Murray v. Garretson
Murray v. Garretson
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This was an ejectment by writ, pursuant to the act of 21st March, 1806, and 13th April, 1807. The plaintiff shewed title in himself at the time of the commencement of the action, and the defendant produced in evidence a conveyance by a third person of the premises subsequent thereto. The opinion of the Judge who tried the cause was taken, whether the plaintiff could proceed to recover damages ánd costs, the title being out of him at the time of the trial. .The Judge expressed an opinion that he could not, whereupon the plaintiff suffered a nonsuit, with an understanding, that the Court in Bank should be moved to take it off, if they should be of opinion .that the plaintiff could recover damages and costs.
In order to a right understanding of this question, it may be proper to consider how the law stood under the form of ejectment by declaration, and whether any alteration is made by these acts of assembly.
Originally the plaintiff in ejectment recovered damages only in this action, because terms .for years were so entirely at the common law in the power of the freeholder, were generally so short that they often expired before the suit could be determined; but when they began to extend to a great length, necessarily and in reason the remedy was rendered commensurate with the injury, and if he made out a title to a term subsisting at the time of trial, the judgment was not only for the damages, but quod recuperet terminum, The
If the term expire pending the suit, the plaintiff cannot recover the possession, because the Court cannot give judgment for the land when it appears on the face of the record, that the title to it is determined, yet he shall have judgment for the damages, because the trespass remains as before. As if an ejectment be bro'ught, and the demise laid on the 1st October, when the plaintiff has title; suppose an estate for another’s life, and on the 1st January, cestuy qui vie, dies, when the title appears to be in the defendant, the plaintiff may proceed in his action and recover his damages, though not the possession, because that must belong to the defendant. The plaintiff is entitled to damages, because the defendant unjustly held the possession at the time the action was brought. Runnington, 404. So where the lessor of the plaintiff claims as tenant for life and dies, the plaintiff may still proceed for damages and costs, although his title is at an
The reason why, after there is an end of the title of the plaintiff pending the ejectment, he may recover damages and costs, is, because the defendant unjustly withheld the possession, at the time the action was brought. It would appear in principle and in justice, that this reason held equally in all cases where there is an end of such title, let its distinction arise from what cause it may.
1'he right to damages for the tort, for withholding the possession, remains unimpaired, by assignment of the title to the thing itself to. the defendant, and the rule in all actions is, that the plaintiff shall recover according to the right which he had at the time of action brought. Pending an action for the mesne profits, a conveyance of the premises to the defendant, does not operate as a release, or preclude the plaintiff from recovery. Fenn v. Stille, 1 Yeates, 154. The damages do not depend on the privity of estate.
The acts of assembly prescribing the writ of ejectment, instead of procees by declaration, make no alteration in the parties’ rights. The alteration is in form alone, not in substance. It is a substitution of real instead of nominal parties; it is laying aside the fiction and nothing more. The issue not guilty, the mode of trial, the evidence, the verdict, the
It appears, therefore, to the Court, that though judgment could not be given for the possession, yet the plaintiff, notwithstanding his conveyance, could proceed to recover in this action, nominal damages, and the full costs.
Nonsuit set aside.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Murray against Garretson
- Status
- Published