Hord's v. Dishman
Hord's v. Dishman
Opinion of the Court
This was an action of trespass quare clausum fregit, brought by John Dishman against John Hard, for breaking and entering his close, and treading down his grass, and ploughing up the earth, and the soil thereof, and cutting down his wheat thereon growing, and converting the same to his own use; and taking and carrying away, and disposing of three beds, twelve chairs, and lOOOlbs. of bacon, of the plaintiffs, and converting the same to his own use; with a continuando from the first to the 21st day of June; and other wrongs done to the plaintiff, to his damage 500l.
The defendant, as to the breaking and entering and the whole trespass alleged, pleaded, first, not guilty; and for further plea, he said, that before the time of entering upon the close aforesaid, to wit, on the twelfth day of June, in the same year, he, the defendant, sued out of the office of the Court of Essex County, a writ in these words: The Commonwealth, &c. Whereas John Hard hath, as appeareth by the decree above prefixed, (which decree is no otherwise mentioned or set forth in the plea,) recovered against Samuel Dishman, (and twenty-three other persons, whose names are set forth,) his right and seisin, &c. of one tenement, &c. in the County of Essex, therefore the sheriff is commanded to cause the defendants as before named, to restore to the said John Hord the tenement, so that he have his seisin thereof, &c. and also, that he cause to be made the sum of forty cents for the costs of that writ, and also his legal fees for serving the same; which said writ afterwards was delivered to a sheriff of the said County to execute, by virtue whereof R. H. one of the deputy sheriffs of that County, restored to the said John the tenement aforesaid, as by return of the said deputy will more fully appear; which said entry is the same of which the said John Dishman now complains: without this, &c.
It was observed by the counsel for -the appellant, though the observation was certainly against his client, that this plea ought to have concluded to the country. But all special pleas in bar, where any new matter, not before apparent upon the record, is alleged, ought to conclude as this does, with a verification, and a submission to the judgment of the Court upon the matter so alleged: which the opposite party may either take issue upon by a total denial of the facts alleged; or confess and avoid them; or admit them to be true, but deny their sufficiency in law to avail the party; as the plaintiff has done in the present case by a demurrer.
As this is a general demurrer, no defect in the plea that is not matter of substance is to be regarded. The objection insisted on by the counsel for the appellee is, that the defendant not being an officer should have pleaded the record of recovery, especially it being his own suit: and the authority in Britton v. Cole
But this is not the only objection to the plea which strikes me. The trespass is alleged to have been committed on the first day of fune, with a continuando to the 21st. The justification is under a writ bearing date the twelfth day of fune. The trespass from the first day of fune to the 12th is not answered: the plea is consequently bad for that reason also. But further: the trespass in taking away three beds, twelve chairs, and 1000lbs. of bar con, and converting the same to his own use, is not answered, nor any notice taken of it, in any way whatsoever) in the second plea; which, were there no other objection, would vitiate it entirely. I therefore think the judgment must be affirmed, unless there be some incurable fault in the declaration; to which no exception whatever was taken in the argument at the bar, nor did any occur to myself) until it was mentioned by the presiding Judge. The objection is to the word whereas in the beginning of the declaration, which, according to ancient precedents in the Court of King’s Bench in England, has been held to be fatal, even after a verdict,
On the point of the quod cum, the declaration, in the present case, is precisely like the one in the case of Ballard v. Leavell.
The declaration, then, being radically faulty, the case of Smith v. Walker, Executor of Michie,
By the whole Court, (absent Judge Lyons,) the judgment of the District Court reversed.
1 Ld. Raym. 309.
Philips v. Biron.
Smith v. Boucher.
Perkin v. Proctor and Green.
2 Wils 384, 385. Perkin v. Proctor and Green.
1 Roll. Rep. 55 2 Ld. Raym. 1413. Dobbs v. Edmunds. 1 Stra. 621. Amyon v. Shore.
1 Wils. 99. Douglas v. Hall. 3 Wils. 203. White v. Shaw. 2 Ld. Raym. 1413. in margine.
а) 1 Wils. 99, 100.
Oct. 1805, MS.
1 Wils. 100.
Oct. 1805, MS.
1 Wash. 135.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Hord's against Dishman
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