Connalley v. Wallace Co.
Connalley v. Wallace Co.
Opinion of the Court
In an action of assumpsit in the circuit court of Mingo County by Connalley against the Wallace Company the plaintiff filed an affidavit with his declaration as an affidavit prescribed by section 46, chapter 125, Code, as to the amount due liim, and the defendants moved the court to quash said affiidavit for defects in it, and the court overruled the motion. Afterwards defendants asked leave to enter the plea of nomassumpsit, but the court refused to allow them to do so for want of an affidavit by the defendants under said section. The court erred in refusing to quash the affidavit because that affidavit wants the certificate prescribed by chapter 130, section 31, Code, by the clerk Or other officer of a court of record of the state wherein the affidavit was made, verifying the genuineness of the signature of
There was a demurrer to the declaration, which was overruled. The declaration is not strictly according to the common law rules of pleading upon notes and checks; but amply sufficient to warn the defendants of the demand asserted and such as to enable the court to give judgment. Therefore we reverse the judgment, quash the said affidavit, set aside the finding of the court on the evidence, grant a new trial and send the case back to the circuit court. •
Counsel for the defendants rely with confidence upon the case of Snodderly v. Fairmont, 23 W. Va. 472, holding that where the parties waive a jury and submit the case to the court this Court will not reverse the judgment on the merits, unless all the evidence on. the trial appears in the record. I do not think this case at all applies to the errors above pointed out. It is true that it might prevent us from saying that the bad affidavit, which could constitute no evidence, was treated as evidence, as it might be that it was not and that the case rested on oral evidence. But this position is not clear. We might say that as this affidavit was maintained by the court it was likely read as the only evidence, or at least as a part of the evidence, and that thus improper evidence was admitted; but I do not rest the decision on that point, I simply say that the principle
Reversed.
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