Common Law Procedure Amendment Act (Ireland) 1853

Execution after Trial.

With respect to Execution:

CXXVII. A Plaintiff or Defendant, having obtained a Verdict or Nonsuit in a Cause tried out of Term, shall be entitled, without any Rule on the Postea or Inquisition, to mark Judgment and to issue Execution in Fourteen Days, and in a Cause tried in Term in Four Days, unless the Judge who tries the Cause, or some other Judge, or the Court, shall order Execution to issue at an earlier or later Period, with or without Terms; and it shall be lawful for the said Judge before whom the Trial has been had, or any other Judge, or the Court, to make such Order accordingly: Provided that, notwithstanding any Judgment signed or recorded or Execution issued by virtue of this Act, it shall be lawful for the Court in which such Action shall have been brought to order such Judgment to be vacated, and Execution to be stayed or set aside, and to enter an Arrest of Judgment, or grant a new Trial or new Writ of Inquiry, as Justice may appear to require, and thereupon the Party affected by such Execution shall be restored to all he may have lost thereby in such Manner as upon the Reversal of a Judgment by a Proceeding in Error, or otherwise as the Court may think fit to direct.