delivered the opinion of the court.
When this case was before this court at the last term, on a motion to dismiss the writ of error (see
Of the numerous errors assigned in this case, but three can be noticed as coming properly under the cognizance of -this court. The cause was originally tried before the District Court of Scott county, and removed, by writ of error,.-to the Supreme Court of the Territory of Iowa. That court struck from the record the bills of exceptions alleged to have , been taken on the
But bills of exceptions were taken by the plaintiffs in error to the ruling of the Supreme Court of Iowa, in rejecting the bills sealed by the District Court, and in refusing to grant a mandamus to the judge of the District Court to sign a bill of exceptions nunc pro tunc; and this rejection and refusal are now assigned for error in this court. It has been questioned whether the action of the Supreme Court of Iowa on these points is the proper subject of a bill of exceptions,- or can be reviewed in this court. But as we- perceive ho error in the course pursued by the court, it will be unnecessary to notice these objections.
^The case was tried in the District Court of Scott county at October term, 1841, and the bill of exceptions which was struck from the record was dated on the 21st of December, 1843. It did not purport to have been taken on the trial, nor was there any evidence on the record that any exceptions were taken or noted by the judge. And, assuming the fact as stated by the counsel for the defendant below, that he had taken ,the exceptions during the trial, and had reduced them ' to. form afterwards, yet the /bill was not settled during the term in consequence of objection made to certain matters therein by the opposite counsel; and the judge, though/ he signed a bill two years after the trial, refused to sign it nunc pro tunc, as if takeii on the trial.
The act of Assembly of Iowa regulating the practice of their courts provides, .that “if, during the progress of any trial in any civil cause, eithe party shall allege an exception to the opinion of the court, and reduce the same .to writing, it shall be the duty of the judge to allow said exceptions, and to sign and seal the same; and the said bill of exceptions shall thereupon become' a part of the record of- such cause; and if any judge of the District Court shall refuse to allow or sign such bill of exceptions tendered, and the same ■ is signed by three or more disinterested by-standers or attorneys of said court, the judge shall then permit the said bill to be filed and become a part of the record ; if the judge refuse, the Supreme Court of the Territory may, when such, cause is brought before them by writ of error or appeal^ upon proper affidavit of such refusal, admit such bill of exceptions as part,of the record.”
This act requires that' the exceptions must be taken during the progress , oi the trial,-reduced to writing, and tendered to the judge, and gives ample renied- to the-party, injured, in case of-a refusal to sign them or permit them to be made á part of the record. If the party does not avail himself of therein
The practice is well settled, also, by the decisions of this court. See. Ex parte Martha Bradstreet (
These cases are conclusive as to • the correctness of the proceedings of the Supreme Court of Iowa, in striking out the bill of exceptions and refusing to award a mandamus to compel the district judge to sign a bill nunc pro tunc.- It will be unnecessary, therefore, for this court to express any opinion on. the questions, whether, under the peculiar provisions of the statute of Iowa, a party who had neglected to pursue the course pointed out by it would be' entitled, under any circumstances, to t(ie remedy of a mandamus; and if so, whether a refusal by • the Supreme Court to grant it could be alleged for error in this court.
The only other assignments of error which can be noticed by this court are those numbered 11 and 12: — “ That the Supreme Court'erred in affirming the action of the District Court in regard to the judgment of April 12, 1842, on the ground that the supersedeas bond did not appear on the record with the writ of error. And in affirming the judgment rendered by the District Court at October term, 1842.” ■
To understand the nature of these objections, it will be proper to state that this case was tried in the District Court of Scott county, at October term, 1841, and a verdict rendered for the plaintiff,- and the defendants having moved for a new trial, the case was continued under a curia advisare vult. Owing to a mistake (the cause of which it is unnecessary to explain), the court did not meet at the time appointed by law for the April term in Scott county, but on the week following, which had been fixed for the term of a neighbouring county. On the 12th of April, 1842, an entry was made on the record, overruling the motion for a new trial, and rendering a judgment on the verdict. The mistake was soon after discovered, and the defendants sued out a writ of error to reverse this judgment, as being coram non judice; but before the -writ was served, at the next regular term of the District Court, in October, 1842,- that court, treating the entry made on the record in April as a nullity, because entered by the clerk without any authority from the court, made the following entry of judgment: —
“ This day came the said plaintiff, by his attorney, and it appearing to the court that, at a previous term of this court, to wit, the October term, 1841, the issue previously joined in this
■ In this action of the court we can see no error, or any just ground of complaint on the part of the plaintiffs in error. If the court had ordered the prior entry, made in April, to be stricken from the record, as a mistake, or misprision of the clerk, being made without the authority or order of the court, the record could not have been successfully assailed. The court certainly had full power to amend their records, and are the sole judges of the correctness of the entries made therein; and although they have not said in direct terms that this entry should be erased or stricken from the record, they have done so by violent implication, when they adjudge that the court ’had never decided the motion for a new trial, and treat the record as if the entry of the 12th of April was not upon it, or had been entirely erased from it- The objection, that the record was beyond the reach of amendment, because the writ of error had become a supersedeas and removed it to the Supreme Court, is not founded in fact. The writ of error had not been served on the court, and the record was therefore legally, as well as physically, in possession of the District Court, and subject to amendment. In order to a supersedeas, the statute of Iowa evidently requires a service of the writ upon the court below, and not only so, -but “ that one of the judges of the Supreme Court shall indorse upon the transcript of the court below allowance of said writ of error for probable cause ;. and in such cases, the party issuing such writ shall give bond to the opposite party, with good security,” &c. There is no evidence on the record, that any of these requisites had been complied with.
It is, perhaps, hardly necessary to state that this case bears no resemblancé to that of The United States Bank
v.
Moss,
The objection, that the court below could not make this amendment for want of a continuance, is hardly worthy of notice. The entry of C. A. V. operates as a continuance, and if it did not, a continuance could be entered at any time, to effect the purposes of justice. Such technical, objections have long ¿eased to be of any avail in any court,, and axe entirely cut off by the statute of jeofails of IoWa of 24th January, 1839, section 6.
The judgment pf the Supreme, Court of Iowa must be affirmed.
Order.
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record from the Supreme Court of the Territory of Iowa, and was argued by counsel. On consideration whereof, it is now here ordered and adjudged by this court, that, the judgment of the said Supreme Court in this cause be and the same is hereby affirmed, with costs and damages at the rate of si± per centum per annum.
