Duyckinck v. Clinton Mutual Insurance

23 N.J.L. 279
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 15, 1852
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 23 N.J.L. 279 (Duyckinck v. Clinton Mutual Insurance) 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
Duyckinck v. Clinton Mutual Insurance, 23 N.J.L. 279 (N.J. 1852).

Opinion

The Chief Justice.

In an action of debt to recover a judgment, the declaration avers that the judgment was recovered in the Supreme Court of New York, to wit, at Newark, in the county of Essex. The defendant demurs specially, and assigns for cause that the declaration does not sufficiently allege where the judgment was recovered.

It is an elementary rule of all pleading in personal actions, that every material traversable fact must be stated with convenient certainty of time and place. 6 Com. Dig. 48, 50, “ Pleader ” c. 19, 20; Archbold’s Civ. Pl. 116; Gould’s Pl. 111, § 102 ; 1 Chit. Pl. (7th ed.) 290, 306-7.

The declaration, we are told by high authority, is but an amplification of the original writ, with the additional circumstances of time and place. 3 BL Com. 293. The object of stating the place in the declaration is two fold, viz: 1. To obtain convenient certainty in pleading. 2. To ascertain the venue, or place where the trial shall be had. Ordinarily the double end is attained by alleging that the cause of action arose at some place within the county where the venue is laid. If the action be local, and the place be truly stated, or if the action be transitory, and there be no need of stating where the cause of action actually arose, the introduction of the vide[280]*280licet is neithei' necessary nor useful. But when, in a transitory action, it becomes necessary or expedient, as matter of description or otherwise, to state where the contract was made, or the cause of action actually arose, and the place thus stated- is out of the county in which the venue is laid, then it is necessary to lay the venue under a videlicet. The videlicet was in fact introduced in the declaration, in stating the place, for the purpose of avoiding a difficulty, which was otherwise supposed to exist under the ancient law, that the jury to try the cause must be summoned from the vicinage or venue laid in the declaration. Stephens on Plead. 310; 1 Sellon’s Pr. 245; Roberts v. Harnage, Salk. 659 ; S. C. 2 Ld. Ray. 1043; 1 Com. Dig. 255, Action N.7; Kearney v. King, 2 Barn. & Ald. 301; Mostyn v. Fabrigas, Cowper 178-9.

If the place stated in this declaration, “ to wit, Newark, in the county of Essex,” was designed as the place where the judgment was rendered, the place alleged is intrinsically impossible and inconsistent with the fact to which it relates, for no judgment of the Supreme Court of New York could be rendered there. And if the place be material, the plaintiff must fail upon the trial, notwithstanding the use of the videlicet. For a variance in the statement of a material fact is not aided by its being laid under a videlicet. The averment is nevertheless regarded as positive, direct, and traversable. 1 Chit. Pl. (7th ed.) 348, 644; 2 Saund. R. 200, a. note 1.

If, on the other hand, the place alleged in the declaration was designed as a mere designation of the venue, (as seems to have been the case, from its being laid under a videlicet,) then no place is stated in the declaration where the judgment was rendered. It is insisted, in support of the demurrer, that this is necessary, and that it is not consistent with good pleading, in counting on a judgment, to omit a statement of the place where the court was held. The practice is certainly so. The numerous precedents in the books invariably contain a statement of the place where the court was held before whom the judgment was recovered ; and the practice prevails, as well in declaring upon the judgments of the superior courts of Westminster hall, as upon the judgments of inferior courts of limited [281]*281jurisdiction. And when the judgment is not in the same court, or within the county where the venue is laid, the practice is to allege that the judgment was rendered by the court of-, holden at Westminster, to wit, at A, in the county of B. 7 Went. Pl. 95, 79 to 119; 2 Chit. Pl. (7th ed.) 482 to 493.

In pleading a record of the superior courts at Westminster, it is not necessary to state the county in which the court is holden. It is sufficient to state it to be at Westminster. Arch. Civ. Pl. 117.

The precedents show clearly that the practice is not founded on the idea that an action upon a judgment is a local action. It prevails as well in declaring upon foreign, as upon domestic judgments, and upon the judgments of the superior courts at Westminster, as upon the judgments of inferior courts of limited jurisdiction. A practice or form of pleading, uniform and long established, if it be but a matter of form, involving no higher principle, should, for the sake of certainty and uniformity, be adopted, and not deviated from without good cause. 1 Chit. Pl. (7th ed.) 266.

But the practice is founded in reason and propriety, which is very apparent in its application to the supreme courts of other states. They have not uniformly one fixed and invariable place of meeting, as the courts at Westminster have. In some of the states, the Supreme Court sits in districts designated by law, with separate places of record and a prothouotary or clerk in each district. The jurisdiction of the court within those districts may, to some extent at least, be limited. This court certainly cannot judicially know that the Supreme Court of any other state has general jurisdiction throughout the stale, and that its place of sitting is fixed by law and determinate. When a court sits in different places for different districts, and where the territorial jurisdiction of the court varies with the place in which its sitting is held, the propriety and necessity (in declaring upon a judgment of such court) of stating definitely the place where the court was held when the judgment was rendered is sufficiently obvious. In that mode only, would the defendant be informed by the declara[282]*282tion of the real cause of action, and enabled to avail himself of ' every legitimate defence.

There must be judgment for the demurrer.

Ogden, J. This cause is before the court on a special demurrer to the first count in the declaration. The action is founded upon a judgment rendered in a sister state.

In the count objected against, it is set out that the plaintiff, on the 11th day of August, 1849, in the Supreme Court of the state of New York, to wit, at Newark, in the county of Essex, in the state of New Jersey, recovered a judgment against the defendants, &c.

Two causes of demurrer are shown : first, that the place where the supposed judgment was recovered is not sufficiently set forth in the count; and second, that, under a videlicet, it is alleged to have been recovered at Newark, in this state, which is incongruous, inconsistent, and impossible.

The count is undoubtedly too general in the description of the alleged judgment. It should show the place where the court was held, and where the records of the court are kept.

If, as was contended on the one side, this court is to assume that there is only one depository for the records of the Supreme Court .of the state of New York, the declaration is defective in not stating that place. Or if, as was contended on the other side, we should take judicial notice of the division of

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Bluebook (online)
23 N.J.L. 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duyckinck-v-clinton-mutual-insurance-nj-1852.