Opinion
(June Term, 1851.)
In a writ of error coram nobis, only such errors in fact can be assigned as are consistent with the record before the court in which the case was tried.
APPEAL from Caldwell, J., at GREENE Spring Term, 1851.
Motion in the Superior Court of Greene for a writ of error, coram nobis, to reverse a judgment of that court for error in fact. On affidavits, the case was this: Richard Edwards gave his bond to the plaintiff, and after the obligor's death intestate suit was brought thereon in the county court against his administrator. He pleaded fully administered, and the plaintiff confessed the truth of the plea and signed judgment for the debt, and then sued out a scire facias against Susan C. Edwards as heir at law to have execution against the real estate descended. The scire facias recited the former suit, and that the administrator pleaded fully administered, and the confession of the plea by the plaintiff. The heir pleaded thereto, among other things, nul tiel record, on which issue was joined. After a trial in the county court the case went by appeal to the Superior Court. Through the inadvertence of the clerk, as now suggested by the plaintiff, the transcript from (119) the county court did not set forth the above mentioned plea, nor the plaintiff's admission that the administrator had fully administered; and on that ground the court adjudged that there was no such record, and gave judgment for the costs against the plaintiff. The plaintiff further swears that the original record in the county court contains the matters so recited in the scire facias, that the debt is justly due, and that there are no personal assets to satisfy it.
The court denied the motion, and the plaintiff appealed.
Rodman for plaintiff.
J. W. Bryan for defendant.
It is not to be considered whether there be error in law in the judgment, for if there were such error it could not be corrected by writ in the same court. Moreover, the motion is founded exclusively on an alleged error in fact. A writ of that kind can be had only when allowed by the court where the record is; and if such a case on appeal will lie to this Court, we must say, in our own opinion, it was right not to allow it in this instance. The only error which it is proposed to assign is in a matter of fact directly repugnant to the record. The party wishes now to show that in truth there is such a record, in contradiction to the finding of the fact by the court that there was not such a record. An averment of fact against the record cannot be heard in a case of this kind more than in others. Bac. Abr., Error, K. 3. Only such errors in fact can be assigned as are consistent with the record. When an infant, for example, is sued, there is nothing to enable the court to see that he is or he is not an infant. The law considers that, as an infant, he has not discretion to choose an attorney, and therefore will not let him appear by attorney, but requires the court to appoint a fit person his guardian to make defense for him. As (120) the court does not know the defendant's infancy, it is the part of the plaintiff to ascertain and make known the fact, so as not to allow the court to decide against a person under disability, for whom the full defense may not have been made which the law intends. For that fault the plaintiff's judgment must necessarily be reversed, so as to let in the other party with all the advantages to which the law entitled him; and therefore, the defendant may aver the fact of his disability which stands well with the record, in order that he may have the benefit of a legal defense. It is the same when a feme covert is sued without her husband. But if in those cases issue be joined on the questions of the defendant's infancy or coverture, and it be found that the party is of full age or not a feme covert, but sole, we apprehend that the verdict must of necessity conclude all parties on that point as on any other put in issue and found, and that an averment to the contrary could not be allowed. If it could, it will render the litigation interminable, as each party might say from time to time that then he or she had fuller proof, which would establish the fact to be contrary to the last finding. But the present case is much weaker than those mentioned. It is not one in which it is alleged that the court wrongfully administered the law for want of information, which the plaintiff ought to have given, as to a fact from which the defendant would have derived advantage had it been brought to the notice of the court. But here the allegation is that the court erred in finding a fact against the plaintiff on which the parties were at issue, contrary to the truth, and even that, not because the finding was not right according to the proof then before the court, but by reason simply that he can now produce evidence sufficient, he supposes, to establish the fact as then alleged by him. It is in reality an attempt in a novel way and at a remote period to get a new trial (121) for surprise. The plaintiff's proper course would have been to suggest a diminution of the record and had the defect supplied before the trial by certiorari, or, after the trial and at the same term, on account of the surprise, to have moved for another trial. The present attempt cannot be countenanced.
PER CURIAM. Affirmed.
Cited: Massie v. Hainey, 165 N.C. 178.