Homer v. Brown

57 U.S. 354, 14 L. Ed. 970, 16 How. 354, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1557
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 17, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 57 U.S. 354 (Homer v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Homer v. Brown, 57 U.S. 354, 14 L. Ed. 970, 16 How. 354, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1557 (1854).

Opinion

*363 Mr. Justice WAYNE

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This cause has been brought to this court from the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Massachusetts, by a writ of error.

The action is a writ of right. The demandant declares that he has been deforced by the tenant, Fitz Henry Homer, of certain premises claimed by him as his right and inheritance, of which he was seised in fee within twenty years before the commencement of his suit, at the May term of the Circuit Court, A. D. 1851. A motion was made at a subsequent term to quash the writ, upon the ground that the remedy by a writ of right had been abolished by the Revised Statutes of Massachusetts, c. 101, § 51. Th6 court denied the motion. Then* the defendant, Fitz Henry Homer, who is tenant of a part of the land demanded, tendered the general issue oh a joinder of the mise, on the mere right of the demandant, as to that cf part of the land of which the defendant is tenant; with pleas of general non-tenure as to a part of the demanded premises, 'and of special non-tenure as to the residue. His tender was allowed,' and 'such pleas were filed; upon which the counsel of the demandant joined issue. ’ Subsequently, the defendant asked leave to amend his-pleas, by striking out the pleas of the general issue and general non-tenure, as the same had been pleaded, which was permitted, and he filed a plea of joinder of the mise on the mere right, with pleas of non-tenure. The demandant joined issue on the first plea, and filed a replication averring that, from any thing alleged, he was not precluded from having his action against the defendant, because, at the time of suing out his writ,' the. tenant -was tenant of the freehold, as has been supposed in the writ, of all the residue of the demanded premises; and he prayed that the same might be inquired of by the country. Issue having been taken u-p'o.n the' replication, the cause was tried. At the trial, the demandant put in evidence the will c ? William Brown, dated the 26th April, 1815, with a codicil dated 30th May,'1816, upon which he rested his title. The tenant produced the' record of a judgment in a writ of entry, brought by the' defendant in error against the plaintiff in error, in the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, embracing the premises here demanded; and which had been submitted to- that court on an agreement of fact's, in which a judgment of -nohsuit was directed by the court; and this agreement of facts and judgment-the tenant offered in evidence as ,a' bar or estoppel to the'demandant, so far as the premises were identical with those claimed in this writ of right, and moved the court so. to instruct the jury. The tenant then put in the deeds-of William Brown, ’ Zebiah C. Tilden, Sally Brown, and Samuel Livermore Browp *364 dated May 5, 1824, who were the only children and sole heirs at. law of William Brown, the testator, maintaining that the grantors were enabled, by virtue of the will and codicil, to pass all the title to the demanded premises which the testator had at the time of his death.

The tenant further moved the court to instruct the jury that the action could not be maintained, because writs of right to recover land in the State of Massachusetts had been abolished by its laws.

Also, to instruct the jury that the demandant took nothing under the will and codicil of William Brown,' and that on the pleadings and facts in the case the demandant could not maintain this action. Another instruction was asked, namely, that the rights and title of the demandant, and those- under whom' he claims to the demanded premises, or any part thereof, have been barred by the Statüte of Limitations of Massachusetts. But the counsel for the tenant, now the plaintiff in error in this court, stated in his argument that his other prayers for instruction were not relied upon. The court refused to give either of the instructions just recited, and instructed the jury that the demandant was entitled to a verdict for that part of the demanded premises as to which the tenant had pleaded the general issue; and as to that part of the demanded premises to which the tenant had put in' pleas of non-tenure, that their verdict should be for the tenant. The counsel for the defendant excepted to the refusals and to the instructions which the court gave, and the jury returned a verdict for the demandant, “ that on the first issue, being the general issue, the jury find that the said George L. Brown hath more mere right to have an undivided moiety of so much of the demanded premises as is thus described (northerly by Clinton street, sixteen feet; easterly by the centre of a brick-wall, dividing the premises from land formerly of D. Packer, deceased, fifteen feet eight inches; southwardly by land, formerly, of Savage, now of Homer, the defendant, twenty-three feet, with the appurtenances to him- and his heirs, as he hath above demanded the same) than the said Homer has to hold the same as he now holds it, as the said Brown by his aforesaid writ hath above supposed’; and that the demandant was seised of the same, as by him in his writ alleged. On the second and third issues, being upon the pleas of general and ' special non-tenure, the jury find that the said Fitz Henry Homer was not at the date of the writ, has not been since, and is not now, seised as of freehold of any part of the land therein described, as the said Brown by his aforesaid writ hath above supposed.” '

We think that the remedy by a writ of right for the recovery *365 of corporeal hereditaments in fee simple, may still be resorted to in the. Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Massachusetts, though the same has been abolished in the courts of that State, and that the court, did not err in instructing the jury accordingly. Such a remedy existed in the courts of Massachusetts until the year 1840, and it became, by the' Judiciary Acts of 1789 and 1792, a remedy in the Circuit Court for that district; any subsequent legislation of the State abolishing it in its courts does not extend to the courts of the United States, because it is a matter of process which is exclusively regulated by the acts of Congress. Wayman v. Southard, 10 Wheat. 1. It is as process alone, however, that it continues in the courts of the United States, subject to the limitation prescribed by the Revised Statutes of Massachusetts, as to the time within which such a remedy may be prosecuted in its courts.

The second instruction asked was also properly refused. A judgment of nonsuit is only given after the appearance of the defendant, when, from any delay or other fault of the plaintiff against .the rulés of law in any subsequent stage of the case, he has- not followed the remedy which he has chosen to assert in's claim as he ought to do. For such delinquency or mistake he may be nonpros’d, and is liable to pay the costs. But as nothing positive can be implied from the plaintiff’s error as to the subject-matter of his suit, he may reassert it by the same remedy in another suit, if it be appropriate to his cause of action, or by any other which is so, if.the first was not. Blackstone, 295; 1 Pick. 371; 2 Mass. 113.

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Bluebook (online)
57 U.S. 354, 14 L. Ed. 970, 16 How. 354, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/homer-v-brown-scotus-1854.