Michew v. M'Coy
Michew v. M'Coy
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The common law abhors an ex parte proceeding, whose end is not to compel a contumacious party to come in; and it consequently knows no such thing as judgment for want of appearance. It deems the jurisdiction of the person to be incomplete until the party has submitted himself by appearing; and hence its recourse to the dilatory process of outlawry rather than pass on the right of an absent defendant, though that does not allow the court to proceed in the action even when judgment of outlawry has been pronounced, but gives the plaintiff satisfaction of his debt out of the outlaw’s effects found by the inquest. On the same principle it will not try a prisoner charged with an offence, who refuses to plead. It is evident from this, that the common law does not permit a judgment in personam to be rendered against an absent party in any case; and every judgment for want of appearance, 'which is not supported by a statute, is consequently irregular. Our Act of 1807 authorizes it in ejectment; but only where it is preceded by an affidavit of service; and this requisite has not been dispensed with in any subsequent enactment. In the present case, a general appearance was actually entered, and all question about service or default was at an end; the parties were before the court, and the process had done its office. The cause was put at issue in the usual way; but the court permitted the defendant’s attorney to withdraw his appearance and plea at the trial,
The practice of our courts has been modelled after that of the Common Pleas at Westminster, whose process is summons and distress infinite, according to the usage of the common law, (Introd. to Cromp. Pr. Ch. V.), and which consequently does not authorize a judgment by default for want ,of appearance. Strictly speaking, that judgment was authorized, for the first time in Pennsylvania, by the Act of 1806 to regulate arbitrations and proceedings in courts of justice. By the Act of 1725 to regulate the practice on writs of summons and arrest, the plaintiff was allowed, after affidavit of service, to file a common appearance for the defendant and proceed to judgment against him by nil dicit, which was indeed a species of judgment by default; but it is remarkable that the British Parliament, though borrowing copiously from that Act in the formation of the recent Statute of 2 W. 4, c. 39, yet adhered to the common law principle of authorizing the plaintiff, in case of the defendant’s default, only to enter an appearance for him. This reluctance to dispense with an appearance which would put the plaintiff to the proof of his case before a jury, shows pretty clearly the tone of the common law.
As, then, this judgment is unauthorized by any statute, how is it to be supported ? It is said the'withdrawal of the appearance and plea, was understood, at the time, to be a confession of judgment. But no such understanding is apparent in the case as it stands on the record, by which alone we must be guided. There certainly was no confession before the attorney’s appearance was withdrawn; and he was incompetent to bind the defendants after he had ceased to represent them. In cases of judgment by non sum informatus, or nil dicit, the attorney’s appearance is not withdrawn because there could be no judgment without it. It follows not that the client is defenceless because his counsel may have been permitted to retire from his cause; and it might be matter of grave surprise to him, as it seems to have been to these defendants,
Judgment reversed, and venire facias de novo awarded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.