Cooke v. Thornton

27 Va. 7
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedAugust 21, 1827
StatusPublished

This text of 27 Va. 7 (Cooke v. Thornton) 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
Cooke v. Thornton, 27 Va. 7 (Va. 1827).

Opinion

Judge Caee.

Cooler leased to Thomtoti a tenement in Fredericksburg for seven years. lie afterwards dispossessed him of the tenement, before the expiration of the term; there being about three years of the lease to run when this suit was brought. This is an action of trespass quare clausum fregit, brought by the tenant for this wrong. The declaration shews that there had been no re-entry; but, that the possession gained by the ouster, continued in the landlord.

■Several points were rnr.de in the Court below, but one only was relied on in the argument hero, or seems worthy of notice. It is that growing out of the first Bill of Exceptions. The Counsel for the Defendant moved the Court to instruct the Jury, “(hat admitting the dispossession to be wrongful, they ought not to take into consideration, in their estimate of damages, the injury resulting from the Plaintiil’s being kept out of possession, from the date of the writ to the expiration,” (of the term) “but only from the time of the dispossession, until the suit was brought;” which instruction the. Court refused to give.

In this refusal, I think there was clear error. To maintain this action, there must have been an actual possession when the trespass complained of was committed. Before entry and actual [9]*9- possession, a person having the freehold in Law, cannot have trespass. Thug, it will not lie before entry for a convsee ol' a line, or a purchaser by lease and release, or añ heir or devisee against an abator. A disseisee may have it against the desscisor for the disseisin itself, because he was then in possession; but not for an injury after the disseisin, until he hath gained possession 'by re entry; and then he may support this action for the intermediate damage; for, after the entry, the law, by a kind o£ jus postliminii, (as El.ickstono expresses it,) supposes the freehold to have all along continued in him. I might quote many passages from the Books, in support of this.

Co. Litt. 257, a. “The disseisee shall have an action of trespass against' the disseisor, and recover his damages for the first entry, without any regress; but after regress, he may have an action of trespass with a continuando, and recover, as well for all the mesne occupation, as for the first entry.”

Monockton v. Pashley, &c. 2 Ld. Raym. 977. Per Lord Holt. “As to the case of an entry with ouster, it may he set forth specially in the count, or not, with a continuando, or diver-sis diebus et viscibus, between such a day and such a day; but, then you must prove, that the Plaintiff re-entered before the action brought, or else you cannot assign the ?nesne trespass; for, by the ouster, the Defendant has got possession, and he cannot he a trespasser to the Plaintiff; hut when the Plaintiff re-enters, the possession is in him ah initio, and he shall have the mesne profits.”

I have seen the rule no where more clearly laid down, than in the ease of Case v. Shepherd, 2 Johns. Cas. 27. Per Curiam. "In this case, the trespass is laid with a continuando, hut the distinction, n- to the amount of damages, is this. After an ouster, you r;>u only roeevei for the simple trespass, or first entry: for, where there is an uustu', every subsequent act is a continuance of the trespass. \ei, in order to entitle the Plaintiff to recover for the subsequent acts, there must be a re-entry. But, after a reentry, he may lay his action with a continuando, and recover mesne profits, as i\ell as damages for the oifser.”

In the case before us, there was an ouster, and no re-entry. The Plaintiff, therefore, could recover for the simple trespass, or first entry only. He could not lay his action with a continuando. The Defendant, therefore, might have asked for much broader instructions than lie did. He only asked that the Jury might he instructed not to give damages from the time of dispossession till the expiration of the lease, but to the date of the Writ; and by refusing this instruction, the Court virtually told the Jury, that they might " [10]*10give damages for the whole term unexpired at the date of the ouster-This was unquestionably wrong.

I think the Judgment should be reversed, and the cause sent •back for a new trial; upon which, such instructions as result frorq. the principles now kid down, should be given, if asked for.

Judge Giirnx.

This is an action of trespass quare clausum fregit. There are lire founts, all of which, except the second, lay the trespass with a continuando until the suing out of the Writ; and some ci them, i .ven until the filing of the Declaration; and in all, the continuando i•; laid with the allegation that the Defendant had kept the Plaintiff out of possession, during the whole time mentioned in the continuando.

To'this Declaration, there was a general demurrer, and a plea of not guilty; on which issues were "joined. No Judgment was pronounced on the demurrer, unless the final Judgment for the Plain-riff may be. considered, as I think it may, as involving a. Judgment Upon the demurrer.

The Jury found a general verdict for the Plaintiff. The Defondant took two exceptions to opinions of the Court, given on the trial; the first of which only is insisted on.

The proper course of practice, in the case of a demurrer and issue in fact, is, to try the demurrer first, as has been repeatedly said in t.his Court. For, if the demurrer to the whole Declaration was sustained, there would be no necessity for trying the issue in fact, and the expense of the trial would he .saved; for, in that ease, after a verdict for the Plaintiff, the Defendant would still bo entitled to a .Judgment upon the demurrer. If the demurrer ought to be overruled, there would be no error which would justify a reversal of the -Judgment, although the demurrer were decided after the finding of the issue.

In this case, the second count, which does not lay the trespass with a continuando, is unquestionably good. All the rest are, I think, bad. In deciding upon a general demurrer to such a Declaration, I should have thought that the Judgment should be, to sustain the demurrer as to the bad counts, and that the Plaintiff take nothing by them; and to overrule it as to the good count, so as to put the bad counts finally out of the cause in respect to them; as in -1 Saund. 386, n. q., it is said, that in such ease, the Plaintiff shall have Judgment,/!)?’ so much as is good, and of course, not upon the ■whole Declaration. It was, however held, in The. Dulce of Bed-[11]*11ford v. Aicocke, 1. Wils. 248, that the .dcfmirrer in such case should ho overruled in toto; by which the Defendant could suffer no injury ; for, if the Plaintiff took a verdict on the whole Declaration, and any count was bad, he could not have any Judgment, but might avoid that consequence by taking á verdict on the good count's only.

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Related

Case v. Shepherd
2 Johns. Cas. 27 (New York Supreme Court, 1800)

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Bluebook (online)
27 Va. 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooke-v-thornton-va-1827.