Court Opinion

ID: 6503831
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:16:16.044043+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:40.910403
License: Public Domain

CHILTON, J.
The question is, whether the circuit court had the power to allow an amendment of its previous judgment, nunc pro tunc, after such judgment had been affirmed upon certificate in the supreme court.
In Wiswall v. Monroe, 4 Ala. Rep. 19, it was held, that that when the judgment of the inferior court was’superseded by a writ of error bond, and was affirmed by this court, the effect of such affirmance was, to merge the judgment of the inferior, in that of the supreme court; and that an execution issued on the judgment of the inferior court, after its affirmance, would be quashed. We are satisfied with this construction of, the act of 1826, and it follows, that as the judgment of the circuit court was merged, sunk, by the judgment of this court that no amendment could properly have been made. We have been unable to find any authority which will sustain the judgment nunc pro tunc, and we think upon principle, it is indefensible. We do not agree however with the counsel for the defendants in error, that it is so utterly void that no writ of error will lie. The court has jurisdiction over the subject of amendments, but has, as we conceive, erroneously exercised it in rendering a judgment against the plaintiffs in error. The judgment must therefore be reversed.
A petition is filed in this court with the record, praying that if the court should deem the correction of the judgment in the circuit court irregular, that the correction may be *81made in this court.- This court doubtless has the power to correct its own judgments nunc pro tunc, so as to make them conform to the truth of the case, but there must be something to amend by. Here the judgment was affirmed on certificate- — no record was filed, and the judgment .rendered by this court is in conformity with the certificate upon which it is predicated. To receive the proof at this time, that an error existed in the judgment of the circuit court, which was amendable in that court, and which should have been amended before the affirmance in this, and to grant the relief prayed by the petition, would clearly involve the exercise of original, not appellate jurisdiction. It has been the uniform practice of this court to deny similar motions.