Bellows v. Shannon

2 Hill & Den. 86
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1841
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Hill & Den. 86 (Bellows v. Shannon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bellows v. Shannon, 2 Hill & Den. 86 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1841).

Opinion

By the Court,

Bronson, J.

When the plaintiff has the verdict, the defendant may move in arrest of judgment; but not for judgment non obstante veredicto. That is a motion which comes from the plaintiff when the defendant has the verdict. (Schermerhorn v. Schermerhom, 5 Wendell, 513.)

Where there are several pleas in bar, each going to the whole action, if the issue joined upon any one of them is found for the defendant, he is entitled to judgment as a matter of course, and notwithstanding all the other issues may be found for the plaintiff. One good bar to the action is enough. In this case, as the justification goes to all the alleged trespasses except those of which the defendant has been acquitted by the verdict, and as the issue joined upon the justification has been found in his favor, he had no occasion for making a special motion of any kind, but might have perfected judgment as a matter of course.

This brings us to the plaintiff’s motion for judgment non obstante veredicto. That judgment is rendered where the defendant by his pleading confesses, without sufficiently avoiding the action. The distinction between a repleader, and a judgment non obstante veredicto, is' accurately stated by Mr. Tidd. He says, where the plea is good in [89]*89form, though not in fact; or, in other words, if it contain a defective title or ground of defence, by which it appears to the court, upon the defendant’s own shewing, that in any way of putting it he can have no merits, and the issue joined thereupon be found for hitn, there, as the awarding of a repleader could not mend the case, the court, for the sake of the plaintiff, will at once give judgment non obstante veredicto: but where the defect is not so much in the title, as in the manner of stating it, and the issue joined thereon is immaterial, so that the court know not for whom to give judgment, whether for the plaintiff or defendant, there, for their own sake, they will award a repleader. A judgment therefore non obstante veredicto is always upon the merits, and never granted but in a very clear case: a repleader is upon the form and manner of pleading. (2 Tidd’s Prac. 953, Phila. 1828.) This distinction is adopted in 1 Chit. PI. 695, (ed. 1837.) Staple v. Haydon, (1 Salk. 173,) is a leading case on this subject. It is there said, that where the defendant pleads an ill plea, but the matter, if well pleaded, might have amounted to a good bar or justification, judgment can never be given against the defendant as by confession; but where the matter, though never so well pleaded, could signify nothing, judgment may in such case be given as by confession. This case is also reported in 2 Ld. Raym. 924, where Holt, C. J. took this difference: that where the defendant confesses a trespass, and avoids it by such a matter as can never be made good by any sort of plea, there judgment shall be given upon the confession, without regard to such an immaterial issue. But where the matter of the justification is such as, if it were well pleaded, would be a good justification, there though it be ill pleaded, yet that shall not be taken to be a confession of the plaintiff’s action. (6 Mod. 1, S. C.) Numerous cases in support and illustration of this doctrine have been collected and are cited by Mr. Tidd and Mr. Chitty at the pages already mentioned.

Let us now see how much can be gathered from the pleadings, taken in connection with the verdict of the jury. [90]*90The defendant assaulted the plaintiff. That fact is found by the jury on the plea of not guilty. But the plaintiff broke and entered the defendant’s close, and committed the first assault. Those facts are well pleaded by the defendant, and are admitted by the plaintiff’s replication. Thus far the defendant stands justified, on the ground that he was acting in necessary self defence. That excuse is, however, sufficiently answered by the replication, which alleges, in substance, that the plaintiff was ácting as a constable, having a warrant for the defendant’s arrest,. and used no more force than was necessary to execute the process. This brings us to the defendant’s rejoinder and the issue joined upon it, which the plaintiff insists is so utterly defective that he is entitled to judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The jury have found, in the language of the issue, that the plaintiff did not acquaint or give notice to the defendant that a warrant had been issued, or was in the plaintiff’s hands to be executed; and it is alleged in the rejoinder, and, not being denied, is admitted by the surrejoinder, - that the defendant did not know, by any other means, that a warrant had been issued. The case then comes to this: the plaintiff, being an officer and having a warrant, of which, however, the defendant knew nothing, broke and entered the defendant’s close, and committed what, aside from the warrant, was an assault upon the defendant’s person; and he did this without giving any intimation that he came as an officer .to execute legal process. Every reasonable intendment is to be made in favor of the party who has the verdict, and it is not too much to presume that the plaintiff was entirely silent in relation to his object in breaking the close and making the assault. If he had said, “ I have a warrant for you,” or I come to execute legal process,” or had in any other way intimated the nature of his business, the jury would have been warranted in finding the issue in his favor; but they have found against him. We are not at liberty to say that the plaintiff had any good excuse for his silence, for upon this motion presumptions are not to be indulged in his favor. And besides, he has put [91]*91himself upon another ground in pleading. He says, he gave the defendant notice—not that he had an excuse for omitting to do so. He must, then, be regarded as having acted without any reference to his official character, or the process in his hands. Whether he could justify under the warrant in an action for false imprisonment, is a question not now before us.

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Related

Schermerhorn v. Schermerhorn
5 Wend. 513 (New York Supreme Court, 1830)
Arnold v. Steeves & Frost
10 Wend. 514 (New York Supreme Court, 1833)
Willis v. Green
10 Wend. 516 (New York Supreme Court, 1833)
Frost v. Thomas
24 Wend. 418 (New York Supreme Court, 1840)
Commonwealth v. Field
13 Mass. 321 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1816)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Hill & Den. 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bellows-v-shannon-nysupct-1841.