Carter v. Grant's adm'x

73 Va. 769, 32 Gratt. 769
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 5, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 73 Va. 769 (Carter v. Grant's adm'x) 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
Carter v. Grant's adm'x, 73 Va. 769, 32 Gratt. 769 (Va. 1880).

Opinion

Burks, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of error to a judgment of the hustings court of the city of Richmond, awarding execution against the plaintiff in error on a forfeited forthcoming bond taken on a warrant of distress for rent.

After the plaintiff had proved notice of her motion, and had shown in evidence the forthcoming bond, the distréss warrant, the officer’s return thereon, and the affidavit on which the warrant was issued, the defendants, resisting the motion, stated, through their counsel, that their defence was that there was no such contract of rent as is set out in said affidavit and claim, and demanded that the plaintiff should prove the contract as alleged; but the court refused to require the plaintiff to make any further proof than that contained in the said papers, until the defendants showed by evidence such defence as is allowed by the statute; the court being of opinion that, upon this state of the case, the plaintiff was entitled to award of execution; to which opinion and decision of the court the defendants, by their counsel, excepted.”

The defendants, however, did not rest on this exception, but proceeded to give evidence to sustain the defence before stated; the plaintiff adducing no evidence in addition to that already mentioned as offered by her in opening the case.

[771]*771After hearing the evidence and arguments of counsel, the court gave-judgment against the defendants for the penalty of the forthcoming bond, to be discharged by the payment of five hundred dollars, (the amount of rent ascertained to be due), with interest thereon, and for the plaintiff’s costs on the motion. To' this judgment the defendants, by counsel, also excepted; and the court certified the facts proved on the hearing.

There are but two questions arising on the record.

The first is, whether, on the plaintiff’s evidence, without any proof by the defendants, she was entitled to award of execution. Or, in other words, whether, after the defendants stated the grounds of their defence and demanded proof of the contract under which the plaintiff claimed the rent specified, the plaintiff was entitled to award of execution, such proof not being furnished. Subtantially, the question is, in the state of the case as presented, upon whom was the burden of proof? Was it upon the defendants to show that there was no contract of lease, or none on which rent claimed accrued, or was it for the plaintiff to prove a contract and rent reserved under it?

Certainly, if the rent claimed was not due by contract, there was no right of distress. It was of the essence of the right to distrain, that there should have been a contract. In the absence of a contract, the distress was illegal.

When the action of replevin was in use, the landlord in his avowry set forth his title, the contract of demise and tenancy thereunder, which, of course, included a statement of the term and amount of rent to be paid, and he also alleged the amount of rent in arrear, and then avowed the taking of the goods and chattels of the tenant as for a distress for the rent so in arrear.

If the tenant wished to put the contract in issue, he did so by proper plea, which was either non demisit or non tenuit. These pleas concluded to the country, and upon [772]*772issue ioined thereon, the burden was on the avowant, and o * > he was held to the strictest proof of the contract as laid the avowry. If there was no rent due at the time of tpg distress, there was an appropriate plea for such a case, styled in law French, riens in arrere (nothing in arrear).

Such a plea admitted the demise and tenancy, and averred the single proposition that the rent was not in arrear when the distress was made. Alexander v. Harris, 4 Cranch, 299. On the trial of this issue, it was for the tenant to show the truth of the plea. Cooper v. Egginton, 8 C. & P. 748, (34 E. C. L. R. 618). There were other pleas not necessary to be noticed, in which the onus was on the plaintiff or defendant, as one or the other might have the affirmative of the issue.

When the action of replevin was abolished at the revisal of 1849 (Code of 1873, ch. 145, §4), the new remedy for illegal distress, resorted to in the present case, was substituted. The tenant was allowed to give a forthcoming bond,

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Related

Mason v. Moyers
2 Va. 606 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1844)

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Bluebook (online)
73 Va. 769, 32 Gratt. 769, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-grants-admx-va-1880.