Dickerson v. Wadsworth

33 N.J.L. 357
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 15, 1869
StatusPublished

This text of 33 N.J.L. 357 (Dickerson v. Wadsworth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dickerson v. Wadsworth, 33 N.J.L. 357 (N.J. 1869).

Opinion

Depue, J.

The plaintiff, Dickerson, sued the defendants

in the Circuit Court of the county of Morris, in an action of trespass, guare clausum fregit. The defendants having failed to file a plea, judgment was taken by default, and a writ of inquiry was issued for the assessment of damages. The damages were assessed at less than the sum of $100. Upon the return of the writ of inquiry, the plaintiff moved for judgment thereon, with costs of suit to be taxed, against the defendants. He based his application for costs on the ground that the trespasses complained of, and for which damages had been assessed, were committed upon uninclosed woodlands of the plaintiff, to which he had title in fee, but of which he had not actual possession.

The questions certified by the Circuit Court are, first, whether, under the facts stated, the plaintiff is entitled to costs; and if so, then, secondly, how may the facts be proved or made manifest to the court.

As the case stands upon the record, the plaintiff is not entitled to costs, the action being one within the cognizance of the courts for the trial of small causes, and the damages recovered being less than the sum of $100.

The plaintiff’s counsel proposed to the court below, to show that the action could not have been prosecuted before a justice, because of his inability to prove an actual possession of the locus in quo, and that, in order successfully to [359]*359maintain the action, he was compelled to resort to proof of title.

The position of the defendant’s counsel is, that the plaintiff’s difficulty was not that a justice’s court had not jurisdiction of his ease, but that lie could not prove it.

There is a considerable class of cases in which injuries to lands are redressable by action of trespass, where there is no possession in fact in the owner, and the possession which is the basis of his right to sue, is constructive, being such as by implication of law is annexed to his title. As to this class of cases, if the position of the defendants’ counsel is correct, this result will follow: that the owner of unoccupied uninclosed lands, if he sues in a justice’s court to recover damages for a. petty trespass on his lands, will be met there with the practical difficulty that he cannot prove possession, and will be non-suited; and if he sues in a higher court, he will be excluded from costs, if the trespasser sees fit to suffer judgment by default; for if the suit is in the Supreme Court, the judge has no power to certify that the title came in question to give costs, except upon the trial of the cause, (Nix. Dig. 324, § 14;

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Bluebook (online)
33 N.J.L. 357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dickerson-v-wadsworth-nj-1869.