Turner v. Beatty
Turner v. Beatty
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an action of trespass quart clans, freg. The plaintiff declares in two counts, for breaking and entering a certain close of the plaintiff, situate, &c., digging up the soil and cutting off and destroying a wooden pipe
The defendants pleaded: First, The general issue — not guilty. Second, As to entering, Ac., digging up the soil, and- cutting off and destroying the pipes, Ac., and diverting the water, Ac., and treading down the grass, Ac., they say, that the said closes in the said declaration mentioned, now are and at the several times when, Ac., were the doses, soil, and freehold of the said defendants, Stewart Beatty, fyc., and that he, in his own right, and the said James K. Swayze, jr., David A. Beatty and Peter Danley, as Ms servants, and by his command, at the said times when, Ac., broke and entered, Ac., and because the soil, wooden pipes and boxes, Ac., had been wrongfully and injuriously put and placed, and were at those times remaining and being in and upon the said closes in which, Ac., encumbering the same; they entered and dug up the same, and removed the said pipes and boxes to a convenient distance from and out of the said closes, and there left the same for the use of the plaintiff, doing no unnecessary damage to the said plaintiff, as they lawfully might, Ac.
The plaintiff joins issue upon the plea of not guilty, and replies to the second plea, that the said closes are the closes', soil and freehold of the plaintiff, and not of the defendant Stewart Beatty, in manner and form, Ac., and on this 'plea the defendants join issue.
These issues having been sent down to the Warren circuit for trial, the postea is now returned, from which it appears, that the cause having been submitted to the jury upon the evidence, they found the defendants guilty on the first issue joined between the parties, and assessed the plaintiff’s damages at twenty dollars; and on the second issue they found the defendants not guilty.
And the counsel for the plaintiff insists, that the yerdict of guilty on the general issue being in effect a verdict
On the other hand, the counsel for the defendants as strenuously contend that the verdict for the defendants upon the plea of liberum tenemenlum, is fatal to that upon the general issue, inasmuch as it establishes the justification pleaded, and that, therefore, the defendants are entitled to a general judgment.
Where the intention of the jury can be ascertained, there is no difficulty; the court will always mould the verdict into proper form. But if a verdict is repugnant, or uncertain in a material point, it is void.
Now here the two propositions, or parts, of this verdict are in direct conflict with each other, and there is nothing in the case, as made by the pleadings, or as disclosed in the evidence, from which we can gather with certainty the intention of the jury. The real contest in the cause was as to where the dividing line between the farms of the plaintiff and the defendant, Stewart Beatty, was. The plaintiff claimed that the spring, the locus in quo, was within the boundary of his farm; and this, Beatty denied, and claimed that the premises were within the lines of Ms farm. It was a question of boundary- — of title. The defendants, it is true, produced some evidence that the trunk and pipes were originally put in by Turner under an agreement wiih Charles Beatty, a former owner oí the defendants’ farm, but that he did not comply with the terms of his agreement. The plaintiff, however, did not claim to have had them there by leave and license from the defendant or his grantor. He put himself upon his title.
The plea of not guilty put the title, as well as the fact of . committing the act alleged to be a trespass, incidentally in issue. For the defendants were at liberty under that plea to prove either that they did not commit the act, or that the title to the locus in quo with the right of immediate posses
The plea of liberum, tenementum, not only put the title directly in issue — it did more: it set up title by way of a justification of the act alleged to be a trespass. And the defendants to maintain it on their part, were bound to show that the freehold was in themselves, or a third party, by whose command they entered, either by direct or presumptive evidence of such a title as operated as a justification ; and we are bound to infer from the finding of the jury in favor of the defendants on this issue, that they did so, and if they did so it was a complete answer to the action, and they were, in fact, not guilty of the alleged trespass.
The verdict must be sot aside and a new trial ordered — ■ the costs to abide the event of the suit. This disposes of the case for the present, for it would be improper for us, under these circumstances, to look into the other question so elaborately argued, as to which party was entitled to the verdict upon the weight of evidence. That question must be again referred to the appropriate tribunal for a solution.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- JONAH TURNER v. STEWART BEATTY
- Status
- Published