Bowdish v. Peckham
Bowdish v. Peckham
Opinion of the Court
The notice ought to be as particular as a special plea in bar. The statute by allowing notice of special matter to be given in evidence under the general issue, dispenses with the form only — not the substance of a special plea. The plaintiff must by the notice, be informed of the facts intended to be proved, otherwise,
Swift, for the defendant, offered the same evidence in mitigation of damages.
By the Court. The evidence cannot be received in mitigation of damages. You may give evidence of the general character of the plaintiff-, which it must be presumed he has come prepared to support.
Verdict for the plaintiff".
After verdict, Swift and Marvin moved in arrest of judgment for the insufficiency of the declaration.
The words charged in the first count were — Joseph Bowdisli
In the second count, the words were charged to have been spoken as follows — “He, Joseph Bowdish, (meaning the plaintiff) has made out a false account against me, (meaning the defendant) well knowing the account to be false, and sworn to it, and he (meaning the defendant) could prove it.”
It was insisted in support of the motion, that the words as charged in the declaration were not actionable — that they did not necessarily import the crime of perjury, especially as there was no colloquium of any Court or magistrate before whom the account had been sworn to, or of any cause or occasion of taking the oath. But admitting the words to be actionable, yet it was insisted that there was an inconsistency running through the whole declaration. Af-ter setting forth the words of charge in the first person, each count-concludes thus — “ and he (meaning the defendant) could prove it.” In grammatical construction it is an assertion of the plaintiff that he, the defendant, could prove the charge to be true.
For the plaintiff it was insisted that the words clearly imported a charge of perjury, and would be so. understood by all who heard them; and that although there was in setting forth the words a change of persons, the first to the third, yet it was clear that the defendant was meant in both persons, and so was the averment.
By the Court. The words in common understanding clearly import a charge of perjury — perhaps not conclusively. Had they have been introduced with a proper colloquium, it might have been put out of all question. In taking the second exception, the defendant’s counsel are correct in their construction of the declaration. The third person he clearly means the defendant, as well as I preceding in the first person; but in the one caso he is the person speaking — in the other, spoken of; the person of whom some one makes the assertion, “ he can prove it.” In strictness the defendant does not make the assertion of himself, whatever the pleader intended. He has put the assertion into the mouth of the plaintiff, who is speaking in the declaration. It is undoubtedly a mistake; but it is now a fatal one, and the judgment must be arrested.
fSwift, for the defendant, moved to be allowed costs.
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