Tribble v. Frame
Tribble v. Frame
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opirn -n of the court.
This is a writ of error brought to reverse a judgment recoveied by Frame in an action of trespass guare clausum, fregit which was brought against him in the circuit court by Tribble.
The declaration contains two counts, in neither of which are the abuttals of the close upon which the trespass is charged to have been committed set forth, and to each count the defendant pleaded separately liberum tenementum. To each plea the plaintiff replied, and issues to the country were. thereupon joined by the defendant.
After the evidence of each party was through, the court, on the motion of the defendant, instructed the jury, that under the pleadings, to enable the plaintiff to recover in this action, he must shew two distinct closes in the county of Clark, (that being the county in which the closes are described to lie in the declaration,) and also that a ti’espass Was committed on each dose.
It will be observed, that the instruction is not hypothecated upon any opinion which the jury might form the evidence introduced or reüed on by
But suppose it-were admitted that the defendant had land in the county in which the trespass is charged to have been committed, would the plain-a®-er Pr0°f °f the fact by the defendant, be entitled to recover under the pleadings in this case, without shewing that he had two closes, upon each of which a.trespass was committed.
This.question is one which was also made and decided by the circuit court, and as the cause must be reversed for the error in the instruction of the -court, and the question may possibly be again made upon the return of the cause to that court, it is ■proper.that we should now dispose of it.
If the declaration contained but one count, it is perfectly clear that there could be no recovery by
The correctness of this doctrine' of the law was not contested in argument, but its application to a. case in which the declaration contains more-counts than one, was denied. But if such be the rule applicable to a declaration containing.one- count only, no reason is discerned whv the-same rule should not govern declarations containing several counts, provided the plea to each be of the same sort. If, as remarked by Starkie, the defendant may elect to what parcel he will apply his plea, and thereby, on-proving that he had a close in the same place, defeat a recovery upon a declaration containing but' one Count, it would seem necessarily to follow, that if the declaration contains several counts, both of which are general, the defendant- may also elect to wh at parcel to apply his. plea, and thereby on like, proof defeat a recovery for any one trespass. The
Sergeant Williams, in treating on the doctrine oí new assignments, has, in a very few remarks, presented the subject in a lucid point of view. “It was” says he “anciently the most usual practice in trespass clausum fregit, to declare generally for breaking the plaintiff 's close at' A. This general mode of declaring put the defendant under a difficulty of knowing in what part of the vill of A, the trespass, which the plaintiff meant by his declaration, was committed. The defendant was therefore permit-ed to plead that the close was his freehold, which he might do without giving it a name, because, as the plaintiff was general in his count, the defendant might be as general in his plea. And if the plaintiff traversed it, he run a great risk; for if the defendant had any part of his land in that viII, the verdict would be for him on that issue. This turned the difficulty upon the plaintiff, and therefore he was almost always driven to a new assignment, in which he assertained the place with proper exactness.” 1. Saun. 299b, N. 6.
It is therefore not by multiplying counts in his declaration, that the difficulty turned upon him by general pleading in trespass clausum fregit, is to he escaped- by the plaintiff, but it is by a new assignment of the trespass charged in his declaration. It is true that a new assignment is in the nature of a dec]arátion, and it may be contended that, as the declaration contains two counts, one of which should be considei ed. as equivalent to and answering all the purposes of a new assignment. But were the argument admitted to be sound, the difficulty with the plaintiff would be the same. For liberum tenementum is pleaded separately to each count, and though either be considered as a new assignment, as both are general, it was as much incumbent upon the plaintiff after plea, to new assign as to the one ¡count
The defendant, it is said, must plead to a new assignment in the same manner as to a declaration; and if the plea be such as would require a new assign-merit, if pleaded to a declaration, the plaintiff, it. is also said, must new assign in this case. 1 Saun. 299c. N. 6.
In whatever- point oí view, therefore, the counts in the declaration are considered, as they are both general, and liberum tenementum is pleaded to eac)l, the plaintiff will not be entitled to recover unless he proves more than one close and trespass, provided the defendant shews that he is entitled to land in the same county in which the trespass is charged fO have been committed.
The judgment must, however, for the error in the instruction of the court, which has been noticed, be reversed with cost, the cause remanded to the court below, and if the plaintiff shall fail to obtain le&ve of the court and withdraw his replications to the pleas, or one of them, and new assign, a new trial of the issues must be had, and such further proceedings there had as may not be inconsistent with the principles of this opinion.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.