Wilson v. Moore
Wilson v. Moore
Opinion of the Court
Wilson obtained judgment, in a court for the trial of small causes in Somerset, against Moore, Waldron and others, in an action on the case for trover and conversion.
Moore appealed, and, on the return of the papers to the Court of Common Pleas, a rule was taken upon the other defendants to show canse why Moore should not prosecute the appeal alone. No cause having been shown, the rule was made absolute, and Moore authorized to proceed without the other defendants.
On the trial before the Common Pleas the jury rendered a verdict in favor of Moore, and against Wilson ; whereupon the court rendered judgment against Wilson, and in favor of all the defendants.
Wilson now moves a rule for a writ of mandamus, commanding the Court of Common Pleas to issue execution against the defendants who did not appeal, upon the ground that the whole record was removed, and that the
If the judgment below was wholly reversed in the Court of Common Pleas, then there is no ground for this motion ; for there is no judgment in that court on which it can issue execution in favor of Wilson. If the reversal was erroneous, yet, being a judgment, il must so remain until corrected by that or some other court. If such was the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas, it was wrong.
The defendants who did not appeal, and who on rule declined to prosecute the appeal taken by Moore, were not before that court. They made no complaint, and it is to be presumed that they were not aggrieved by the judgment of the justice, but submitted to it.
The rules taken, in the nature and to the effect of a summons and severance, were proper; and although less necessary on an appeal than on certiorari or writ of error, yet the practice has been sanctioned by the court,, and seems to be proper. Shepherd v. Fenton, 4 Halst. 8. The reason for requiring summons and severance is, that every defendant might otherwise bring a separate writ of error, and by that means delay the plaintiff from having the benefit of his judgment, though it should have been affirmed once or oftener. 1 Arch. Pl. 210. But this cannot be on an appeal, where the party is required to make it to the next term of the Common Pleas after the rendition of the judgment.
Nevertheless the party appellee has a right to know whom he must meet on the trial. If the action is upon a contract, wherein all the defendants must be shown to be liable, the appellee, if he be plaintiff, must prove his whole case, so far as to show the liability of all, or else the whole judgment will be reversed. There the judgment is an entire thing, and the recovery must, be against all or none.
An appeal is not in the nature of a writ of error, but of a new trial. And in an action of tort against several,
■ A proper and safe practice would be to try the appeal between the party who appeals and his adversary; if the judgment, as -between them, is reversed, that which remains can be enforced by an action upon the original judgment, with proper averments of the subsequent proceedings.
The' whole judgment here having been reversed, there is nothing in the Court of Common Pleas on which to issue an execution against the defendants. If, the judgment is not wholly reversed, there is another mode of proceeding, and the motion for a mandamus must be denied.
Ogden, J., concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- David W. Wilson v. Moore, Waldron
- Status
- Published