CODE OF CIVIL PROCEDURE.
No. 3 of 1901.
1281
675. The certificate of the Registrar shall not, unless the circumstances of the case render it necessary, set out the judgment or order or any documents or evidence or reasons, etc., but shall refer to the judgment or order, documents, and evidence, or particular paragraphs thereof, so that it may appear upon what the result stated in the certificate is founded.
676.—(1) Where an account is directed, the certificate shall state the result of such account, and not set the same out by way of schedule, but shall refer to the account verified by the affidavit filed, and shall specify by the numbers attached to the items in the account which, if any, of such items have been disallowed or varied, and shall state what additions, if any, have been made by way of surcharge or otherwise, and where the account verified by the affidavit has been so altered that it is necessary to have a fair transcript of the account as altered, such transcript may be required to be made by the party prosecuting the judgment or order, and shall then be referred to by the certificate.
(2) The account and the transcript, if any, referred to by the certificate shall be filed therewith.
(3) No copy of any such account shall be required to be taken by any party.
677. Any party may, before the proceedings before the Registrar are concluded, take the opinion of the court upon any matter arising in the course of the proceedings without any fresh summons for the purpose.
678. Every certificate, with the account, if any, to be filed therewith, shall be filed in the Registry, and shall thereupon be binding on all parties to the proceedings, unless discharged or varied on application by summons.
679. Any application to discharge or vary a certificate shall be made before the expiration of twenty-one days after the filing thereof.
680. The court may, if the special circumstances of the case require it, on application by motion or summons for the purpose, direct a certificate to be discharged or varied at any time after the same has become binding on the parties.