delivered the opinion cff the court.
The first question to be disposed of is the motion of the Commonwealth to have this writ of error dismissed as improvidently awarded, upon the ground that the bills of exception relied on were not signed and made parts of the record in the manner and within the time prescribed by the statute.
The final order which was entered on the 23rd day of March, 1910, provides, in part, as follows: “And the prisoner having expressed a wish to apply for a writ of error, this sentence is suspended for ninety days from the adjournment of this court, and the prisoner is allowed sixty days from the adjournment of this court within which to file his bill of exceptions.” The court adjourned on the 24th day of March, 1910. The bills of exception appear to have been signed on the 29th day of April, 1910, more than thirty days after the adjournment of the court.
The express mandate of the statute is that “any bill of exceptions may be tendered to the judge, and signed by him, either during the term at which the opinion of the court is announced, to which exception is taken, or within thirty days after the end of such term, either in term time or in vacation, whether another term of the said court has intervened or not, or at such other time as the parties, by consent entered of record, may agree upon.”
In this case the bills of exception were not signed by the judge during the term of the court at which the several opinions excepted to were announced, nor were they signed withia
To meet the difficulty thus plainly confronting him, the prisoner, by counsel, procured from the judge of the circuit court a vacation order, which was received and entered in the clerk’s office of Buckingham county on October 20, 1910, purporting to amend the final order in this case, so as to make it read that the sixty days .thereby given the plaintiff in error in which to file his bills of exception was agreed upon and entered of record by consent of parties.
The court had no power to amend its final order in this particular after the adjournment of the term at which tha same was entered. During the term of a court at which a judicial act is done, the record remains in the breast of the court, and may be altered or amended; but after the adjournment of the term amendments can only be made in cases in which there is something in the record by which they can be safely made. Amendments cannot be made after the adjournment of the term, upon the individual recollection of the judge or upon evidence aliunde. It is manifest that there
Although we are without authority to consider the assignments of error based upon bills of exception which are not made part of the record, we deem it proper to say, that this is a companion case with the cases of Ed. Jones v. Commowwealth, and Richard Perkins v. Commonwealth, ante, p. 862,
For the reasons given, the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
