Hallowell v. Williams
Hallowell v. Williams
Opinion of the Court
It appears, from the paper-book, that the first objection made in the court below against the admissibility of evidence, proceeded upon the notion that the agreement of the 27th of November, 1816, signed by the then practising attorneys of the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery county, and the practice that has obtained in pursuance of it, was not applicable in a case like the present, and for this reason the evidence mentioned in the first bill of exception ought not to have been received under the declaration filed in the cause. But this is a mistake; the agreement is framed in general and very comprehensive terms. It includes all cases of appeal from the judgments of justices of the peace. There is nothing in its language or spirit, exclusive of any class of cases of which a justice has by law jurisdiction, and in which an appeal lies from his judgment. This appeal consequently falls within its scope and meaning.
But it is further objected here, that the agreement is not to be regarded as a rule of the court below, being but a private arrangement of the gentlemen who were parties to it, not binding upon their successors. It is admitted however, that immediately after it was concluded, it was placed among the records of the court and for nearly -thirty years has been recognised by both court and bar, as furnishing a rule of practice, of which all have had the advantage, if any advantage flowed from it. Under these circumstances, we think it has acquired the character and force of a rule of court established by
We se.e no error presented by the second bill of exceptions. .The recognisance entered into by the defendant below, in pursuance of the thirty-third section of the act of 12th of July, 1842,- to procure a "stáy of execution upon the judgment recovered by Williams v. Brouse, was properly conditioned that no part of the property of the defendant in the judgment liable to execution should be removed, secreted, assigned or in any way disposed of, except for the necessary support of himself and family, until the plaintiff’s demand should be satisfied, or until the expiration of ten days after the plaintiff should be entitled to have execution issued on the judgment, &c. The execution issued at the suit of Williams, having been returned by the constable with the endorsement “ no goods,” which was," in effect, a return that no goods of the defendant could be found .whereon to levy it; it became necessary, or at least not improper, for the plainiiff to prove, that at the time of the acknowledgment of the recognisance, the original défendant, Brouse, possessed goods liable to be taken in execution, and their value, for without this there could be obviously" no breach of the condition of the recognisance". If.it were admitted that the plaintiff "might have" safely rested on the recognisance itself as prima-fade proof of this fact, still this did not preclude him from giving" other competent evidence to establish it, and we see no objection to parol proof for the purpose.
The third, fourth and fifth bills of exception, founded on the rejection of evidence offered by the defendants below,-may be considered in connection. The executions issued by Justice Leech, and the proceedings had.in pursuance of them, were offered to rebut the plaintiff’s case, by showing that at the time of the acknowledgment of the recognisance by Hallowed, Brouse had, in reality, no goods which could have been made the subject of an execution, at the suit of Williams, inasmuch as the chattels' proved by the plaintiff to have been in Brouse’s possession, at the date of the recognisance, had, theretofore, 'been taken in execution at the suit of-Charles Bosler, in whose favour Brouse had confessed a judgment for upwards of $300, which chattels were subsequently sold to satisfy the last-mentioned judgment. Whether these facts, if made.out by compe
The plaintiff below having shown all that was incumbent on him to prove to entitle him to recover, the defendant, upon the rejection
As to the seventh specification, it is sufficient to say, the narr. filed in the case is but a fiction tolerated by the rule of court to which reference has already been made. It was not intended to set out truly the plaintiff’s cause of action, and therefore, for every legitimate purpose of pleading, might as well have been altogether omitted. The object, under the rule, is to try the cause on its merits without regard to the declaration or other pleading. Where such a rule exists, it is tantamount to an agreement that no defect, in form or substance in the pleadings, shall be taken advantage of. To permit a defendant to aver, as matter of defence, that a contract was made on Sunday, when in reality the plaintiff does not allege the existence of any such contract, would be laughably absurd. The plea offered is not a demurrer, though so denominated in the record. If it were, it would be sufficient to say that it is not permitted to a demurrer to aver, as the ground of it, a fact dehors the pleading demurred to. But, treating this as a plea in bar, the court below were right in rejecting it.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
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