Debow v. Colfax
Debow v. Colfax
Opinion of the Court
Upon tbe trial of the cause, at the Bergen Circuit, in October, 1824, before the late Chief Justice, a non -suit was ordered, which the'' plaintiff now seeks to set aside.
In examining the propriety of the non-suit, the first question to be resolved is, whether Mr. Field would himself have been entitled to cut and carry away the grain at maturity had no sale by him been made ? At the time he sowed the grain, he was the minister, in possession, and entitled to hold and enjoy the parsonage so long as he remained minister. The precise nature or apt denomination of the estate which he had in the premises, whether of freehold, or for years, or at will, needs no\ to be sought. For. the law of
Tho enquiry results then, in the second place, what is the effect of that sale ? Does it vest in the purchaser a greater right than would have remained in the seller, Mr. Field? Shall the former hold, and may he take the crop, although as we have seen, the latter might not. The counsel of the plaintiff sought to maintain the affirmative, and relied on the rule which gives to the undertenants or lessees of ten
I have found no adj udged case, nor even a dietum, which gives the underlessee the crop_ where the grain has been sown, not by him but by his lessor. And just reason and sound principle would forbid such extension of the rule. Its foundation is due encouragement to husbandry, and the security of him who labors and sows from the effect of the acts of another not under his control. But the rule would be worthless from obvious liability to evasion, if the widow might the hour .before her marriage, or the tenant on the day antecedent to his commission of waste, avoid the consequence of those acts by so simple a device as the sale of the crop. So far as we meet with anything in the books, this distinction -is recognized. In-the case of Grantham v. Hawley, Hob. 132, it is said, if a man conveys an estate, which he has sowed, to A. for life, and A. dies before the crop is severed, the person who sowed it shall have it; and on the margin it is said, if the lessor sow it, and then convey the
On those considerations I am of opinion the non-suit was ■ rightly ordered.
As another reason for setting aside the non-suit, the counsel of the plaintiff insisted that the cause should have been put to the jury upon the facts. I think otherwise. Upon the facts exhibited in evidence on the part of the plaintiff ho had not shewn, in matter of law, property in himself in the rye in question, an indispensable pillar of his action. If the cause had been submitted to the jury, the duty of the judge would have been to have charged them, that the plaintiff taking the facts to be true, had failed to shew a right to recover, and was not entitled to their verdict. A plaintiff may not ask a jury for a verdict, and the judge may well prevent by a non-suit, a verdict mistakenly rendered, and which afterwards must be set aside, if, on the plaintiff’s own case, uncontroverted as to fact, the law is clearly against him. Moreover, from the affidavits laid before us, it appears the plaintiff’s counsel, and wisely too, preferred a non-suit; for after the opinion of the judge, as to the legal effect of the voluntary removal of Mr. Field, had been expressed, the counsel of the plaintiff said : “ if that is the opinion of the court, the plaintiff must submit to a non-suit, and he was accordingly non-suited.” I remark wisely, for he has thereby secured to his client, the plaintiff, review of the legal questions here, and an opportunity if the opinion of
Another reason for setting aside the non-suit is, that legal evidence offered by the plaintiff was overruled. In the course of the trial he offered to read to the jury a resolution of the consistory of the church, adopted on the 29th November, 1817, to the following effect: that this body disavows any claim to the grain mentioned in the resolution, of the 4th of May, 1816, and declare that said resolution was passed in anticipation of an expected purchase, which has never been realized.” The resolve of the 4th of May, 1816, was, that “ Paul Debow take particular care of the grain on the parsonage lot, lying in Bergen county, and that he shall be satisfied for his trouble.” The evidence of the resolve, of November, 1817, because it amounted at the most, only to a disclaimer on the part of the .church,- but vested no title in , the plaintiff, was overruled. And in my opinion, rightly. The question depended “on the title or property of the plaintiff in the rye. If he legally acquired none, under the purchase by Romer from Mr. Field, he had none, nor could any mere disavowal or disclaimer on the part of the consistory supply, pr tend to supply the -want. A very different case might have been presented, if a valid act on the part of the corpo.rat-ion, made in due season, and antecedent to the harvest, transferring to Paul Debow their property in the rye, had been produced. But as was justly remarked by the judge, it was no more, in its most liberal acceptation, than a disavowal on their part, not a transfer; and if indeed a transfer, of what avail to establish a legal title in the plaintiff, could have been their transfer of a chose in action in November, 1817, upwards of a year after the rye had been cut, and in the possession of the defendants ?
An undue-weight seemed on the argument at the bar, to be attributed to the fact that an action for the taking of the rye had been commenced in a justice’s court, to which these defendants had" filed a plea of title. The plaintiff however
Let the non-suit stand.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Paul Debow against George W. Colfax and Andrew Titus
- Status
- Published