Kinney v. Muloch
Kinney v. Muloch
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
It is true, that this court, as a general rule, will govern itself in all cases, according to the rules of practice in the King’s Bench, as they were established and acted upon in that court, at the time of our becoming independent of the crown ; except so far as those rules are inconsistent with our altered circumstances ; or have been abrogated by statute or by new and positive rules of this court; or become obsolete and useless; or have been superseded by a long and approved course of practice which has grown up here since the revolution, and has become a sort of common law of our own court. These exceptions, it will be perceived, have swept away a very large portion of the rules that existed in Westminister Hall, at the time of our revolution : nevertheless, there are still many matters of practice, in relation to which, we should be without any rules, if we are not governed by those of the King’s Bench, relating to such matters. Such amongst others, is that which was recognised by this court, in Armstrong v. Davis, Coxe's R. 110, which was cited on the argument. In Davison v. Frost, 2 East, 305 the court were governed by an old rule, made in the year 1729, regulating the course of practice on the part of a defendant who had been arrested upon a writ in which the cause of action was “specially specified and expressed.” But that rule had been framed under the influence of the statute of 13 Car. 2 Sec. 2 c. 2, which required the true cause of action, to be particularly expressed in the writ — that statute is not in force in
In bailable actions, the affidavit always on file, when the writ issues, will, disclose to a defendant the true cause of action; and in case of a Judge’s order, the affidavits on which the order is founded arc generally, and ought always to be,filed by the Judge: if the defendant is really ignorant of the cause of his arrest, he can be at no loss to discover tiie specific ground of action, by an appeal to the Judge who made the order, or procuring a copy of Use affidavits, as was done in this very case.
The court, are therefore of opinion, that the cause of action is sufficiently expressed in this writ, and the motion must he denied ; but without costs, as this matter seems not hitherto to have undergone, any xliscnssion or judicial decision, before the court.
Motion denied.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- KINNEY v. MULOCH
- Status
- Published