Andrews v. Moore

1 Tapp. Rep. 215
CourtStark County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedDecember 15, 1817
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Tapp. Rep. 215 (Andrews v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Stark County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrews v. Moore, 1 Tapp. Rep. 215 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1817).

Opinion

President.

The plaintiff was entitled to a judgment by default, for want of a plea, according to the practice of the court; and the defendant coming in, after a motion for judgment, is in the same situation as though at his instance an office judgment had been set aside on the usual terms of pleading, issuably an equitable plea, going on to trial or continuing the cause, at the election of the opposite party. The defendant has prayed oyer, and had it, and then demurred to the declaration. He has also put in two pleas in bar. The first, only, is objected to, and on the ground of its being a special demurrer. The distinction made in the English courts, is between frivolous pleas and those which go to the merits of the case, as appears by the case of Wright vs. Russell, 2d Bl. Rep. 923 — Berry vs. Anderson, 7 T. Rep. 530 — and Bell vs. Da Costa, 2d Bos. and Pul. 446.

The party moving to set aside an office judgment, does so on the ground that he has a good defence on the merits. He thus obtains leave to plead. His plea, therefore, should go to the plaintiff’s right of action, and not to mere matter of form. A special demurrer is not always frivolous, for advantage may be taken under it, of substantial defects ; the causes assigned, may be struck out, and leave to the party demurring, all he can reasonably ask. We prefer following the English practice in this respect, and consider that a special demurrer, as such, is not receivable in this stage of the cause. The defendant may, however, let the demurrer stand as a general one, if he thinks proper.

Wright, for the defendant, now argued, that “There is a general demurrer to the Narr. here, and the objections arising thereon, to the plaintiff’s right to recover, are:

1st. The want of legal profert of the article of agreement, or excuse for its omission.

2d. The want of an averment of plaintiff’s having performed the covenants on his part, in said article to be performed, particularly of conditions precedent.

3d. The want of an averment of the date of the article.

[218]*2184th. That the breach assigned, is not of any covenant jn articie to be performed by defendant.

5th. A variance between the article and description in the Harr.

As this demurrer has been put in on oyer of the article, I shall consider the article as a part of the record, in the view [ take of this motion.

1st. I take it to be clear law, that in all actions founded on specialties, a profert of the specialty must be made in the Narr. or a legal excuse shown therein for the omission. — Hero is no profert, but an attempt at an excuse, that the article is as the hands of one George Stidger. — Who George Stidger is, or how the article came into his possession, does not appear. — It is a rule in pleading, “that every thing shall be taken most strongly against the party pleading.” 1st Chit. PI. 241 — 1st Saund. 259, n. 8 — 2d B. and P. 155 — 4th East 343 — Apply that maxim here, and we may suppose the plaintiff placed the article in the hands of Stidger to avoid making profert; for such supposition may well be reconciled with all that is stated in the Nan'. If the article had been lost by time, accident, was in possession of defendant, or had been destroyed by him, the showing such facts would excuse the profert: but would it excuse profert that the plaintiff had wilfully destroyed the article, or voluntarily placed it in the hands of a third-person ! I think not — and have not laid' my hand upon any authority looking that way. The plaintiff ought to show how the article came into Stidger’s possession — and that it was by course of law, time, accident, or procurement of defendant, and that he refused to deliver it up on demand, before it works an excuse for him.

2d. — The forms of pleading require a general allegation of performance, &c. by plaintiff, but however the law may be as to necessity of such allegation, I apprehend it will not be denied, that if it appear in this case by the Nair. or the article on oyer, that the performance of the act complained of by the plaintiff depended on the doing of' some previous act, by the plaintiff himself, that performance by him of such act, or excuse for the non-performance must be averred in the declaration — 1st East 203 — 2d Bur. 899 — 2d New Rep. 233 — Doug. 690-1 — 1st Chit. PI. 352 — It will only be necessary here, then, to inquire whether, by the article in this case, the plaintiff was to do any act upon which depended his right to demand the $154.25 declared for. — The article provides for the payment, or securing the payment, of “ the remaining sum of $154.25 against the 1st May 1816, which last [219]*219mentioned. sum the said Thomas agrees to give his note with security, upon the receipt of a deed for Lot No. 75, in Canton, which deed the said Moses agrees to make to the said Thomas, on or before the loth May next,” (i. e. 1815)

the time of paying the 2d instalment. The order of time here, as well as the language, shew clearly the intention of the . parties, that the deed for lot 75 should be made by the plaintiff, before he should have a claim for the last of the money. Upon the making the deed by the plaintiff, depended his authority to compel the defendant to pay or secure the money. It was not their intention, that the defendant should pay the whole consideration money, and look only to the plaintiff’s responsibility. It seems evident he distrusted that; and, in order to secure the lot, and to make the thing reciprocal, he agreed, on receiving the deed, to secure or pay the plaintiff. The authorities cited below, will be found to contain the law on the subject of such conditions: 1st Saund. 320, n. 4; 2d Saund. 308, a n. 3, and 352 n. 3; 1st H. Blk. 273; 1 Wins. Abridg. 396; 6th T. R. 572; 1st Cowp. 50; 2d New Rep. 233; 1st Bast, 203; 2d Bur. 899; 2d Johns. 145-207-272-387; 10th Johns. 203-266.

3d. As to the date. 1 conceive it necessary, in declarations upon all specialties, to describe the instrument as having a date; and to shew the date, or describe it without date. The article produced, does not satisfy the declaration, but is variant therefrom, inasmuch as it is not there stated to be without date. It is variant, also, in another particular. The description of the Narr. is of “a certain writing obligatory, or article of agreement, under the hand and seal of the said Thomas.” The article produced, is an article of two parts, between the said Thomas and Moses, and under the hands and seals of both of them. This is a fatal variance on demurrer, and would not even be cured by a verdict. Gordon vs. Austin, 4th T. R. 611; Whitwell vs. Bennet, 3d B. & P. 559; Hooker vs. Cooke, 4th T. R. 314.

4th. As to the breach. The covenant is, to give a note, with security, on the 15th May 1815, for the payment of $154 25, on 1st May 181G — -the breach is, the non-paymen.t of the money on the. 1st May 1816. I take it, if the note and security, were given for this payment, on the 15th May 1815, the right of action on the covenant is gone, the plaintiff must look then only to his note and security — and it no where appears in this declaration, but that the note and security was given. The court will not presume the defendant more in default than the plaintiff has alleged. This breach does not answer the covenant; [220]*220indeed it may well stand, and the defendant still have performed everything he was bound to do by the terms of covenant.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Tapp. Rep. 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrews-v-moore-ohctcomplstark-1817.