Long v. Cummings
Long v. Cummings
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Following is a copy of the transcript:
“Transcript of Judgment from Trial Justice’s Court.
On action of defendant for professional services. Judgment in this action was rendered for plaintiff and against the defendant, June 22, 1889.
Recovery..................................$53 00
Costs..................................... 4.55
Transcript fee.............................. . . 25
$57 80
*523 1 hereby certify that the foregoing is a true and correct transcript from my docket of a judgment rendered by me. J. O’H. Sanders (E. S.), Trial Justice. Varnville, July 9, 1889.”
This ruling was in conflict with the decision in Love v. Dorman, infra 384, in which the Court, construing section 87 of the Code of Procedure, held that from the date of the receipt of a transcript by the clerk of the Circuit Court and the entry thereof in the abstract of judgments, it becomes a judgment of the Circuit Court, and is, therefore, entitled to the presumptions which attach to such a judgment, and that it cannot be collaterally attacked, except for jurisdictional defects appearing upon its face. Judgment reversed.
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- Syllabus
- 1. Real Property.—The statute op limitations or adverse possession does not begin to run against the heir of an ancestor against whom a judgment was obtained in his lifetime, in favor of a purchaser at a sale of his lands under such judgment -after his death and during the minority of the heir, until the heir attains his majority. 3. Judgments—Magistrate Courts.—It is not necessary that the transcript of a judgment to the Circuit Court from a magistrate court should show affirmatively that the magistrate had acquired jurisdiction of the defendant.