
    
      WATSON & AL. vs. PIERCE.
    
    Appeal from the court of the third district.
    a court cSnnot give default,Qonba petition ad■dressed to nother court. Nor permit the petition tobe amended.
   Matthews J.

delivered the opinion of the ■ .. . , In this case, a petition addressed tq . the district court of the parish of West Felicia-na was filed in the office of the clerk of East Ba. * ton Rouge. Copies of the petition and citation were served on the defendant who was a resident of the latter parish, and is stated to be such in the petition. No appearance was put in by the defendant, nor answer filed, and the plaintiff moved for judgment by default. The court refused to grant ivbecause it had no jurisdiction of the case: application was then ■- rr made to amend the petition by striking out the _ . • word,We$t Feliemna, and inserting the words East Baton Rouge, and also for leave to change the assertion in respect to the residence of the plaintiffs, who were styled “of the city of Philadelphia and state of Louisiana,” by erasing the words state of Louisiana. The court refused leave to do so, and the petitioners excepted.

We think the judge below did not err. His refusal to give judgment by default on a petition addressed to another tribunal is so clearly correct, that it requires no observation from us .to shew it so. His rejecting the application to amend is sustainable on the obvious reason that there was nothing before him to amend by. The case was not legally before his court, because it was addressed to another tribunal, and the error of the clerk in filing it and issuing citation, could not enable him to take cognizance of it. The judge of west Feliciana was the only person who could have authorised amendments to this petition. That* which was offered under the name of an amendment in the court of east Baton Rouge, was the making a new petition by changing the tribunal, and there nothing before that court to which such an amendment could attach. '

Watts Sf Lobdell for plaintiffs, Duncan fot defendant.

It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the district court be affirmed with costs.  