Woodrough v. Perkins
Woodrough v. Perkins
Opinion of the Court
— The first question to be decided is, whether the inferior court did right in dismissing the writ of error coram. vobis, without adjudicating upon the errors assigned in the replevin bond, because no notice in writing of the time and place of making the application to the judge who granted the writ and supersedeas, was produced, or proven in court to have been given i The act of as
If it be objected that this construction of the act may occasion unjust delays and vexation, by obtaining writs of error coram vobis without notice, we answer that that is not to be apprehended, because the judge could not grant the writ without proof of the notice required by the act, without being guilty of gross inadvertance, or culpable dereliction of duty, which ought not to be presumed ; besides, the dismission of the writ because the notice is not produced in court, will not remedy the mischief, for the delay will have taken place before the motion to dismiss can be made. This case is not like those summary remedies created by statute, where final judgment is given upon notice. In them the notice is in the nature of process to bring the party into court, and if either no notice, or an insufficient notice be given, the party’s interest might be finally compromitted without an opportunity afforded him of being heard in his defence,; the notice should therefore always appear. In the present case, the writ of error being served upon the party, will always warn him to appear and make
We are therefore of opinion, the inferior court erred in dismissing the writ of error coram vobis, without adjudicating upon the errors assigned.
Upon the other errors assigned, it will be sufficient to observe, that the replevin bond appearing upon its face to have been executed by a feme covert, the wife of the defendant in the execution, must be deemed null and void, as a replevin bond ; and this objection was assigned for error as well in the inferior court as in this court. Whether the bond will be good against the securities as a bond at common law, so as to support a common law action, need not now be decided ; but it cannot be good as a replevin bond, under the statute, against some of the obligors, unless it be good against all, for execution cannot issue against the securities only.
Judgment reversed.
Reference
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- Woodrough, &c. v. Perkins
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