In this cause an appeal was taken to, and •decided by, this court at last term, reported in 80 N. C., 81, w-herein the- decree of the court below, setting aside a sale *3of land made by its authority to 0. H. Moss and D. G. Rice, was affirmed and a certificate’ of the opinion directed to be issued.
At the last term of the superior court of Henderson county, upon the coming down of the certificate from the supreme court, the cause stood for hearing, when the parties agreed upon and prepared a decree by consent, which was present■ed to and signed by the judge and filed in the cause. At a later day in the same term, the plaintiff moved to strike from the decree the clause which provided for the mode and manner of ascertaining the sum to be repaid to the purchaser, which was opposed, and His Honor having disallowed the motion the present, appeal is taken.
The decree entered by consent was what is termed an interlocutory order, and the general rule is that such orders made in the progress of a cause are in the breast of the court during the term at which they are passed, and may be altered in any respect, and also. may be rescinded or modified at any time after the term and before the final hearing by a proper case being made out. The formal and orderly proceeding for rescission or amendment of such order is, by a viva voce motion in matters of course, which, according to the course of the court, may be granted without hearing both sides; and by written petition in matters special affecting the rights of other parties, so as to notify them of the grounds and enable them to show cause against the same and adduce evidence, if necessary, in opposition. Adams’ Eq., 348. Wilcox v. McLain, 2 Hay., 368; Ricks v. Williams, 1 Dev. Eq., 3.
This is the rule, it will be observed, when the order sought to be rescinded or modified is the order of the court. But a decree by consent is the decree of th.e parties, put on file with the sanction and permission of the court; and in such decrees the parties acting for themselves may provide as to them seems best concerning the subject matter of the litiga*4tion, and with the like sanction of the court they may alter or amend from time to time, with the assent of all. But where a consent decree is entered, neither party can strike from it a material part or clause, nor have the aid of the court to do so, without the consent of the other. For if it could be so done, then a party, by order of the court, may be held to a decree with a material clause stricken out, without which he would never have assented to it, and one which, in its altered form, the court could never have made.
A decree by consent as such must stand and operate as an entirety or be vacated altogether, unless the parties by a like consent shall agree upon and incorporate into it an alteration or modification. If a clause be stricken out against the will of a party, then it is no longer a consent decree, nol-is it a decree of the court, for the court never made it.
There is no doubt a decree by consent, either enrolled or not, may be rescinded or modified ; but it is certain it cannot be done by a petition to rehear, or on a hill of review for errors of law apparent, for the reason that it was not the judgment of the court -T and therefore, if erroneous, the error was not the error of the court. In such case it would seem to-be a necessity to seek remedy by an original bill under the old system, or by civil action under the new, on the ground of fraud and imposition and the like. Monnel v. Lawrence, 12 Johns. Rep., 521; Harrison v. Ramsay, 3 Ves.
Just so in the case of an interlocutory order after or during the term at which it was entered under our code-system : The order, if entered by consent, could not- be modified by striking out a clause against the consent of a party opposing, .nor for error as upon a petition to rehear, but it would have to be done by a motion or petition in the cause, specifying imposition or fraud or other adequate cause, going to the whole order and constituting, such as would be ground ;to. set it aside on an original bill in the case of a final decree.
*5In this case, from the case of appeal made out bj the judge, the plaintiff moved to Strike out a single clause of the decree by consent, and the other party not consenting, and no special ground of circumvention, imposition, or fraud having been urged so far as we can see, there was no error in disallowing the plaintiff’s motion. Judgment of the eourt below is affirmed. Let this be certified.
No error. Affirmed.