Carter v. Wallace

2 Tex. 206
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 2 Tex. 206 (Carter v. Wallace) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter v. Wallace, 2 Tex. 206 (Tex. 1847).

Opinion

Mr. Justice WheeleR

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant in error filed his petition in the district court,. alleging that the plaintiffs in error, and defendants in that court, “did with force and arms enter your petitioner’s close, lying and situated in the county aforesaid, and pulled down and removed from thence your petitioner’s fence and converted the same to their own use;” by which he avers his “farming operations were retarded,” etc., and concludes by laying his damages at one thousand dollars.

The answer is a general denial.

The only questions which we think properly presented by the record for our consideration arise upon the refusal of the court to give a charge asked by the defendants, as follows:

“That if they, the jury, shall find that the fence was erected on the land belonging to Harrison’s estate, which afterwards became the property of the defendants or either of them, without authority, and that the fence was standing on the land when [208]*208■it became the property of the defendants or either of them, they will find for defendants.

■ Or, if they shall find that defendants did not enter plaintiff’s ¡■close and take away the rails or fence, they shall find for the defendants, etc.

The first branch of this charge embraces matters so entirely •foreign to the pleadings as scarcely to require a particular notice.

In actions qyua/re clausum fregit, the general issue, even by the English rules of pleading, does not operate as a denial of the plaintiff’s possession or right of possession in the locus in ■quo; which, if intended to be denied, must be traversed specially. And in actions of trespass d& ionis asportatis, the •general issue operates only as a denial of the defendant’s having committed the trespass alleged by taking or damaging the goods mentioned, but not of the plaintiff’s property 'therein. 3 Tom. L. Die. (565. This may formerly have been otherwise (8 Term, 403), but even at the common law, where the act complained of would, prima facie, appear to be a trespass, any matter of justification or excuse, or done by virtue of a warrant or authority, must in general be specially pleaded. 1 Saund. 298, note 1; 4 Pick. 127, 145. These, it has been said, are positive rules of law, in order to prevent surprise on the plaintiff at the trial by the defendant then assigning various reasons and causes of which the plaintiff had no notice, and which, consequently, he could not be prepared to meet at the trial on the plea of not guilty on fair and equal terms with respect to the evidence and proof of facts. 1 O. P. 539.

But whatever may have been the necessity at common law, with the broad defenses under its general issues, of specially pleading the matters sought to be set up by asking the charge in question, there can be no doubt they must have been specially averred here, where each party is required to state the facts relied on as constituting his cause of action or'gróuni of defense, and for the reasons assigned in the authority just quoted.

If the defendants intended to justify under a paramount title in themselves,.they should'have alleged it. But the an[209]*209swer contains no averment of title in the defendants and no-matter whatever in justification or avoidance.

The remaining proposition embraced in the charge seems to require a more particular notice. To determine whether it ought to have been given, it is material to ascertain with some precision what was the real subject of controversy as disclosed by the pleadings.

The petition is very carelessly and defectively framed. The action seems, in form, trespass quare clausum fregit; in substance, trespass de honis asportatis, or trover. It is not an attempt to join these several forms of action by different counts, as at common law; but the elements of all are combined and grouped together in the plaintiff’s attempted statement of his cause of action. Had he discarded form altogether, his statement of his case would perhaps have been more intelligible.

At common law the joinder of actions often depends on the form and not the right of action. Thus, trespass cannot be joined with trover, not because the rights asserted in these actions are inconsistent, but because, as it is said, the joinder depends on tho form of action and the judgments are different; that in trespass being in strictness quod capiatur, and that in trover quod sit in misericordia, 1 Term, 277; 16 J. R. 116; and the objection could be taken advantage of by writ of error.

Here no such distinctions exist; and no reason is perceived why distinct injuries, occasioned by a trespass upon lands, and a tortious conversion of personal property may not be joined in the same action, since the forms of action of the common law are not recognized in our courts, but every right of action may be asserted upon its own particular facts and circumstances, without regard to form. All our actions are in the strictest sense, though not in a technical sense, special actions on the case, being what the actions framed under the statute of Westminster 2d have been described, actions “ whereby the suitor has ready relief, according to the exigency of his business, and adapted to the specialty, reason and equity of his very case.'” 3 Com. 51. It may be truly said here, with a [210]*210slight variation of the language of Lord Hardwieke, 1 East,. 226, that wherever the common or our statute law recognizes- or creates a legal right, for a violation of that right the injured party may bring a special action on his own case, by a petition framed according to the peculiar circumstances of his own particular grievance. In our petition the technical distinctions and artificial boundaries of the common law actions constitute no element and have no place; but its only requisites are, that it shall disclose a right, an injury, and a remedyr the facts which constitute the plaintiff’s right, the injury committed by the defendants, and a specification of the relief sought. It is subjected to no such test as, Does it pursue the form of trespass, or trover, or any one of the common law actions? but the inquiry is, Does it disclose any valid, subsisting cause of action?

Subjected to this test, the petition before us is believed to be-substantially good on error. It contains no averment of the value of the property alleged to have been converted by the-defendants; but this omission is cured by verdict. The injuries complained of are that the defendants forcilVy entered the plaintiff’s close, and that they pulled down and removed from thence his fence, and converted it to their own use.

Eor each of these injuries separately an action will lie: for the first, though no special damage be proved, because every unwarrantable entry or breach of a man’s close is supposed necessarily to carry along with it some injury or other, 3 Com. 210; 19 J. R. 385; and for the second, for the actual injury occasioned apart from the actual trespass; for trover may be supported even for fixtures, if having been severed they be taken away; and by the party who has the absolute ownership of personal property, either trespass or trover may be maintained, though he never had the actual possession. 3 Tom. L. D. 682, 659; 7 Term, 13; 1 Wend. 466; 10 id.

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2 Tex. 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-wallace-tex-1847.