Opinion
Decided May 4, 1931.
Judgments — Nunc pro tunc — Inherent power to adopt rules — Order to be grounded on court's personal recollection, records or testimony — Power exercised with caution — Orders restricted to evidence of judicial action actually taken — Power exercised only to supply clerical omissions — Notice to parties not necessary, when — Order to affirmatively show what intended to be corrected — Whether journal corrected to speak truth, or erroneous judgment modified — Record should disclose ground of court's action — Entry erroneous in omitting ground, intention and notice.
1. Courts have power to adopt practice of entering orders, judgments and decrees nunc pro tunc.
2. Order nunc pro tunc must be grounded on personal recollection of court, or upon records or minutes or testimony of witnesses having knowledge of facts.
3. Power to enter orders nunc pro tunc should be exercised with caution.
4. Power to enter orders nunc pro tunc is restricted to placing on record evidence of judicial action which has been actually taken.
5. Power to enter nunc pro tunc order can be exercised only to supply omissions in exercise of functions that are clerical merely.
6. When judge enters nunc pro tunc order on own recollection or on memorandum found in records, court can proceed to correct clerical error without previous notice to parties affected.
7. Where court must rely on extraneous evidence to determine whether clerical error has been made, notice should be given to parties and hearing granted before entry of nunc pro tunc order.
8. Entry of nunc pro tunc order must affirmatively show just what order was intended to correct.
9. Entry must show whether nunc pro tunc order was correction to make journal speak truth, or was intended as modification of erroneous judgment.
10. Record should disclose ground on which court acted in entering nunc pro tunc order correcting previous entry.
11. Nunc pro tunc entry not disclosing ground upon which court acted, what entry was intended to correct, nor that notice was served upon parties affected thereby, held erroneous.
ERROR: Court of Appeals for Cuyahoga county.
Mr. I.B. Fried and Mr. Ben G. Ruby, for plaintiff in error.
Messrs. Wolf Kruchkoff, for defendants in error.
Error proceedings are prosecuted from the judgment of the municipal court wherein an alleged nunc pro tunc entry was made on September 6, 1930, to correct an entry which was entered August 13, 1926. The entry of August 13, 1926, reads as follows:
"Statement of claim and counter-claim in this action dismissed without prejudice at plaintiff's cost for which judgment is entered."
The entry of September 6, 1930, reads as follows:
"Entry of Aug. 13, 1926, corrected to read nunc pro tunc as follows: At the close of plaintiff's case, motion to dismiss as to Rose Wolf without prejudice granted. Motion to dismiss without prejudice as to Morris H. Wolf overruled. Motion by defendant for judgment in favor of Morris H. Wolf is granted. Counterclaim for defendants dismissed without prejudice."
It will be seen that four years and one month elapsed after the original final entry was made in this cause before the corrected entry was entered by the court.
This matter is presented to us entirely upon the transcript, as no bill of exceptions was filed in this court.
The power of courts to adopt the practice of entering orders, judgments and decrees nunc pro tunc is recognized. It is likewise settled that an order nunc pro tunc cannot be granted upon mere guess, but must be grounded on personal recollection of the court, or upon records or minutes or the testimony of witnesses having knowledge thereof.
Helle v. Public Utilities Commission, 118 Ohio St. 434, 439, 161 N.E. 282, 283:
"The power to enter a nunc pro tunc order is inherent in courts of justice. This power is necessary in order that the records of a court or other tribunal may be made to speak the truth."
This power, however, should be exercised with caution, because otherwise the stability of judgments would be destroyed.
The power "is restricted to placing upon the record evidence of judicial action which has been actually taken" and "it can be exercised only to supply omissions in the exercise of functions that are clerical merely." Jacks v. Adamson, 56 Ohio St. 397, 402, 47 N.E. 48, 49, 60 Am. St. Rep., 749.
But a mere erroneous judgment cannot be corrected by a nunc pro tunc entry. Atkinson v. Atchison, Topeka Santa Fe Rd. Co., 81 Mo., 50.
When the judge acted upon his own recollection, or upon memorandum found in the records which displayed beyond question that an entry previously made had been entered by mistake of the clerk, or that the error was clerical in its character, the court can proceed in the exercise of its discretion to correct the same without previous notice being given to any of the parties affected, but, where the court has to rely upon extraneous evidence in order to determine whether or not a clerical error has been made in the journal of the court, proper practice would require that the parties affected thereby should be duly notified, and that no action should be taken by the court until both sides have had an opportunity to be present to present their facts and arguments, and likewise to take exceptions to any action of the court which they deem objectionable.
The function of nunc pro tunc is not to change, modify, or correct erroneous judgments, but merely to have the record speak the truth.
The entry which was made in the present case on September 6, 1930, does not disclose whether the correction is in the nature of a modification of the former judgment, intended to correct the court's mistaken judgment, or was intended merely to put upon the record the actual judgment which the court rendered on August 13, 1926, but which was mistakenly entered otherwise.
While not doubting the power of the court to exercise this power to make nunc pro tunc entry after the lapse of several years, we hold that the power of the court must be safeguarded so as to prevent any possible abuse of same. The entry must affirmatively show just what it is intended to correct, and whether it was a correction to make the journal speak the truth by inserting into it that which actually took place, but which was mistakenly entered otherwise, or was intended to be in the nature of a modification or correction of an erroneous judgment. Likewise the record should disclose the ground upon which the court acted — whether it was upon its own recollection or upon memorandum contained in the court records, or whether the court depended upon extraneous oral evidence in order to determine the error, in which event due notice must be served upon the parties affected by the change in the entry. The entry as it now appears does not disclose the ground upon which the court acted, nor does it show what it was intended to correct. Likewise the entry does not disclose that notice was served upon the parties affected thereby.
For the reasons given, the judgment of the municipal court is ordered reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
VICKERY, J., concurs.
WEYGANDT, J., not participating.