Davis v. Fitchett

5 Fla. 261
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 1, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 5 Fla. 261 (Davis v. Fitchett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Fitchett, 5 Fla. 261 (Fla. 1853).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.:

The appellant, who is, as it appears, a free man of color, was sued by the respondents in a Justice’s Court in a plea of debt, upon a promissory note for the sum of fifty dollars, upon which judgment was rendered by the Justice against him for the said sum of fifty dollars, with interest and costs. Prom this judgment he appealed to the Circuit Court of the Southern Circuit, sitting in Hillsborough County, when U}3on a new trial, judgment was rendered against the appellant for the sum of sixty-six dollars, and. from this last judgment the record has been removed to this Court by appeal, upon several points of law reserved upon bill of exceptions.

The first error assigned is upon the ruling of the Circuit Court, that the appellant, who was defendant in the Justice’s Court, could be sued without joining his guardian, and making the latter a party to the suit. The necessity for making the guardian a party to every suit brought by and against a free person of color, is supposed to arise from the provisions of the Act of January 8,1848, entitled “ An Act to authorize Judges of Probate of the several Counties in this State to appoint guardians for free negroes.” The first section of the statute provides, that free persons of color shall be required to have guardians, to be selected by themselves, or if under ten years of age, by their parents, with the approval of the Judges of Probate, and it is made the duty of the Judge, if the guardian is approved of, to issue a certificate of appointment. The second section provides, that such guardians “ shall have power to sue for and recover all such sums of money as are or may hereafter be owing to such free negro, or free mulatto, and shall have the same control over them as is possessed by guardians in other cases.”

[263]*263The last section is the one which is relied upon, to support the position assumed^ that a free person of color cannot be sued otherwise than through, or by bis guardian, The statute, it will he observed, provides only for cases in which such free person of color is the plaintiff or creditor ■ it is silent as to those cases in which he is the debtor and defendant; and it will also he observed that the enactment is couched in affirmative terms only. Hence it will follow4 that if before the Act, such persons were not under any disability to sue for the recovery of their rights, they may do so still, upon the principle that an affirmative statute does not take away the Common Law — the only effect will he, to give to the guardian appointed under the law, the right to sue equally with the ward. But as before remarked, the Act-speaks of creditors and plaintiffs only, and if the correlative parties of debtor and defendant are included within the Act, it must ho by force of the general terms— 44 and shall have the same control over such free tnegroes and free mnlattoes as is possessed by guardians in other cases.” This, it is supposed, places the free person of col- or under all the disabilities, in relation to his position as a party in Court, which an infant labors under; hut it is very clear, that the terms quoted do not extend beyond the authority which such guardians may exercise over the persons of those committed to their wardship. If, however, the provision should he deemed ample enough to put the free persons of color with regard to their property and rights of property under the same disabilities as if they were infants, yet a reference to the law in relation to infants, as parties in a Court of justice, will show that the ■position is not well taken. When it is said that at Common Law, infants could neither sue nor defend, except by guardian, it is not intended to he the guardian of the infant’s person and estate, hut either one admitted by the [264]*264Court for the partic ular suit on the infant’s personal appearance, or one appointed for suits on general by the King’s letters patent. Fitz. Nat. Brev., 27, H.

But this rule being found inconvenient, it sometimes happening that an infant was secreted by those who had the legal custody of his person, and so prevented from applying to have a guardian ad litem appointed, it was remedied by the Stat. Westm., 1, (3d Ed., I,) c. 49, and Westm. 2, (13 Ed. I,) c. 15, which authorized suits by the infant bj prochein ami. Co. Lit., 135, b. n. 1.

If an infant is sued, he is not sued by his guardian, nor is there any principle of law which requires he should be sued in this manner ; but the suit is brought against him as if he were of full age, and being brought personally info Court, a guardian ad litem is assigned him to enable him to make his defence ; and in this way only, by reason of the incapacity and disability resulting from his non-age, can he defend any action or suit at law or in equity. If the infant, when sued, does not apply to the Court for the appointment of a guardian ad litem, the plaintiff’s attorney should apply to him to appear and move for that purpose, and in case of refusal so to do, the plaintiff’s attorney may, six days afterwards, make application to the Court. Schief. Prac., 168, citing 2 Wils. R., 50.

So it would appear that if free persons of color were placed on the same footing as infants, the action was, in its origin, rightly brought against the appellant. We do not, however, consider that free persons of color rest under the same incapacities and disabilities with regard to the defence of suits, which infants do, but they may appear and defend by attorney as other persons of full age, and this assignment of error is therefore overruled.

2. In the Circuit Court, the appellant sought to interpose a plea denying the execution of the note* sued upon, [265]*265but wbicb plea the Court would not admit to be filed on the ground that the plea could not be admissible, unless it appeared from, the record of the justice, that such plea had been regularly filed in the Court below ; and this refusal of the Court forms the second and third errors assigned here.

If the trial in a Circuit Court of an appeal from the decision or judgment of a Justice of the Peace were upon the record, in the same manner as appeals from the Circuit Court to this Court, the ruling of the Judge below would without doubt, have been correct; but as by the Act of Feby. 12, 1832, (Thomp. Pig., 364,) the case is to be tried anew upon its merits, we are at a loss to perceive the force of the reason stated for rejecting the plea when offered in the Circuit Court.

By the Act regulating the practice and proceedings of the Circuit Court, (Thomp. Pig., 330,) dilatory pleas and pleas denying the execution of any bond, note, or other writing sued upon, are not to be received unless pleaded on oath, and filed before the cause is called upon the appearance docket; but by the Act regulating proceedings before Justices of the Peace, although such plea is required to be sworn to, yet there is no time limited within which it is to be filed. (Thomp. Pig., 471.) It may therefore be put in at any time before trial in the Justice’s Court; and as the appeal from his judgment altogether suspended its force and effect as a judgment, and the party was entitled to a trial of the case anew, as if it had never been tried before, we can see no valid objection to an amendment of the pleadings by either party, or to the interposition of new defences. If the new trial had been in the Justice’s Court, it is very clear the right to amend the claim or defence existed, and we cannot conceive that the removal to a Superior Court would operate any change of [266]

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Bluebook (online)
5 Fla. 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-fitchett-fla-1853.