59 Ill. App. 40 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the Court.
While it is true that at the beginning of the roll filed here as the record of this cause, from the Circuit Court, there is written a convening order, yet it comes to us with no authentication as being truly copied from the record of that court.
The certificate of the clerk is that the roll is a “ complete transcript of the record prepared according to praecipe.” That is not a certificate implying that it is a transcript of the whole record of the cause, but only of such record as is so prepared. Whatever is in the roll that the praecipe did not call for, is not embraced in the certificate.
If a record certified as complete was without a convening order, we would reverse the judgment. Swartzbaugh v. People, 85 Ill. 457.
If no such order was on the record itself in the Circuit Court, it would seem that a judgment would be void collaterally. Lawrence v. Fast, 20 Ill. 338.
But for the want of such order in a roll “ prepared according to prascipe ” we could not reverse, if the praecipe did not call for the order; and putting it in when it is not called for, and the certificate only authenticating what it called for, leaves the space which in this roll is occupied by what reads as a convening order, without authentication.
The praecipe here called for eight items—definitely described—of which the convening order is not one.
Perhaps we can not reasonably conjecture that anything else pertaining to a complete transcript is left out; but our authority to reverse a judgment of the Circuit Court does not rest upon any conjecture, however probable.
The brief of the appellee, filed Harch 15th, which at the time of this writing is nearly eleven weeks ago, specifically objected to the certificate, and yet nothing has been done to present to us an authenticated record. The opinion of this court that such certificate is insufficient has been repeated at intervals for now upward of five years. Atkinson v. Linden Steel Co., 35 Ill. App. 448; Tolman v. Wheeler, 5504, Jan. 28, 1895.
We do not care to express our opinion about proceedings not within our jurisdiction, and the order appealed from is affirmed.
That is done upon the principle that any judgment brought before us, and not affirmatively shown to be erroneous, must be affirmed.