75 Pa. Super. 94 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1920
Opinion by
The appellee moves to quash this appeal upon two grounds: First, That the record is not certified by the judge who presided at the trial in the court below. Second, That the transcript of the testimony and proceedings at the trial are not certified by the official stenographer who took the notes of the proceedings at the trial. The case was tried and the verdict of the jury rendered on September 4, 1913. The appellant had, before the verdict, excepted to the charge and refusal to affirm the defendant’s points and requested that the testimony and charge be written out and filed of record. The court so ordered and allowed the exceptions. The day after the verdict ivas rendered the defendant moved the court to have the evidence certified and filed so as to become a part of the record, and moved the court for judgment non obstante veredicto upon the whole record, under the provisions of the Act of April 22, 1905. The court did not dispose of this motion for judgment non obstante veredicto for over two years, and shortly after it did so the judge retired from office. “The court never dies nor resigns, though its officers may; and its duties are neither satisfied nor extinguished by a change of its functionaries. The departing judges’ unperformed duties devolve upon the successors”: McCandless v. McWha, 20 Pa. 184. The judge whose term of office had expired could not subsequently perform any function of the court: His successor, in exercising the duty which devolved upon him in this case was vested with discretion as to the mode of proceeding, as in the ordinary cases of amendments. The judge who certified this record proceeded in a careful manner to ascertain whether it accurately recited the proceedings at the trial, and, it not being even suggested that it is not a true and complete record, we are of opinion that his certificate should stand. The defendant in this case was in no default. He had promptly and repeatedly moved the court to have the evidence certified and filed so as to be
The plaintiff seeks to recover from this defendant a debt which he alleges was owing to him by the father of the defendant, who died in September, 1910. The ground upon which the plaintiff bases his right to re
The defendant was called to testify in his own behalf and an offer made to prove by him that the consideration for the farm was $2,500, as recited in the deed, and that the $2,500 was to be applied to the debts of the grantor, J. J. Henry, and whatever balance was left after paying the debts was to be turned over to the said J. J. Henry; and that the consideration money was paid in full under
The specification which assigns for error the refusal of the court to enter judgment in favor of the defendant non obstante veredicto cannot be sustained. No question of law was by the court reserved, but the appellant seeks to found his light to have a judgment entered in
The judgment is reversed and a venire facias de novo awarded.