Court Opinion

ID: 3651724
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:06:10.412176+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:17:19.359043
License: Public Domain

The following are the facts in the case:
At Spring Term, 1890, of Chowan, there was a judgment dissolving the injunction. From this judgment there was an appeal by the plaintiff to the Supreme Court. Judgment was affirmed in the Supreme Court. The certificate of the Supreme Court was sent down to the Superior Court, to Spring Term, 1891, and at that term there was entered on the minute docket the following: "Judgment as per transcript filed from the Supreme Court." There was no judgment written and signed by the presiding judge at said Spring Term, 1891. The case was dropped from the docket and never placed upon the docket again until Spring Term, 1892, when, in consequence of the notice of 14 March, 1892, the clerk placed it on the civil issue docket for said Spring Term, 1892.
The motion was continued until the Spring Term, 1893, when the plaintiff moved to dismiss, upon the ground that there was no cause pending in which the motion of the defendant could be made. The court gave judgment dismissing the motion to assess               (21) damages, and the defendant appealed.
While it is more regular and, for many reasons, the better course, that judgments should always be signed by the judge, it has been repeatedly held that this is not mandatory. Matthews v. Joyce, 85 N.C. 258; Rollins v.Henry, 78 N.C. 342; Keener v. Goodson, 89 N.C. 273; Spencer v. Credle,102 N.C. 68. The entry on the docket, *Page 16 
"Judgment as per transcript filed from the Supreme Court," was sufficient and a termination of the action. Besides, under the provisions of chapter 192, Laws 1887, the former judgment of the Superior Court was not vacated by the appeal — merely suspended — and the suspension was ended by the affirmation of the judgment by the Supreme Court.
The subsequent judgment in the Superior Court added no validity to the former judgment of that court, nor to the judgment in the Supreme Court. Its office was simply formal, to direct the execution to proceed and to carry the costs subsequently accrued.
No error.
Cited: Range Co. v. Carver, 118 N.C. 338; Wool v. Bond, ib., 2; Brownv. Harding, 170 N.C. 261; Land Co. v. Chester, ib., 400; McDonald v.Howe, 178 N.C. 258.