Spencer v. Patten
Spencer v. Patten
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appellees sued the appellants, Philip M. Spencer and Jarrett Spencer, in Harford County, and the case was removed to Howard County. On the 28th day of March, 1896, a jury was sworn in the Circuit Court for the latter county to try the issues joined, and on April 9, 1896, there was a “ motion to amend declaration and to strike out the names of Philip M. Spencer and Jarrett Spencer, two of the defendants, from the writ and all subsequent proceedings in this case.” The next entry appearing on the very imper-
A demurrer was filed to the declaration, but it was not pressed in this Court. The defendants filed on the same day, April 9, 1896, a plea in abatement to the amended declaration, which is set out in the record with the following entry just below it: “ Motion ne recipiatur to said first plea and motion granted.” On the same day four pleas in bar,' marked second, third, fourth and fifth pleas to the amended declaration, were filed. The second was the general issue plea, and the third, fourth and fifth were demurred to,- and the demurrers were sustained. On the 16th day of April, 1896, two other pleas marked the sixth and seventh were filed, and there is an entry in the record, “ demurrer to the sixth plea and motion ne recipiatur to the seventh plea. . Demurrer and motion ne recipiatur sustained.” On the 17th day of April there was a verdict for the plaintiffs, and after a motion for a new trial was overruled judgment was entered thereon and an appeal taken. The record shows that exceptions had been taken during the trial, but as they are not in the record we are confined in our inquiries to the questions ■ presented by. the rulings of the Court below on the pleas.
The first point urged in this Court is in reference to the ruling on the first plea, which was filed in behalf of all the defendants, and alleges that at the time of the issuing of the summons in the case “ another suit or action was pending in the Court of Common Pleas of Baltimore City in this State, in which the said plaintiffs in this case are plaintiffs against Joseph E.’ Spencer and J. Herman, two of the defendants to this suit (and one Jarrett Spencer), on the same causes of action in said amended declaration mentioned and described, and which said suit is pending at this time.” There is nothing in the record concerning the action of the
The rulings on the third, fourth, fifth and sixth pleas will be considered together. The declaration alleges that the defendants did unlawfully, wrongfully, wilfully and maliciously break and enter the lands of the plaintiffs, and did then and there unlawfully, wrongfully and maliciously use and occupy said lands “by placing thereon and using stationary floats and other contrivances and devices for fishing in the waters of the Susquehanna River adjacent to said lands, whereby the plaintiffs were deprived by the defendants of the beneficial use and enjoyment of said lands as a fishery, as well as deprived of other uses to which said lands were suited and profitable to the plaintiffs.”
These pleas are intended to raise the same question. The third, for example, alleges that the plaintiffs’ closes are a part of the bed of the Susquehanna River covered by the navigable waters of the river where the tide flows and reflows, where there is a common fishery wherein all citi
The seventh plea is defective. Objection is made to its having been disposed of by a motion ne recipiattir. The proper way to raise the question was by a demurrer for want of equity, but as it is so manifestly bad, the defendants were not injured by the method adopted.
Although the question as to what rights the plaintiffs had in the navigable waters of the Susquehanna was argued at length, and with ability, we will not now determine it, as it
Judgment affirmed with costs to the appellees.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- J. HERMAN SPENCER and Others v. THOMAS H. PATTEN and MARTHA J. PATTEN
- Cited By
- 7 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Plea in Abatement—When to be Filed—Pendency of Another Suit— Motion of Ne Recipiatur to Plea—Review of Ruling on Appeal— Trespass on Land Covered by Navigable Water— Fishery—Plea Amounting to General Issue—Demurrer—Harmless Error—Plea Amounting to the General Issue. A plea in abatement cannot be filed after a plea in bar, unless the facts relied on to abate the action arose afterwards, and in that case the plea in abatement should allege that the facts arose afterwards. After a plea in bar was filed, the plaintiffs amended the' declaration and the defendants were required to plead to the same. Held, that the defendants could not plead to the amended declaration matters which existed at the time of their pleading to the original declaration. In this case the original .suit for trespass was against six defendants, and they pleaded in bar. Afterwards the declaration was amended by striking out two of the defendants and the remaining four pleaded in abatement, the pending of another action by the same plaintiffs in another Court against two of the defendants and another party for the same cause of action. A motion of ne recipiatur to this plea was granted. Held, that the pendency of the suit for a joint trespass against these three was as much matter of abatement in the original suit to which all six were parties as in the amended declaration where two of the three and two others were defendants, and that the dilatory plea could not be filed under these circumstances. The rule requiring dilatory pleas to be filed promptly is important in the administration of justice, not only to save costs and prevent surprise to litigants, but also to save the time of the Court. The question as to whether a plea in abatement was filed in time or not should be raised by a bill of exception and not by a motion of ne recipiatur. If upon such motion a plea is not received and is not therefore technically a part of the record, it may be questioned whether this Court, upon an appeal from the judgment when there is no bill of exception, can review the ruling of the trial Court. The declaration alleged that the defendants unlawfully entered the lands of the plaintiffs, and used the same by placing thereon stationary floats for fishing in the waters of the Susquehanna River, adjacent to said lands. The pleas of the defendants set forth that the lands referred to in the declaration were a part of the bed of the said river, covered by navigable waters, where the tide ebbed and flowed, and where there was a common fishery for all citizens, and that the defendants were fishermen, and at the times and places mentioned in the declaration were fishing with seines from floats made of timber temporarily anchored in said navigable waters. Upon demurrers to the pleas, Held, ist. That the gravamen of the declaration is that the plaintiffs were deprived of the beneficial use of their lands as a fishery by stationary floats placed there by the defendants, and that if the pleas intended to deny plaintiffs’ title, they are bad, because merely amounting to the general issue. 2nd. That if the pleas do not deny that the land was the plaintiffs, they are bad, because it is not an answer to the declaration to say that the defendants were fishing in the ordinary manner. 3rd. That if the plaintiffs had title to the lands covered by water, the defendants had no right to place thereon obstructions which interfered with plaintiffs’ lawful use of the same; and the statements in the pleas that the floats were only temporarily anchored for the purpose of fishing, are only denials of the allegation in the declaration of the use of stationary floats, and amount to the general issue. When a plea amounts to the general issue, it is bad upon demurrer. A plea for defence on equitable grounds in an action of trespass set forth that the plaintiffs’ lands are part of the bed of a navigable river; that the defendants are fishermen and the act complained of was the fishing of said river; that there were no marks showing the boundaries of plaintiffs’ lands; that plaintiffs had never objected to the use of floats in fishing over said lands, and had said that they had no greater right to fish at that point than any one else, and that the defendants in fishing there acted in reliance upon these facts. Held, that this plea was bad and was liable to demurrer for want of equity. Where a plea setting up a defence on equitable grounds is bad, a demurrer thereto should be filed, but where such plea is disposed of by the granting of a motion of ne recipiatur, the defendant is not injured.