Spaulding v. Rogers
Spaulding v. Rogers
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was drawn up by
The record of the judgment sought
From the date of the disclosure, as thus incorporated, it appears that the trustee, at the return term, signed and swore to a disclosure in which he denied having any goods, effects or credits of the principal debtor in his hands, at the time of the service of 'the writ on him, and submitted himself to examination. At the same, or a subsequent term, he was examined by the counsel for the plaintiff, but the disclosure was not presented to the Court, to determine whether trustee or not, until the term when judgment was rendered.
To justify the reversal of a judgment for error, it should distinctly and unequivocally appear that an error has been committed. It should not be a matter of doubt or uncertainty. Notwithstanding the record shows the disclosure was not adjudicated on at the first term, it does not show that the trustee did not then appear and submit himself to examination. On the contrary, it does appear by the disclosure itself, which being made part of the record-must be deemed a's true,- that the trustee did appear, denied his liability upon oath, and submitted to further examination as the law requires. In the usual course of practice, the disclosure would be placed on file the term at which it was made. Nothing indicates that such was not the case here. The want of authority to allow costs, should be affirmatively shown. This is not done, and we are not to presume the judgment erroneous, when, from aught that appears, it may have been legally rendered.
Exceptions sustained. Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Arthur Spaulding, (in error,) versus Ira S. Rogers
- Status
- Published