Hall v. Howard
Hall v. Howard
Opinion of the Court
Proceedings in error are brought to reverse an order made in an appeal from a justice of the peace, staying all proceedings on the judgment, because the justice rendered it more than four days after hearing, when he had lost jurisdiction. The stay is proper if the appeal was regular.
The appeal was allowed under the statute upon cause shown, upon the ground that the appellant had lost his ordinary appeal by circumstances not within his control. It is insisted no such ease was made out. We think otherwise.
Thereupon showing was made for a special appeal to the circuit court, by affidavit, which, assuming the judgment to have been actually rendered on the 28th of January, gave a narrative of facts indicating how appellant had been led without his fault into supposing it had been rendered later.
Before the hearing on this application, it was discovered by the appellant that the return to the first appeal had been falsely procured by Hall to set forth a wrong date, and that the judgment had been really rendered at a date which would have saved the first appeal.
On a new and full exposition of the manner in which this difficulty was brought about, the circuit court allowed a new and special appeal, which when returned showed that the justice’s judgment was void.
Howard lost his first appeal after he had regularly sued it out, by the false return made to it, which the justice swore was done by Hall’s interference. This was a circumstance beyond Howard’s control and for which he was in no way to blame. It would have been a gross' wrong to deny him relief. The juggling performances for concealing the truth about the judgment were fraudulent and ' deserving ' of more than censure.. The court below did'him such justice as it could in a summary way by the perpetual stay of proceedings. We do not think it should be disturbed.
The proceedings in the circuit court must be affirmed with costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Harvey B. Hall v. William Howard
- Status
- Published