It appearing that the verdict was inadvertently recorded “guilty of murder in the third degree,” when in reality the jury returned a verdict of manslaughter, the motion of the State to remand the cause for correction of the record will be allowed.
S. v. Harrison,
That the Superior Court at term has the power to make its records speak the truth, and, to this end, to correct them, if need be, is established hy a number of decisions.
S. v. Marsh,
The presumption is, that the record as it appears is true, and the court ought not to interfere with it at all, unless, upon thorough inquiry, its duty of correction is manifest. S. v. Harrison, supra.
*514
Ordinarily, the court may proceed
ex mero motu
to correct its records, and to make tbem speak tbe truth, but in
Durham v. Cotton Mills, supra,
it was suggested, as the better practice, to do so only after notice to the party to be affected by the correction, especially if the change be material.
Summerlin v. Cowles,
Remanded.
