Bangs v. Snow

1 Mass. 181
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1804
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Mass. 181 (Bangs v. Snow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bangs v. Snow, 1 Mass. 181 (Mass. 1804).

Opinion

Thacher, J.,

thought it was the right of the counsel for the defendants ; the plaintiff had nothing to open ; the act of taking is ac knowledged, and the defendants, in effect, justify.

Sedgwick, J.,

said he was of the same opinion; the present mode of proceeding is, by the statute, a substitute for special pleading; the defendants take the affirmative, and acknowledge every thing which the plaintiff has to prove.

Strong, J.,

said he was of a different opinion, and that, according to his present recollection, the practice had uniformly been different.

The counsel for the defendants first offered in evidence a warrant, dated 28th Feb. 1803, for calling a meeting of the north parish in the town of Harwich, which parish is now lying in the toions of Harwich and Brewster, directed to David Foster, collector, and signed by the assessors, (the defendants,) to be holden on the 8th day of March, then next.

This was objected to, because it purported to be a warrant for calling a meeting of a different corporation from the corporation mentioned in the brief statement of facts to be given in evidence.

[140]*140[ * 184 ] *By the act passed Feb. 19,1803, (stat. 1802, c. 76,) dividing the town of Harwich into two towns, and erecting the northerly part thereof into a town by the name of Brewster, it is clear that the~e are and had been two parishes in Harwich, one of which was called the north parish, as in the warrant: it is true the warrant goes further, and describes it as now lying in the towns of Harwich and Brewster, which is perhaps strictly true; because a small part of what was originally the nbrth parish is situated within the now town of Harwich. The brief statement describes the parish as being in the town of Brewster, which is substantially true, as nearly the whole of it is in fact within the town of Brewster: the object of the brief statement was to give notice of the substance of the defence ; this it had certainly done, as it was impossible that the plaintiff should be misled by it; nor did his counsel at the Court of Common Pleas, where the cause was tried, make the objection which is now made, or contend that all the notice which the law supposes or requires had not been given.

The Attorney-General, (Sullivan,) in reply,

said that he thought the statute which authorized the giving in evidence special matter, under the general issue, ought to- be construed liberally ; but that to extend it to a case like the one now before the Court, would tend to deceive and intrap the plaintiff. It would, in effect, permit defendants to give notice that they should justify as assessors of A, and to give evidence of acts done by them as assessors of B, which the Court, he trusted, never would sanction by their decision in the present case.

was for admitting the warrant in evidence, because he thought that, from what appeared in the present case, it was evident the parish was known by the different names mentioned in the warrant and in the brief statement, and might [ * 185 ] * fairly be intended to be the same, and that the plaintiff knew the fact to be so. The statute for giving notice of the defence intended under the general issue, requires nothing more than the substance of the defence, and that stated intelligibly, as is evident from the words “ filing a brief statement of the special matter of defence.”

said he was for construing the statute in the most liberal manner, because the intention of the legislature was to relieve from the trouble and danger of special pleading; but to extend it to a case like the present, would be perverting it to purposes which might be more mischievous than those things were which it was intended to remedy. In this case, the notice of particulars to be [141]*141given in evidence, and the evidence offered, are inconsistent. The notice is, that the defendants were acting as assessors of the Congregational parish m the town of Brewster. The evidence offered is of the north parish in the town of Harwich, which parish is now lying within the towns of Harwich and Brewster. Whichever part is taken of the description given in the warrant, it is different from, and inconsistent with, the description given in the brief statement. If the latitude contended for is admitted, how can the plaintiff come prepared to meet the evidence ?

said he thought the Court ought to give their opinion on genera] principles, upon principles which would bear to be applied to all similar cases, and not whether in this particular case the plaintiff had had actual notice. He then stated the case very briefly, and said that he did not consider such a variance as would be fatal in pleadings, would be fatal in this case; but here one is called a parish in one town, the other a parish in another town, or in two towns, as is obvious upon inspection. How are the Court to intend that things so differently described are not, in fact, different, but *one and the same ? The Court, or the plaintiff, [ * 186 ] might as well intend that John is James.

The defendants had leave to amend the brief statement on the common rule.

The warrant was then objected to on two grounds—First, that it had not been proved that the persons under whose authority it purported to have been issued, were assessors; and secondly, that it did not appear, by the return of the collector, endorsed on the warrant, that the qualified voters had been notified seven days previous to the time set in the warrant for holding the meeting, as the statute relative to the subject requires.

The return of the collector was as follows, viz., “ Brewster, March 8, 1803.—Pursuant to the within warrant, I have notified the inhabitants of the north parish, late of Harwich, qualified as therein expressed, to meet at the time and place, and for the purposes within mentioned. D. F., Collector.”

■ The Court said that, taking the return of the collector strictly, it did not appear that the inhabitants had been notified until the very day on which the meeting was holden; but, as it was usual for constables and collectors to return their warrants in this way, dating the return on the day of holding the meeting, they would admit the warrant in evidence, for the purpose of showing who was the ■parish clerk.

The parish clerk, being admitted and sworn, produced a book, which, he testified, contained the records of the north parish in Harwich, and by which it appeared that the defendants were chosen [142]*142assessors at the meeting holden March 8, 1803, and that there was then granted the sum, of $1200 for past charges of the parish, to be assessed on the inhabitants. The other particulars contained in the brief statement were then proved ; and here the counsel for the defendants rested their justification. [ * 187 ] * E. Bangs for the plaintiff. By the act passed Feb. 19, 1803, to divide the town of Harwich, and to incorporate the northerly part thereof into a separate town, by the name of Brewster, the town of Brewster

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Bluebook (online)
1 Mass. 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bangs-v-snow-mass-1804.