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Kinne

V.

Plumb.

Vermont Stat.

common law in England, which practice is surely not set aside by any statute of the State. On the contrary the whole body of the English common law is adopted sub modo, or with certain restrictions. In support vol. 1. p. 51. of which practice, he cited Lilly's Entries, vol. 2. p. 522. Clitheroe v. Franklin. In this cause it appeared to the Court of C. B. upon affidavit, that the verdict was given for the tenant, and judgment thereon signed; but the postea, with the writ of habeas corpora juratorum, and the panel thereto annexed, was by misfortune lost. It was ordered that the like record should be engrossed, and that a habeas corpora be made anew and returned, and a verdict on the postea be returned by the associate of the Lord Chief Justice of the Court, and that judgment be entered thereon according to the verdict.

He also cited Str. Rep. vol. 1. p. 141. edit. 1781. King, qui tam, v. Bolton.

The defendant having brought error in Parliament, the record was transcribed, and, as it was carrying to the House of Lords, the original was picked out of the officer's pocket. The House of Lords received the transcript without examining it, and the Court of B. R. ordered a new entry to be made, and the judg ment of the King's Bench was affirmed in Parliament.

Mr. Chipman further observed, that the decision of the Supreme Court, cited by the Assistant Judge, he humbly conceived was not in point, as that deci sion was grounded upon an especial rule, apparently made to apply to a particular case; but because the County Court had no power to make such especial rule, non constat they may not make general rules for the orderly practice of their Court, as provided by

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S. Miller, for the appellee. The statute directs that the declaration shall be sent out with the writ; that service shall be made in all cases twelve days before the sitting of the Court to which it is made returnable. These requisitions of the statute must be complied with, or the judgment will be erroneous; or rather, all the subsequent proceedings will be irregular and void. That these requisites have been complied with, can be shewn by matter of record only. In this case, it cannot appear that these statute requisitions have been complied with. What then is the operation of the process in the County Court? Plainly this: To compel a defendant to answer to a declaration filed against him in Court without any previous preparation or notice. This is directly repugnant to the statute, which requires that the defendant shall have twelve days notice of the declaration before the sitting of the Court. The rule of Court, then, on which the proceedings are founded, must be void, and of course all the proceedings grounded upon the rule.

The decisions cited from the authorities were founded on the English statutes of jeofails, which are broader than ours; of course those decisions can have no weight. Besides, if the rule of the County Court be repugnant to the laws of the State, it must be void. In this view of the subject we have only to compare the rule with the statute. The repugnancy is manifest.

To notice more particularly the cases cited from the English books. We observe, that the cause of

King, qui tam, v. Bolton, was in prohibition. In that cause it appears, that after the plaintiff had declared in prohibition, judgment against him, and writ of error brought by him in Parliament, in carrying up to the House of Lords a transcript, together with the original record, the latter was picked from the pocket of the clerk; the transcript was read in Parliament without examination and comparison with the original, as is the practice in such cases; the Lords proceeded, and affirmed the judgment. After a final judgment and decision of the cause, on the writ of error application was made to the Court of King's Bench to file the proceedings de novo to support the judgment; and by statute the Judges in England are empowered to amend in support of judgments; but in the construction of this and all other statutes of jeofail, they never create, and have ever some written document to amend by. In this case there was the copy or transcript of the process to amend by. Thus, by our practice, should the copies brought into this Court by appeal be lost, this Court would allow them to be supplied by a new transcript. The files and records of the County Court would remain to amend by.

In the case of Clithero v. Franklin, where the habeas corpora verdict and postea were lost, there was the writ, declaration and process still left. There was the Judges' notes to amend by, as well as the oath of the Clerk. The habeas corpora is to be compared to our venire; the verdict, as with us. Should our Clerk neglect to enter the verdict, or lose it when returned on paper as in civil causes, it might at any time before the ending of the term, be supplied from after recollection; yet the writ and process could

Kinne

V.

Plumb.

Kinne

V.

Plumb.

never be thus supplied. There is this principle in both cases cited; there was something to amend by. In the present case, there was nothing to supply the loss of the files but a partial amendment, supplying merely the declaration without mesne process, bail, or subsequent pleadings, and that declaration supplied from the mere recollection, and supported by the affidavit of the attorney to one party, and forced upon the other party.

The Chief Judge delivered the opinion of the Court.

The County Court were not authorised to make such rule. The statute points out the mode of issuing and serving process. This is a case unprovided for by law. A practice under such rule, which authorises the plaintiff's attorney to file such declaration, would open a door for contest. Considering this cause as irregularly before the County Court, they having no jurisdiction, this Court have not the cause regularly before them, and therefore it must be dismissed.

Rule made absolute.

Miller then moved the Court for costs, agreeably to his motion filed. He argued, that the proceedings under the rule in the County Court were compulsory; that the irregularity of these proceedings was the fault of the original plaintiff, and not the laches of the defendant; that this is similar to a case on a judgment in favour of a plea in abatement to the jurisdiction of a Court where costs are taxed;

that the plaintiff ought not to allege the irregularity of his own process as an excuse for the payment of

costs.

The Chief Judge mentioned a cause before this Court, decided in Windsor County, where an appeal was taken from an order of amendment in the County Court. The Court decided against the appeal. On the motion for costs, the Court referred the appellee to the bonds given below to prosecute the appeal to effect.

The Court took time to advise; and now, on the tenth day of the term,

The Chief Judge delivered the opinion of the Court.

This case is distinguishable from a plea to the jurisdiction, as in that case there is original process; in the present case no original process upon which costs can be predicated.

The cause is dismissed without costs.

NOTE. By an act of the Legislature, passed November 10th, A. D. 1807, provision is made to supply the deficiency of files "lost, mislaid, or destroyed." Vid. Vermont Stat. vol. 1. p. 114.

Kinne

V.

Plumb.

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