Norcross v. Boulton
Norcross v. Boulton
Opinion of the Court
Two questions are presented by this case : 1st. Was the plaintiff below, liable to costs ? and 2dly. Does a writ of error lie in this case ? 1st. That the plaintiff, although he thought proper, in this action, to call himself administrator, was liable for costs, I think there can be no question. It has sometimes been insisted, that the plaintiff’s liability to costs, depended on the question, whether the money when recovered, would be assets or not; fas in Cockerill v. .Kynaston, 4 Ter. R. 277; Bull v. Palmer; 3 Lev. 165, and some other cases.)
But this distinction has long since been exploded, and was contrary to older authorities than those by which it was set up, as may be seen by Hid. Law of Costs, 175, and 184, and cases there cited.
The true rule is simply this; that if it is not necessary for the plaintiff to name himself executor or administrator, then he shall pay costs — but if his title to the action comes to him in his representative character, and he can sue only as such, then he shall be excused, if he fails in the action. Hul. Law of Costs, Ch. 3 Sect. 1 pages 174 and Seq. Smith v. Barrow, 2 T. R. 477; Per Ashurst Justice; Hooker v. Quilter, 1 Wils. R. 172 Per Dennison Justice; Bangs v. Bangs, Barnes Notes, 119 ; Bligh v. Cope, Id. 141; Marsh v. Yellowly, 2 Str. 1106.
It is true, executors and administrators were not expressly excepted out of the statutes of 23 H. 8, Ch. 15; and 4 Jeto. 1, C. 3, which gave costs generally, to a defendant, in case he succeeded ;
2dly. Does a writ of error lie in a case like this ? I do not ask whether such a writ, is the proper remedy ? for I can conceive of no other. The proceedings below, being in the course of the
But without relying upon Phillips v. Phillips, as an authority for the plaintiff in error, I am of opinion, upon the principles adopted by a majority of this Court, in Evans v. Adams, (3 Green's R. 373) that a writ of error well lies in this case. The application to the Court of Common Pleas, in this ease, as in that, was not to the discretion óf the Court; but if the party was right, he was entitled ex debito juditke to what he applied for. If wrong, as he clearly was, then the Court, did not merely exercise a bad discretion; but they mistook the law, and have given an erroneous judgment; and a judgment that is final and conclusive upon the rights of the plaintiff in error, and from which he can have no appeal, if this writ, will not lie. The order complained of in this case, is in no sense, an interlocutory order; nor of that class of orders or proceedings in the progress of a cause, on which it is rightly held, as in Shorts v. Quigly. 1 Binn. R. 222, and other eases cited in Evans v. Adams, (3 Green 377) that error will not lie. But it is a final judgment, or award, in the nature of a judgment; definitively settling the legal rights of the parties in the matter. And is it so, that any Court in this State, short of the Court of Appeals in the last resort, may render a final judgment against a party, from which, however erroneous, he can have no appeal ? I think not. Lord Coke in his Commentaries upon Littleton (Go. Litt. 288. b.) tells us, that a writ of error “ lieth when a man is grieved, by any error, in the foundation, proceeding, judgment, or execution ; but without
Samuel Boulton, adnsinistrator de bonis non, of James Bowne deceased, with the will annexed, declared in trover, .that after the death of his testator, he w-as possessed of certain goods and chattels, as administrator, that he lost them &c. and that they came to the hands of the defendant, by finding, who converted them to his own use &c. The jury found the defendant not guilty ; and the Court gave judgment, that the plaintiff take nothing by his writ; that the defendant recover costs against him, to twenty-eight dollars and thirty cents; and have execution for the same. An execution was accordingly issued. At the uext term, the Court, after hearing counsel, on both sides, determined, that an administrator was exempted from paying costs, by the statute; wherefore they amended their record, by entering a rule, that the judgment, so far as relates to costs be vacated, set aside and annulled, and that the execution therefor, be quashed. Upon this, the defendant below, brings a writ of error; in the return to which, under the seal of the Court, the clerk certifies the judgment, not as it is, but as it was at first; together with a copy of the rule for making it as it is. The plaintiff assigns for error, first, the vacating of the judgment, so far as relates to costs; secondly the quashing of the execution.
1. The law has been too long and too fully settled, to be disputed at this day, that if an executor or administrator charge the wrong for which the suit is brought, as being done to himself, and fail to prove his ease, that he shall pay the costs ; for he sues in that case in his own right; but i-f he charge that the wrong was done to his testator or intestate, and fail to prove it, he shall not pay costs, for he sued in right of his testator, not of himself. In the case of Bollard v. Spencer, 7 Ter. Rep. 358, an administratrix brought trover for goods lost out of her onm possession as administratrix, in which she failed; and on solemn argument, the Court awarded her to pay the costs; for a conversion after
2. But a mere reversal will not help the defendant to his right; we must go further, and give such judgment here, as the Court below ought to have given. It has been said that where the defendant below brings error, the Court above cannot give a new judgment, it can only reverse; the reason assigned is, that he seelcs only to be eased and discharged of the judgment against him. Parker v. Harris, 1 Salk. 262; Cuming v. Sibly 4 Bur. 2488; 2 Saund. 101 w; Wyvill v. Stapleton, Stra. 617. But here the defendant below is seeking to recover something, to which he is entitled on the face of the record, and ought to have recovered below; therefore the reason of those cases, cannot possibly apply to this case. A plaintiff would not be remediless, even without a new judgment, for after a general reversal, his cause of action would remain, and he could sue de novo; but the defendant never can sue for these costs; therefore unless we give such new judgment, as the Court below should have given, he will be remediless. Where the plaintiff below brings error and obtains a reversal, we can go further and give a new judgment on the face of the record before us ; because he seeks not only for a reversal but for his right; and on the same principle we may do it where the defendant seeks not for a reversal only but
3. The minutes of a Court containing a memorandum of its adjournments, proceedings, and rules, were never considered in law, matters of record, as far as I can learn, till the case of Evans v. Adams; but according to that case, error may be assigned in every part of the minutes, as out branches of the record. Accordingly all the errors in this case, have been assigned in the minutes and rules of the Court; and therefore let them be reversed. If these are out of the way, the plaintiff in error supposes the first judgment of the Court below, (which they utterly disclaim) can be forced upon them as their judgment between the parties, and as such be affirmed. But I differ from him totally. Their solemn and deliberate judgment is, that the administrator shall not pay costs, and so it appears by the record they have made and sent into this Court. What is a record? The law pronounces it to be absolute verity, so that it cannot be contradicted or even questioned, elsewhere. The Judges of every Court of common law, are privileged under their oaths of office, to make a record of their proceedings, and to amend it according to the truth. They have the same right to amend their record, and make it deliver their opinion truly, that we have; and we amend our record, not only at another term, but we have done it even after
But the record itself shews, it is said, that they first rendered judgment for costs, and afterward set it aside. I hope it is not meant by this, to deny the power of a Court of common law, when they think they have been misled, or for want of information at the moment, have fallen into error, that they must persist in a conscious error, for want of legal power to alter it according to their solemn conviction of what is required by law and justice. We do this so often in this Court, ourselves, that for our own ■sakes, as well as for the sake of justice to suiters, it will not be questioned.
After all it may be said, here is a judgment for costs, in the Court below, certified under their seal, and we may affirm it; or else why did they certify it? I answer, they have certified under their seal, that it is not their judgment, that they have disclaimed it; that they have ordered it to be “ vacated set aside and annulled,” and that it is no longer true, nor any part of their record. This is the very mode in which all records are vacated, at the common law, and they become as much vacated by it, as if they were entirely scratched out with a knife, so that not a vestige or mark of a letter remained. It is the safest mode, because it shews that the vacating was not a criminal act, but done by authority. It is the mode of vacating and annulling judgments in this Court. It is not necessary to scratch and erase, or obliterate, blacken and deform the book of judgments. But if we can take the liberty of imputing to them as their judgment, what they have by rule vacated, annulled and absolutely
Concurring Opinion
Concurred in the opinion of the Chief Justice; and with Justice Ford’s opinion that a new judgment should be rendered for the costs below.
Judgment reversed; and a new judgment rendered in this Court, for the costs below, and execution to issue therefor.
Cited in Stewart v. Richey, 2 Harr. 165; Den, Rutherford v. Fen, 1 Zab. 703; Kinney v. Central R. R., 5 Vr. 274.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- SAMUEL NORCROSS v. SAMUEL BOULTON ADMR. DE BONIS NON CUM TEST. ANNEXO, OF JAMES BOWNE
- Status
- Published