Pontius v. Commonwealth
Pontius v. Commonwealth
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
— This action was instituted, upon the official bond of John Cummings, late sheriff of Union county, by the Bank of Pennsylvania, against Frederick Pontius, as one of the sureties of Cummings, in order to recover various sums of money which Cummings, as sheriff, had received by virtue of several executions placed in his hands, issued upon judgments at the suit of the bank. At the trial of the cause, the counsel for the bank made out a statement of its claim in the form of an account, consisting of debits and credits, and calculations and charges of interest and costs, in which last were included fees, coming to the attorney of the bank, on the judgments obtained by him for the'bank, upon which the executions were sued out, though the bank had never paid these fees to its attorney. The statement and calculation,
But the counsel for the bank has applied, if this court should be of opinion that the court below erred in allowing the jury to charge the defendant there with the attorney’s judgment fees, for leave to have the error corrected. If it were the case of a judgment given on a verdict for damages assessed by the jury, exceeding the amount laid in the plaintiff’s declaration, this court might permit the record to be taken back to the court below, that the error might be corrected there, by the bank’s entering a remittitur for the excess, as was done in the case of Spackman v. Byers, (6 Serg. & Rawle 385). In such case, the error is committed exclusively by the jury in the first instance, by giving the plaintiff more damages than he claims in his declaration. In the second instance, although it is true that the court commits an error, likewise, by entering judgment upon the verdict, yet this is done inadvertently, because there is no objection made to it by the defendant or his attorney. In no case would such an error be committed by the court, if the defendant were to object to it, or apprise the court of it at the time. It is therefore right that the court should strain a point to have such an error corrected without a new trial, if the plaintiff desire it, seeing the defendant did not object to, or apprise the court of it at the time. The extent, also, of the error appears on the record with indisputable certainty ; and therefore it has been thought might be corrected at any subsequent period. At first, however, it was considered that a correction of it could only be made while it remained the error of the jury; and that the remittitur, therefore, could only be entered by the plaintiff before judgment was rendered on the
Judgment reversed, and venire de novo awarded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Pontius against Commonwealth
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- 3 cases
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- Published