Court Opinion

ID: 7896667
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 21:52:55.716289+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:49:14.473727
License: Public Domain

Alvey, C. J.,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case is brought into this Court upon assignment of error in the proceedings of the Court below, under Rule 1, respecting appeals. At the common law, the writ of error lies where a party is aggrieved by any error in the foundation, proceeding, judgment or execution of a suit, in a Court of record (Co. Litt., 288, b); but it only reaches errors or defects in substance, that are not aided, amendable, or cured at common law, or by some of the statutes of amendments or jeofails. 2 Tidd’s Pra., 1136.
In the case of Speak vs. Sheppard, 6 H. & J., 81, it was held, that upon writ of error, the Appellate Court was bound to examine the entire record, and to reverse the judgment, as was done in that case, if there was error found to exist in any part of the proceedings, although the Court below were right, in the rulings, or opinions given by them, upon all the points or questions upon which they were asked to decide. In such state of the law, and the practice under it, it is not difficult to perceive how liable a defendant in error was to be taken by surprise, and how difficult it was to maintain in the Appellate Court the judgments of the Courts below. The whole proceedings being subject to scrutiny in the Appellate Court, the best considered judgments were constantly liable to be reversed, for some error or defect in the proceedings, in ,no manner affecting the merits of the cause, and to which the attention of the Court below had, perhaps, never been called. It has been generally understood that it was the decision of the case of Speak vs. Sheppard, *522supra, that gave rise to the passage of the Act of 1825, ch. 117, to remedy this defect in the law. That decision, though made in 1823, was not published until 1825, just before the meeting of the Legislature of the December Session of that year. The Act of the December Session, 1825, provided, “ that the Court of Appeals shall not reverse any judgment, on any point or question, which shall not appear to have been presented to the County Court, and upon which that Court may have rendered judgment.” As will be observed, the statute required that it should affirmatively appear to the Appellate Court, that the point or question upon which the judgment below was sought to be reversed, had been distinctly and directly presented to the trial Court, and upon which that Court had decided. And such was the plain construction as held by the Court of Appeals, in Sasscer vs. Walker, 5 G. & J., 103, and Graham vs. Harris, et al., id., 489, 496, and in many subsequent cases. This provision of the Act of 1825 has been incorporated in the Code, Art. 5, sec. 12, in terms somewhat different from those employed in the original Act, hut with no substantial change of sense or meaning. The section of the Code declares that “ The Court of Appeals shall in no case decide any point or question which does not appear by the record to have been raised or made in and decided by the Court below.” And in the fourth Eule respecting appeals, made by the Judges of this Court, in pursuance of the provision of the Constitution, the substance of the section of the Code, just referred to, is embraced in these terms: “ In no case shall the Court of Appeals decide any point or question which does not plainly appear by the. record to have been tried and decided by the Court below.” It was in view of this statutory restriction, and to produce conformity thereto, that it was provided in the first Eule respecting appeals, that the party applying to have the record removed as upon writ of error, should “ plainly designate the points or questions *523of law by the decision of which he feels aggrieved; and no point or question not thus plainly designated in such application shall be heard or determined by the Court of Appeals.”
In this case, what is alleged to be error, under the rule, is of a purely technical nature, and relates simply to the time and manner of the entry of the judgment, and not to the pleading, nor to the finding of the Court, upon which the judgment is based. The various assignments of error are reducible to a single point, and that is, that the judgment was entered as of a day which was Sunday, when the "Court was not, and could not legally have been, in session. But it does not appear that this point or question, thus assigned for error, was ever presented to the Court below and passed upon by it, either at the time of the entry of the judgment or afterwards; and, as we gather from the record, no such point or question was in point of fact presented for decision. And as such point or question was not made to and decided by the Court below, this Court is, as we have seen, inhibited from considering and deciding it. Boarman vs. Israel & Patterson, 1 Gill, 372, 380; Schleigh & Kershner vs. Hagerstown Bank, 4 Gill, 306, 312; Morgan vs. Briscoe & Clark, 4 Md., 271. This is quite unlike the case of the entry of a judgment that the Court had no power or jurisdiction to enter. The error assigned is a mere slip or irregularity in entering a proper judgment.
In the case of Bridendolph vs. Zeller, 5 Md., 58, where a writ of error had been sued out for the correction of supposed errors in the proceedings, it was held, that this Court could not, upon writ of error, since the Act of 1825, ch. 117, reverse any judgment on any point or question which was not directly presented to, and decided by, the Court below; but that the defendant in the judgment should have proceeded by motion to strike out the judgment, under the Act of 1787, ch. 9, sec. 6, now embraced *524in section 38 of Art. 75 of the Code. And so in this case, for the irregularity of entering the judgment as of a day that was Sunday, a motion could have been made to strike out the judgment, and to have the same entered as of another day; and upon refusal to strike out the judgment and to make proper entry thereof, an appeal could have been taken to this Court. The judgment was not in point of fact entered on a Sunday, hut it was entered as of the 23d of December, 1883, by an order of Court dated January 21st, 1884; and the 23d of December, 1883, happened to be on a Sunday; manifestly a mere slip, or mistaking of the day. The alleged error, therefore, is simply in regard to the date given to the judgment, and not in regard to any matter affecting the merits of the case. Instead of entering a motion for a new trial, which appears to have been done, but afterwards withdrawn, the defendant in the judgment should have entered a motion to strike out the judgment for irregularity, so that the Court could have corrected the entry, of the judgment, and made entry thereof, in conformity to their previous finding, as of a legal day.
(Decided 14th November, 1884.)
Bor the reasons stated, the assignment of errors must be quashed.

Assignment of errors quashed.