Sanchez v. Haynes
Sanchez v. Haynes
Opinion of the Court
On final determination of this cause here the judgment of the Circuit Court was reversed, the opinion having been filed on the 21st day of May, during the January term, A. X). 1895, of this court. Motions are made at the present term, but within thirty days from the filing of the opinion, to vacate and have declared void the judgment rendered, on the ground that upon the face of the record it appears that this court never had jurisdiction of the case and the judgment was entered by mistake, and also to vacate the supersedeas granted and quash the writ of error because it was not brought and prosecuted with effect within two years after the judgment was rendered in the lower court. It is contended as a basis of support for the motions that the writ of error was not properly served by lodging it in the office of the clerk of the court in which the judgment was rendered. Writs of error and scire facias to hear errors were issued from this court within
The motions should be denied, and it will be so •ordered.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- E. C. F. Sanchez, in Error v. J. Manchester Haynes, in Error
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Writs of error and scire facias ad audiendum errores were regularly-issued from the Supreme Court and made returnable as provided by law; the sheriff of the county in which judgment was-rendered, as deputy of the sheriff of the Supreme Court, endorsed on the writ of error that it was served by delivering a copy to the attorney for defendant in error; transcript of the record duly certified was filed in the Supreme Court and the case was regularly submitted thereon by both plaintiff in error and defendant in error; the cause being regularly reached for final hearing, the judgment was reversed, and subsequently to-filing the opinion therein, defendant in error filed motions to vacate the judgment of the Supreme Court and quash the writ of error, the bases of the motions being that the writ of error had not been served and the Supreme Court had no jurisdiction of the case: Held, That the motions should be denied, no-affirmative showing being made that the writ of error was not in fact lodged with the clerk, and the action of defendant in error in submitting the case on the record and invoking a decision of the court thereon amounting to an affirmance on his part that the writ was properly served.