 | Ala. | 1914
Before the submission of this cause, the appellee obtained a certiorari to the trial court, to perfect the record. Before the clerk of the circuit court made his return to the certiorari, appellee moved in the trial court to have the judgment appealed from, which was a judgment by default, amended nunc pro tunc, so as to show that a jury was had, to ascertain the amount of damages; the claim or demand sued on being one in which a jury was necessary to ascertain the amount of damages.
The appellant, defendant in the court below, resisted the motion to amend; and here assigns several errors as to the admission of evidence, as to the order allowing the motion, and as to the amendment of the judgment.
There was no error in allowing the bench notes of the trial judge, Avhich show that a jury was ordered
In Nabors v. Meredith, 67 Ala. 333, 335, it is.said: “That practice in this state has been too' long and firmly established to be now disturbed, permitting judgments nunc pro tunc to be entered without requiring notice to be given to the opposite party. No' injustice can result from this rule, for the reason that such amendments are always allowed on some entry or memorandum, which is to be determined from an inspection of the court records, and. cannot be contradicted or gainsaid by proof of extraneous parol facts. The court erred in refusing to grant the motion for want of notice. — Glass v. Glass, 24 Ala. 468; Allen v. Bradford, 3 Ala. 281 [37 Am. Dec. 689]; Bentley v. Wright, 3 Ala. 607; Fugua v. Carriel, Minor, 170 [12 Am. Dec. 46]; Freeman on Judg. § 64. The facts appearing on the record authorized the amendment. The suit was on a note of hand, properly described in the complaint, and the docket of the court contained a memorandum in the handwriting of the presiding judge, which showed the rendition of a judgment by default in favor of the appellant against the defendants in the judgment. The omission of the amount of damages was a mere clerical mistake, and its insertion a purely ministerial act, such as was always amendable at common law, regardless of any power conferred by the statute of jeofails. — Wilkerson v. Goldwaite, 1 Stew. & P. 159.”
There was no error in the trial court’s declining to allow the sheriff to amend his return to the summons and complaint. Such evidence is not admissible on motions to amend judgments nunc pro tunc. While the proposed change Avas called an amendment, it Avas not in law an amendment of the return of the sheriff, but
If the summons and complaint had been admitted, it could not and would not have affected the result; but we see no error in the court’s declining to admit the same on the hearing of the motion to amend.
The judgment was properly amended by reference to the entries on the trial docket, commonly called bench notes; the same being memoranda made by the trial judge. These constituted sufficient authority for the amended judgment entered.
We find no error in the record, and the judgment must be affirmed.
Affirmed.