Ammonett v. Harris

1 Va. 488
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedOctober 17, 1807
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Va. 488 (Ammonett v. Harris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ammonett v. Harris, 1 Va. 488 (Va. 1807).

Opinion

Charles Ammonett brought an action of trespass, assault and battery, in the District Court of Richmond, against twelve defendants jointly. Some of them eluded the process, and others prevented it from being served upon them, by force; so that, in the end, the writ was executed on four only. Casey and Landrum, two of them, on whom it was first served, appeared and pleaded not guilty; and a verdict was rendered against them jointly for 6001. At the term in which the verdict was found, for reasons appearing to the Court, it was ordered that, unless the plaintiff should, within three months, release to those defendants 5001. part of those damages, the judgments should be set aside, and a new trial granted them, and the cause again put upon the docket; but, in case of such release, that execution be issued for the balance and costs. The release was executed accordingly, and the plaintiff took judgment and sued out execution for the balance, part of which was levied. Afterwards, two other *defendants, Harris and Turpin, having been served with process, after the former had filed their plea, but before the judgment had been obtained against them, and the cause standing as to them on a new writ of inquiry, appeared and pleaded the release as to part, and judgment for the residue of the damages assessed, in bar of any farther assessment of damages; bringing into Court and tendering to the plaintiff the full balance due on the judgment.

To this plea the plaintiff demurred specially ; and for cause of demurrer, assigned that the present defendants were not arrested when the former filed the plea; that the Jury might find the present defendants guilty of several parts of the same trespass, or one of them guilty of the same at different times; that several damages might be assessed against several defendants, in the same action, according to their several degrees of guilt; and that the order of Court, directing the release, applied to the particular judgment against the first defendants, and related to that particular judgment alone.

The defendants joined in demurrer; and judgment was thereupon given in their fa-vour, to which the plaintiff obtained a writ of supersedeas from one of the Judges of this Court.

Randolph, for the plaintiff in error. The release was to Casey and Landrum, saying nothing about the other defendants. I contend, therefore, that it enured to those only to whom it was given.

My primary position is, that, in this action, and under these circumstances, it was in the power of the Jury to sever the damages. If this position is in my favour, the release enured distinctly to Casey and Lan-drum : so too, the execution was against men who had committed separate injuries; and so, on the fourth place, the doctrine of taking judgment pro melioribus damnis did not apply.

I. Whether, where the declaration is joint, the Jury can sever the damages.

On this point, if reason only is consulted, the question will be decided in the affirmative. Torts are either joint or several: the guilt of one man is not that of another: and different considerations ought to apply to persons of different wealth.

Reason only ought to be consulted, because the authorities are very numerous, confused, and contradictory. The chief is Lord Mansfield in Hill and another v. Goodchild, *5 Burrow, 2790, and he declares there is so great inconsistency in the cases, it is impossible to reconcile them. I argue, therefore, that you are emancipated from British authorities as to this point, and should settle the law by your own decision. But, if we are to be governed by precedent, that case is different from ours: for there the Jury found all the defendants jointly guilts' > whereas, here, although Casey and Landrum had a joint-judgment against them, Harris and Turpin were not then before the Court. We cannot avail ourselves of the observation of Lord Mansfield, relative to cases where defendants are charged severally : but he says that his decision has no application to cases where they plead severally.

The principle in the case of Jones v. The Commonwealth, 1 Call, 555, is in our favour. 1 Bulstrode, 157, cited in 5 Burrow, 2791, is in point. Cro. Eliz. 860, Austin v. Wilward, states that where one is found guilty in part, and the others in all, the damages shall be severed. But 11 Co. Rep. p. 5, Haydon’s case, is in our favour; and. it will appear that all the decisions which prohibit severance of damages are where the cases of all the defendants were submitted to the same Jury; and no instance occurs of an authority against severing the damages, where the defendants are, at different times, brought before different Juries.

[220]*220Chapman v. House and others, 2 Stra. 1140, shews that where the defendants severed in their pleas, the Jury might assess separate damages. Lowfield v. Bancroft and others, 2 Stra. 910, is a case against us. Yet, in the same book, the case of Lane v. Santloe, p. 79, is in our favour.

II. The release enured to Casey and Lan-drum only. Esp. 415, Cook v. Jenner, (cited from Hobart, p. 66,) appears against me on this point: but the release executed by Am-monett was not voluntary, but directed by the Court. Besides, if my doctrine is true, that the damages might be severed, how can this release operate in favour of other defendants, who were not then before the Court?

III. These were different judgments; therefore different executions might be issued.

IV. The doctrine de melioribus damnis does not apply to circumstances like these, where the defendants drop in at different times; but only where the judgment is obtained against all at once. When Casey and Landrum had pleaded, we were not bound to wait till we could get them all before the Court. This would have been a great hardship upon the plaintiff. If a contrary doctrine should prevail, *a wealthy defendant, to screen his own fortune, might put forward others, who were his tools, and worth nothing.

JUDGE} TUCKHR.

Might not the severance of damages lead to the inconvenience you mention? Aman might set on another to commit a trespass. The instigator might be compelled to pay only one shilling, while a large sum might be assessed against the insolvent perpetrator.

Randolph. The severance of the damages is the only way to prevent that inconvenience. The Jury would find against each according to the enormity of his offence, and consider the sum which had been granted against one, in estimating the damages against the rest.

Wickham, for the defendants in error. No authority can be produced to shew that there may be several verdicts and several judgments against defendants who are jointly sued. Where the object is punishment, the atrocity of the crime and the property of the offender ought to be considered, as in Jones v. The Commonwealth; but, where compensation for the injury 'is in question, the injured person has a right to look equally to all who have injured him.

In Co. Litt. 232 a. it is said that a trespass is joint or several, at the will of him to whom the wrong is done; and in E}sp. 395, quoting Yelv. 68, that, if the person injured sues one and obtains judgment, the others may plead it in bar.

It is a strange doctrine that, although you cannot by separate actions recover separate damages for one and the same trespass, yet in a joint action you can.

I admit that, where the trial is of several issues, of writs of inquiry by different Juries, the damages may be severed.

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Related

Jones v. Commonwealth
5 Va. 482 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 1799)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Va. 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ammonett-v-harris-va-1807.