44 N.C. 472 | N.C. | 1853
It appeared that the plaintiff obtained a judgment before a justice of the peace against the defendant, who prayed an appeal to the Superior Court. The justice who gave the judgment, thinking the defendant could not, by law, appeal to the Superior Court, endorsed upon the papers an appeal to the county court. This endorsement was afterwards altered by the magistrate at the instance of the defendant, and in the absence of the plaintiff, and the appeal entered to the Superior Court. The papers were thereupon returned to the Superior Court, and on motion of the plaintiff, the appeal was there dismissed. The writ of recordari was then obtained.
His Honor, Ellis, J., before whom the motion was made, ordered (473) the cause to be transferred to the trial docket; from which order the plaintiff appealed to the Supreme Court.
The statute of 1850, chapter 1, enacts that "if either of the parties to a trial before a justice of the peace shall be dissatisfied with the judgment given thereon he may appeal, either to the next term of the Court of Pleas and Quarter Sessions of his county, or to the next term of the Superior Court, at the option of the party: provided, sufficient security be given, as now prescribed by law." The plaintiff *432
in the recordari had, by virtue of the statute, an undoubted right to appeal to the Superior Court of Law from the judgment given against him by the justice on 16 August, 1851. Of this right the justice had no authority to deprive him; but he did, under a mistake of the law, attempt to deprive him of it, by entering upon the judgment an appeal to the county court. Whether, upon discovering his mistake, the justice had the power, in the absence and without the consent of the other party, to change the direction of the appeal, by striking out the word "county," and inserting the word "Superior," so as to carry the appeal to the latter court, it is unnecessary to decide. The act of the justice, certainly, we think, vacated the appeal to the county court; because, after the word "county" was erased, there was nothing in the papers to show that the county court could entertain it; and had the magistrate returned it there, the county court would have been compelled to dismiss it. After the erasure, the appeal was either properly to the Superior Court, or it was made void by the act of the magistrate. If it were properly to the Superior Court, then that court ought not to have dismissed it; but, having done so, the appellant was entitled to the writ of recordari, as the only remedy then open to him; and in such case, it is not pretended, as indeed it could not be, that the judgment or dismission would be a bar to this remedy. Bond v. McNider,
PER CURIAM. Judgment affirmed.
Cited: Rollins v. Henry,