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St. Pierre v. Beauregard

Supreme Court of Vermont. October Term, 1930
Jan 7, 1931
103 Vt. 258 (Vt. 1931)

Summary

recognizing court "has the incidental power, independent of any statute, to revise and correct its records, and, if necessary, for sufficient reasons, to order a case to be brought forward after final judgment, and vacate the judgment and open the case for further proceedings"

Summary of this case from McLaughlin v. Pallito

Opinion

Opinion filed January 7, 1931.

Bastardy Proceedings — Judgment and Order — G.L. 3616 — Presumption Parties Stipulating as to Judgment and Order Referred to Statutory Judgment and Order — Recognizance Specified in G.L. 3617 Mandatory — Courts — Amendment of Records — Discretion of Court — Mistake or Accident Not Fault of Party as Ground for Exercise of Discretion To Amend Record — Correcting Error at Subsequent Term of County Court — Failure of Court To Exercise Discretion of Motion To Amend Record — Judgment on Recognizance and Execution — Notice to Surety.

1. Only order and judgment court can enter in bastardy proceedings is that provided by G.L. 3616.

2. It will be presumed that parties to bastardy proceeding, stipulating amount and manner of payments to be made by defendant to plaintiff and that court might enter judgment and order "for that amount to be paid as above stipulated," referred to judgment and order specified in G.L. 3616.

3. Provision of G.L. 3617, that person adjudged father of child in bastardy proceedings shall enter into recognizance before court as therein provided, is mandatory.

4. County court, within certain limits, has incidental power, independent of statute, to revise and correct its records, and, if necessary, to order case to be brought forward after final judgment, vacate judgment, and open case for further proceedings, and may do this at subsequent term.

5. Power of county court to revise and correct its records is addressed solely to its discretion.

6. In amending record, court has right to act upon ground of mistake or accident not arising from neglect or fault of party.

7. Where parties to bastardy proceeding in stipulating as to judgment intended court should render judgment provided by statute, but by mistake or inadvertence of court, and without fault or neglect of plaintiff, judgment rendered failed to conform to statute, error is one which may be corrected by amendment, at subsequent term, court having discretionary power to grant or refuse relief prayed for.

8. Failure of court to exercise its discretion, in overruling motion to amend judgment in bastardy proceedings to conform with statute, held error.

9. Where judgment in bastardy proceedings, while irregular, when considered with stipulation of parties to which it referred, was specific as to amount of several payments to be made by defendant and dates when due, judgment comes within terms of recognizance taken before justice of the peace, and plaintiff was entitled to have judgment on same and execution issued as provided by G.L. 3619, provided statutory notice was given.

10. Where record did not show that surety in bastardy proceeding had been given twelve days notice required by G.L. 3619, Supreme Court cannot say that lower court erred in overruling motion for execution to be issued on recognizance.

BASTARDY PROCEEDING. The parties stipulated as to amount and manner of payments to be made by defendant to plaintiff and that judgment and order might be entered thereon, and judgment that plaintiff recover of defendant amounts named in stipulation was rendered by court at the September Term, 1928, Orleans County, Willcox, J., presiding. At the March Term, 1930, Orleans County, Sherman, J., presiding, plaintiff filed motions praying that case be brought forward; that a capias issue to bring defendant before court to show why he should not be ordered to pay as ordered at the September Term, 1928; that he be required to give a suitable recognizance to make payments as ordered in record at said September Term, or be confined in jail until recognizance was given; that judgment be amended to conform to G.L. 3616, 3617; and that an execution issue against defendant and his surety who recognized before the justice of the peace. The motions were severally overruled as matter of law. The plaintiff excepted. Reversed and remanded.

E.A. Cook for the plaintiff.

Lee E. Emerson for the defendant.

Present: POWERS, C.J., SLACK, MOULTON, WILLCOX, and THOMPSON, JJ.


This is a bastardy proceeding. It appears from the record that at the September Term, 1928, the parties stipulated and agreed "that the defendant shall pay to the plaintiff One Hundred Dollars on or before ten days from date, that he will pay her One Hundred Dollars each year thereafter for four years making Five Hundred Dollars to be paid in full settlement of the case and that the court may enter judgment and order for that amount to be paid as above stipulated." It further appears from the record: "And such proceedings were had that the court ordered and adjudged that the plaintiff recover of the defendant the amounts named in the said stipulation." The defendant paid the first one hundred dollars, but has not paid anything since then.

The plaintiff brought her motion to the March Term, 1930, praying that the case be brought forward, and that a capias issue to bring the defendant before the court to show cause why he should not be ordered to pay as ordered at the September Term, 1928, to give a suitable recognizance to pay the payments as ordered in the record of said September Term, or be confined in jail until such recognizance is given.

The plaintiff filed another motion praying that the court amend the judgment so that it would conform to the provisions of G.L. 3616, 3617, relating to judgments in bastardy cases; and also another motion praying for an execution against the defendant and his surety who recognized before the justice of the peace.

The case was brought forward, and the three motions were severally overruled as matter of law; and the plaintiff took and was allowed an exception to the overruling of each motion.

G.L. 3616 provides that if the judgment of the court on trial is that the defendant is guilty, he shall be adjudged to be the father of the child, and shall stand charged with its support, with the assistance of the mother, in such manner and proportion as the court judges proper. G.L. 3617 provides that such father shall during the term of the court in which the orders are made, enter into a recognizance before the court, with sufficient sureties, to the mother of the child, in such sum as the court directs, conditioned that he will abide and perform the orders of the court so made in the premises; and on entering into such recognizance, the one entered into before the magistrate shall be void.

We think that the judgment and order that the parties agreed and stipulated that the court might enter is the judgment and the order specified in the provisions of G.L. 3616. That is the only order and judgment that the court can enter in a bastardy case, and it will be presumed that the parties had the same in mind when they entered into the agreement and stipulation.

The judgment the court rendered did not conform to the provisions of G.L. 3616, but was in substance such a judgment as is rendered in actions of contract. Nor did the court oblige the defendant to enter into the recognizance required by the provisions of G.L. 3617. The provisions of the latter statute are mandatory upon the court.

Can the judgment that was rendered at the September Term, 1928, be amended by the same court at a subsequent term so that it will conform to the provisions of the statute; and can the court at a subsequent term oblige the defendant to enter into the recognizance required by the statute?

It is well settled in this State that the county court, within certain limits, has the incidental power, independent of any statute, to revise and correct its records, and, if necessary, for sufficient reasons, to order a case to be brought forward after final judgment, and vacate the judgment and open the case for further proceedings. And this can be done at a subsequent term. Smith Hanscomb v. Howard, 41 Vt. 74, 77; Fire Ins. Co. v. Reynolds, 52 Vt. 405; Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Foster, 88 Vt. 503, 93 A. 258. The power is addressed solely to the discretion of the court. Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Foster, supra. And mistake and accident not arising from the neglect or fault of the party is a ground which the courts have a right to act upon in amending their records. Goddard v. Fullam, 38 Vt. 75. In Mosseaux v. Brigham, 19 Vt. 457, 460, this Court said: "But this rule (that the truth of the record cannot be disputed) does not forbid the exercise of a revisory power by a court of general jurisdiction over its own records. It is a power incident to such courts, to inquire into the correctness of their own proceedings, to correct their records according to the truth, if erroneously made, or to relieve a party against the unjust operation of a record, on ascertaining, by a direct inquiry into the matter, that the record ought not to have been so made."

It is apparent from the record that the failure of the judgment rendered at the September Term, 1928, to conform to the provisions of the statute was due to the mistake or inadvertence of the court, and not to any fault or neglect of the plaintiff. The parties intended that the court should render the judgment provided by the statute; and the error of the court in not doing so can be corrected by amendment. The court below had the discretionary power to grant or refuse the relief prayed for. But it did not exercise its discretion in overruling the motion, and this was error. Johnson v. Shumway, 65 Vt. 389, 26 A. 590; Lapoint v. Sage, 90 Vt. 560, 565, 99 A. 233; State v. Fairbanks, 101 Vt. 30, 34, 139 A. 918. While the judgment was irregular, yet, when considered with the stipulation of the parties to which it referred, it was specific as to the amount of the several payments to be made by the defendant and the dates when due. This judgment comes within the terms of the recognizance taken before the justice of the peace, and the plaintiff is entitled to have judgment on the same and execution issued as provided by G.L. 3619, if the parties against whom the motion was made had twelve days' notice before the making thereof. Garvin v. Walsh, 54 Vt. 367. It does not appear from the record that the surety had such notice. In the absence of any showing that he did have the statutory notice, we cannot say that the court below erred in overruling the motion for execution to be issued on the recognizance.

It is not necessary to consider the first motion praying that a capias issue to bring the defendant before the court. It appears from the docket entries that the defendant appeared generally by counsel in the court below. If, on remand, the court amends the judgment so that it conforms to the provisions of G.L. 3616, the recognizance required by G.L. 3617 will naturally follow, and the defendant can be committed to jail if he does not enter into the same.

Judgment reversed, and cause remanded.


Summaries of

St. Pierre v. Beauregard

Supreme Court of Vermont. October Term, 1930
Jan 7, 1931
103 Vt. 258 (Vt. 1931)

recognizing court "has the incidental power, independent of any statute, to revise and correct its records, and, if necessary, for sufficient reasons, to order a case to be brought forward after final judgment, and vacate the judgment and open the case for further proceedings"

Summary of this case from McLaughlin v. Pallito
Case details for

St. Pierre v. Beauregard

Case Details

Full title:ALICE ST. PIERRE v. GEORGE BEAUREGARD

Court:Supreme Court of Vermont. October Term, 1930

Date published: Jan 7, 1931

Citations

103 Vt. 258 (Vt. 1931)
152 A. 914

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