Farnesly v. Murphy
This text of 1 Add. 22 (Farnesly v. Murphy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Alleghany County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
There are three questions.—1. Has the plaintiff any just demand, against the defendant?
2. Has he brought it forward in a proper shape ?
3. And, if he has, how much ought he to recover ?
1. The merits are clear for the plaintiff. He sold only his claim and possession, not the title ; this the defendant undertook to procure himself from the proprietary. The defendant got from the plaintiff all that was promised him ; all that he then expected ; all for which he was to pay to the plaintiff 42l. and this he ought to have paid.
2. The objection to the form of the action is better founded, and strong. But courts have been daily enlarging the liberality of this action, and leaning more against nonsuiting a plaintiff, with justice on his side. The cases nearest the present, in which this form of action has been held to lie; are Clarke v. Shee, for notes, and Longchamps v. Denny, for a masquerade ticket. And if you presume, that the defendant has sold the land, and received the worth of it, your presumption will be something like that in the case of the masquerade ticket. There is another presumption, which may be made, to support this action, from the defendant’s having received the profits of the plaintiff’s possession and improvement. The best form of action surely has not been chosen; but the objection is unreasonably extended, in saying, that the money must not only have been received by the defendant, but paid by the plaintiff. It is clearly enough if the defendant have received money from the plaintiff’s property, or for the plaintiff’s use, from any body. The objection is not exclusively directed to us, by a motion for a nonsuit; but to you also on a general verdict. We shall not direct a nonsuit.
3. As to the quantity of damages. Some cases, where there is a just or reasonable cause for retaining the money, till there has been a legal investigation, might justify a jury in refusing even interest to a plaintiff. In some cases damages ought to be measured by the loss of the plaintiff; in some, perhaps, by the gain of the defendant, proceeding from the unjust detention. And in some cases, it is proper to give exemplary damages. Indeed these remarks which would have applied to a special assumsit, are less proper in the present form of action, which goes only for the money supposed to have been actually received. But this case is highly fraudulent.
The jury returned with a verdict for the plaintiff for 159l. 12s. 9¼d. damages.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
1 Add. 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farnesly-v-murphy-pactcomplallegh-1792.