Opinion
(December Term, 1851.)
1. When it appears from the record that a cause was tried at a special term of a Superior Court, it is to be presumed prima facie that an order for holding it was duly made, and that it was duly held.
2. A Superior Court at a special term has the same power to remove a cause to another county that it has at a regular term.
APPEAL from Settle, J., at the Special Term in June, 1851, of BERTIE.
The facts of the case are sufficiently stated in the opinion delivered in this Court.
W. N. H. Smith, Thos. Bragg, and R. R. Heath for plaintiff.
Asa Biggs and B. F. Moore for defendants.
The action is brought to recover the value of a slave named Jacob, the property of the plaintiff, who was drowned at the fishery of the defendants. Defendants were the owners of the fishery and hired Jacob of the plaintiff as a boatman to work there. On an attempt to put out the seine, the boat in which Jacob was, was upset, and he drowned. Much conflicting testimony was given, both as to the state of the weather at the time the attempt was made to carry out the seine, being a very dark and stormy night, and on the propriety of doing so at that time.
His Honor, after stating to the jury the principles of law governing the action as against the defendants, left the case upon the facts to them, instructing them, in substance, if they believed the witnesses for the plaintiff, they should return a verdict for her, but if they believed those of the defendants, they ought to find for them. A verdict and judgment were rendered for the plaintiff, and the defendants appealed.
No error is assigned to the charge; it was as favorable to the (169) defendants as it could be, and if any error was committed, it was not one of which they had any right to complain.
Upon the argument here, it was not denied that the doctrine of respondeat superior applied to the defendants. But it was contended that the Superior Court of Bertie, where the cause was tried, had no jurisdiction of the cause. This objection, it was alleged, was apparent upon the record, and if so, the defendants are entitled to the benefit of it. The objection was urged on two grounds, first, that it did not sufficiently appear that any special term of Gates Superior Court was held according to law, and, secondly, that if so held, it had no power to remove the cause to the Superior Court of Bertie. To sustain the first objection, two reasons were assigned: first, that the record does not show any order for holding the special term, nor does it show, if so ordered, that it was held by any judge of the Superior Court. The cause was pending in the Superior Court of Gates at the regular term thereof, in the spring of 1851. The record then proceeds as follows, "and afterwards, at Spring Term, 1851, the cause was continued," and afterwards, at June Special Term, 1851, "this cause, on affidavit of the defendants, was removed to Bertie Superior Court." It does, then, appear from the record that a special term of Gates Superior Court was held, and we are bound, prima facie, to presume not only that an order for its being holden was duly made, but that it was duly held. The whole ground occupied by the objection we are considering is covered by S. v. Ledford, 28 N.C. 5. In that case the defendant was convicted of perjury (170) at a special term of the Superior Court of Yancey. After the conviction a motion was made in arrest of judgment, because the indictment did not set forth an order of the court, at the preceding regular term, for the special term, nor charge that the judge who held the court was duly appointed by the Governor to hold it. These objections were overruled, and the court decided that the act authorizing special terms of the Superior Court does not create a new court. It is still the Superior Court of Law, held by a judge of the Superior Courts; and as a Superior Court, the regularity of its proceedings in point of time as in other things is to be presumed until the contrary appears."Inasmuch as the special term might be lawfully held, the fact that it was lawfully held on a particular day and at the proper place establishes, at least prima facie, that it was the due and proper time to hold it." Nor was it necessary that the appointment of the judge to hold the court should be spread upon the record. He does not claim his powers, as a judge of the Superior Courts, from the appointment of the Governor, but from his election and commission as a judge of the Superior Courts. The appointment by the Governor is, under the act of 1844, ch. 16, nothing but a mode by which the judge is assigned to hold the special term of the court. We are bound, then, to presume, prima facie, that the special term of Gates Superior Court was regularly ordered and duly held, until the contrary appears.
The second objection is that if the special term of Gates Superior Court was properly held, its power extended only to the trial of causes, and not to their removal. In the first section of the act of 1844, ch. 16, providing for the ordering of special terms of the Superior Courts, it is provided, "and all the causes on the civil docket shall be tried under the same rules and regulations as are now provided for the holding (171) the regular terms of said court." A judge presiding at a regular term has power to remove any civil suit for trial to an adjoining county, upon proper cause shown, of which he is the exclusive judge, and by section 5 of the act of 1844 the judge holding the special term is clothed with all the power to hear and determine the causes on the docket that he would have if presiding at a regular term. He must necessarily have power to make all orders and rules necessary to prepare a cause for trial and to expedite its progress. If this were not so, he could make no order to continue a cause or to take a deposition. To remove a cause for trial is among his legitimate powers. But in this case the cause was removed upon the affidavit of the defendants, and they appeared at Bertie Superior Court and defended the action. It is true that the consent of the defendants could not give the court jurisdiction of the cause, but it had it under the law of the county, and it was exercised at their request, and it does not lie with them to allege this objection. In the language of the Court in S. v. Seaborn, 15 N.C. 315, "It would be mischievous to allow the party an exception against his own motion."
It is further urged that as soon as the special term closed, all the cases remaining on the docket untried returned to the regular term. This is true, but immediately upon the termination of the special term in this case this cause ceased to be on the docket; it was transferred to the Superior Court of Bertie.
PER CURIAM. The motion in arrest of judgment overruled, and judgment below affirmed.
Cited: S. v. Baker, 63 N.C. 279.
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