Phelps v. Goodman
Phelps v. Goodman
Opinion of the Court
The principal error assigned by the plaintiff in error is, that the judgment does not comport with the report of the referees, being rendered for a less sum than was awarded by them.
By the record it appears that the report was accepted in the whole, and that judgment was rendered for a less sum than that which was awarded; the defendant in error, in whose favor the sum was reported, having released the difference upon the record.
* There is no error in this, any more than there would be in a judgment at common law for a less sum than was returned in the verdict, the plaintiff having remitted the difference.
It would seem, by the language used by the counsel in the
If the court proceeded in the manner suggested by the plaintiff in error, in his assignment, his objections should have been specified and introduced into the record. As the matter now stands, there is no cause for reversing the judgment.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Andrew Phelps, in Error, versus Titus Goodman
- Status
- Published