Way v. Dame
Way v. Dame
Opinion of the Court
By Gen. Sts. c. 142, §§ 1, 4, all personal actions may be commenced by trustee process, except actions of replevin, actions of tort, for malicious prosecution, slander, and assault and battery; and the writ in such case shall be returnable in the county where the trustees or some of them reside or have their usual places of business.
Trespass quare clausum is unquestionably, a personal action within the common law definition, and although a local action yet if the term “ personal actions ” in the trustee act is to receive the ordinary technical meaning, there can be no doubt that this action is properly brought in this county, where the trustees •ave their usual places of business.
In Plympton v. Baker, 10 Pick. 475, Shaw, C. J., in considering St. 1820, refers to St. 1817, and adds, “ We are of opinion that in reference to other analogous statute provisions, and the judicial constructions upon those before cited, actions, though in form personal, which put in issue rights to real estate, are real actions within the meaning of this statute.” It will be noticed that a strong ground for the construction thus given to St. 1820, § 79, is found in the fact that it is a substitute for St. 1817, incorporated into the general act establishing the court of common pleas, and intended as a reenactment of the last named statute.
The defendants contend, mainly on the strength of these decisions, that the term “ personal actions ” is not intended in the trustee act to include trespass to real estate. The statutes egulating the right of appeal have nt necessary relation to those regulating the trustee process, and cannot be said to be in pari
But there is another answer to the defendants’ claim, which seems decisive. If there is any force in the argument that the legislature intended to follow those legislative provisions and judicial decisions, which it is claimed have modified the common law definition of personal actions, it is plain that such modification must appear to have existed prior to the passage of the trustee act. The St. of 1817, as we have seen, discloses the first attempt at such distinction, while the provisions of Gen. Sts. c. 142, § 1, relating to trustees, had their origin as early as 1794, in c. 65, § 1, of the statutes of that year, the phraseology of this early statute with precisely the same exceptions being adopted in the Revised Statutes and continued in the General Statutes. There can be no pretence, therefore, that when this statute first became the law of the Commonwealth, the meaning of the words “ personal actions,” in their legal acceptation, had then been changed by lawgivers or judges. In Wilder v. Bailey, 3 Mass. 291, Sedgwick, J., discussing this statute of 1794, remarks that “ goods, effects and credits, so intrusted and deposited, are attachable in various actions for torts, such as trover, &e., and even in actions of trespass quare clausum fregitP
We cannot see any reason, therefore, for not applying the ordinary rule that the words of a statute are to be taken in their ordinary signification, and technical words in a technical sense. The practical inconveniences which result from bringing actions of trespass upon real estate in counties where the parties do not reside, and remote it may be from the close in question, have misted for a long time, and if they have attracted the attentior
Motion to dismiss overruled.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John M. Way v. John L. Dame & others & trustees
- Status
- Published