Moore v. Chapman
Moore v. Chapman
Opinion of the Court
Friday, December 2.
after stating the case, proceeded:
The consent entered in the County Court, that the defendant might give in evidence upon the trial of the issue joined, any thing which he could have specially pleaded, takes away all objection to his not having pleaded a regular judgment of the District Court, as a justification of the arrest of the defendant upon the execution: an omission which otherwise might have been fatal. The plaintiff’s own evidence, however, as stated in the bill of exceptions, shews that there had been a regular judgment of a Court of Record; and by the act of 1792,
1. Whether the plaintiff’s action, under the circumstances of this case, will lie? And there can be no doubt, that, where a party is taken in custody upon a process, which is for any reason void; as if a capias ad satisfaciendum be sued out against an executor or administrator, on a judgment obtained against him for a debt due by his testator, without establishing a devas-tavit; such writ is merely void, and an action of trespass and false imprisonment lies against the plaintiff suing out the writ, though not ^against the Sheriff,
A second error appears to me in this, the assault and false imprisonment are stated in the declaration to have been committed at the parish of Fairfax, in the County of Fairfax. The evidence excepted to, is an execution issuing from the District Court of Dumfries, which was served at Prince William Court, where the defendant was attending as a witness, and while he was sojourning- (as he expresses it) for a time in the County of Prince William. Now, although trespass is a transitory action, like debt upon a bond, yet if it appear from the evidence that the trespass was committed, in the one case, or the bond executed in the other, in a foreign place or jurisdiction, there must be an allegation in the declaration, that it was so executed, or so committed, at the place to which the evidence necessarily points, to wit, in the County, or country, in which the suit is brought; under a videlicet. This is necessary in order to a proper venire. It is necessary also to prevent a multiplicity of suits. For, if there had been no exception taken to this testimony, how could a recovery in this action be pleaded in bar of any future action brought in twenty other Courts for the same cause?
A third ground upon which I conceive the County Court erred, is, that supposing the execution not to have been previously satisfied, the taking him into custody upon that execution whilst he was attending as a witness at the County «Court of Prince William, and detaining him in custody until he shewed that he was there attending on a summons, was not a sufficient cause to support this action of trespass, assault and battery, and false imprisonment, as was decided in Cameron v. Eightfoot,
I have taken no notice of the evidence which might have been given to the Jury, except what is stated in the bill of exceptions ; the mass of papers copied at the end of the record, as has been more than once decided, though certified by the Clerk to have been filed in the cause, not being properly before this Court.
For these reasons I am of opinion that the judgment of the District Court should be affirmed.
said, that he could see
no error in the judgment of the District Court; and was in favour of affirming it.
was of the same opinion.
-) Rev. Code, 1 vol., c. 76. s. 39.
Oi) 2 Blacks. Rep. 866, Barker v. Braham; 3 Wilson, 368 S. C.; 2 Blacks. Rep. 1192,1193, 1194, Cameron v. Lightfoot. See also 3 T. R. 183, Belk v. Broadhent & Wife.
2 Blacks. Rep. 845, Parsons v. Lloyd; 3 Wilson, 341, S. C.
Doug. 652, Tarlton v. Fisher.
Parsons v. Lloyd.
Barker’s Administrator v. Braham, &c.
Cameron v. Lightfoot.
Philips v. Biron.
2 Blacks. Rep. 1193, in the case of Cameron v. Lightfoot.
Fisher's Executors v. Duncan and Turnbull, 1 Hen. & Munf. 577. vide also 1 Wash. 90, 203.
8 Black's Rep. 1190.
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