US SUPREME COURT DECISIONS
MECHANICS' BANK OF ALEXANDRIA V. WITHERS, 19 U. S. 106 (1821)
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Mechanics' Bank of Alexandria v. Withers, 19 U.S. 6 Wheat. 106 106 (1821)
Mechanics' Bank of Alexandria v. Withers
19 U.S. (6 Wheat.) 106
ERROR TO THE CIRCUIT COURT FOR THE
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, SITTING IN ALEXANDRIA
Syllabus
The Circuit Court for the District of Columbia has authority to adjourn to a distant day, and the adjourned session is considered as the same term.
Where the regular term began on the third Monday in April and the court continued to sit de die in diem until 16 May, when it adjourned to the fourth Monday of June, held that a defendant, against whom an office judgment had been entered on 16 May had a right under the laws and practice of Virginia to appear at the adjourned session and have the default set aside on giving special bail and pleading issuably. chanrobles.com-red
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a writ of error to a judgment rendered by the Circuit Court for the District of Columbia, sitting in Alexandria, in an action of debt, and the case depends on the laws of Virginia as they stood when jurisdiction over the District was first exercised by Congress.
By the law of Virginia, the proceedings, until an issue is made up in a cause, are taken in the clerk's office at monthly rules, and judgments by default become final on the last day of the succeeding term, till which day the defendant in any such action has a legal right to set the judgment aside and to plead to issue. The circuit court held its regular session in April, 1818, and continued to sit regularly till 16 May, when it adjourned to the fourth Monday of the following June. The clerk, considering the day on which the court adjourned as the last day of the term, and the judgments at the rules as having on that day become final, issued an execution on one of these judgments, which had been obtained by the plaintiffs against Cave Withers and his common bail. When the court met in June, the defendant appeared and, on motion, was allowed to set aside the office judgment, give special bail, and plead to issue. The execution was consequently quashed. In the course of the term, judgment chanrobles.com-red
was confessed by the defendant, for the sum claimed in the declaration and a writ of error was then sued out, the object of which was to reverse the last judgment and set aside all proceedings subsequent to 16 May on the idea that the judgment rendered at the rules became final on that day.
The sole question in the cause is whether the adjournment from the 16th of May to the fourth Monday in June was a continuation of the April term or constituted a distinct term.
There being nothing in any act of Congress which prevents the courts of the district from exercising a power common to all courts -- that of adjourning to a distant day -- the adjournment on the 16th of May to the fourth Monday in June would be a continuance of the same term unless a special act of Congress expressly enabling the courts of the district to hold adjourned sessions may be supposed to vary the law of the case. That act is in these words: "And the said courts are hereby invested with the same power of holding adjourned sessions that are exercised by the courts of Maryland." These words do not in themselves purport to vary the character of the session. They do not make the adjourned session a distinct session. They were probably inserted from abundant caution, and are to be ascribed to an apprehension that courts did not possess the power to adjourn to a distant day until they should be enabled so to do by a legislative act. But this act, affirming a preexisting power, ought not to be construed to vary the nature of that power unless words are employed which manifest chanrobles.com-red
such intention. In this act there are no such words, unless they are found in the reference to the courts of Maryland. But on inquiry we find that in Maryland, an "adjourned session" is considered as the same session with that at which the adjournment was made. Since, then, the term at which this conditional or office judgment was to become final was still continuing when it was set aside, and the defendant permitted to plead to the declaration, there was no error in that proceeding.
Judgment affirmed.