7 W. Va. 306 | W. Va. | 1874
The writ in this case is against Thomas MeHuffinan and Spencer, alias S. R. Hill, and is made returnable the
‘‘First. The defendants were never served with process ; the return of the sheriff, if sufficient in other respects (which it is not), shows that the summons had not been executed upon the defendants in this action, of either of them. The defendants could not appear by attorney until they had been duly summoned.*’
“Second. The plaintiff having failed to file the affidavit required by the orders made in the cause on the' 25th day of October, and on the 30th day of December, 1869, the action stood dismissed, and the orders and judgments subsequently entered were coram non judice and void.”
The appellant’s counsel, in support of the first error assignee, cited the Court to Crump v. Bennett in vols. 1 and 2, Littell’s Kentucky Reports, and Moore v. Parker, 3 (Litt. Ky.) I have examined these cases, and find they do not sustain his proposition. The cases there cited are materially different from the case before us.
A record is truth in contemplation of law. Courts of record speak by means of their record, and the record imports in itself such incontrollable credit and verity that it generally admits of no averment, plea or proof to the contrary. 3 Tho. Co. Litt., 323; Field v. Gibbs, Peters (U. S. Cir. Court,) 155; Calwells v. Shields & Somerville, 2 Rob. (Va.), 305. Here the entry made at the October term, 1869, after stating the names of each of the defendants in the caption thereto, declares that “on motion of the defendants, by their attorney, who pleaded payment,” &c. “And on the further motion of the defendants, it is ordered,” &c. If this record speaks the truth, then the defendants appeared before the court, by their attorney, and personally also, and this must be taken as true. Where a cause is 'on the trial docket^ whether properly or improperly, the defendants may
The second error is not well taken, because the record of the judgment of the 8th of December, 1871, declares that the cause had been regularly continued, at the several intervening terms of the court, and the case was “submitted to the court” by the parties, for trial, without objection. “The Suitor’s Test Oath,” which the order of December, 1869 states is filed, is not disclosed by the record, and, under the circumstances, and the declaration and recitals of the judgment of December 30, 1871, this Court would be authorized, if necessary, to sustain the judgment of the court below to presume that the plaintiff did file the affidavits required by the orders of court of October and December. Perkins’ Admr. v.
For the foregoing reasons the judgment appealed from must be affirmed with costs and damages, according to law, to the appellees.
JUDGMENT APFIRMED.