Court Opinion

ID: 6572955
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:31:42.582377+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:56:58.261368
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Hebard, J.
The only question is, whether there was such a minute of the time, when the writ was signed, as the statute requires. This is the same question that was considered in the case of Pollard v. Wilder, at the July Term of this court in Windsor Co., 1843,* and it is unnecessary to go into any reasoning upon the question, as it was then decided. It is enough to repeat what was then said, that this certificate is not a compliance with the statute, and consequently insufficient. Judgment affirmed.

 Isaac Pollard v. Edward L. Wilder, Windsor Co., July adjourned term, 1843. Tin's was an action of debt, brought to recover the penalty given by statute for being party to a fraudulent conveyance. The action was commenced subsequent to the coming in force of the Revised Statutes, but the cause of action accrued prior to their enactment. The magistrate who signed the writ indorsed and signed upon it this minute; “The within writ was exhibited to me this thirteenth day of May, in the year-of our Lord eighteen hundred and forty one.” The action was entered at the May Term of Windsor County Court, 1841, an appearance entered for the defendant, and the case was continued for trial; at the November Term, 1841, the defendant filed a motion to dismiss the suit for want of a sufficient minute upon the writ ,o f the time when the same was signed by the magistrate issuing it. The *606.county court dismissed the action pro forma,, and the plaintiff took exceptions. The Supreme Court held that the case was governed by the provisions of the Revised Statutes, and that therefore a minute of the time of signing was necessary, — that the minute put upon the writ was defective in not stating when the writ was signed, and therefore insufficient, — that the magistrate, after the writ had been served, and the action entered in court, could not be permitted to amend the minute, — but that the defendant had waived his right to have the action dismissed, by entering an appearance at the first term, and permiting the case to be continued for trial, without interposing his motion ; — and the judgment of the county court was reversed.