Hoyt v. Gelston & Schenck

13 Johns. 141
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1816
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 13 Johns. 141 (Hoyt v. Gelston & Schenck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoyt v. Gelston & Schenck, 13 Johns. 141 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1816).

Opinion

SrENGER, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court. The bill of exceptions, taken- at the trial, presents two points for the consideration of the-'court': • '/

- -Iv Was there sufficient evidence of property in the plaintiff?

. 3. Ought the" evidence, overruled at the trial, to have been admitted either in mitigation of damages, or as a bar to the suit ?

With respect- to the first point, the bill of exceptions states,, that the plaintiff gave in-evidence, that, at the time of the seizure of the ship -American Eagle,-by- ike defendants, she was in the ac-; tual, full, and peaceable possession of the plaintiff ; and that, on. the acquittal of the vessel in 'the district court, it Was decreed that she should be restored to the plaintiff the claimant of the vessel in that court; and the plaintiff théri gave.in evi[151]*151dence the proceedings in the district court, by which the above facts fully appeared. In this stage of the cause, and after the plaintiff had proved the seizure of the ship by the defendants, and her value, a motion was made by the defendants’ counsel, that the plaintiff should be nonsuited, on the ground that there was not sufficient evidence to entitle the plaintiff to a verdict, no right or title having been shown in the plaintiff to the ship. We are of opinion that the motion for a nonsuit was correctly overruled. It is a general and undeniable principle, that possession is a sufficient title to the plaintiff in an action of trespass, vi et armis, against a wrong doer. (1 East’s Rep. 244. 3 Burr. 1563. Willes’s Rep. 221. Esp. Dig. 403. Gould’s edit, part 2. 289.) The finder of an article may maintain trespass against any person but the real owner; and a person having an illegal possession, may support this action against any person other than the true owner. (1 Chitty’s Pl. 168. 2 Saund. 47. d.) If these principles are applied to this case, it will appear, at once, that the evidence of the plaintiff’s right to the ship was very ample. He was not only in the actual, full, and peaceable possession of this ship, but he was the claimant of her in the district court; and she has been awarded to him by a sentence of that court. The defendants make this objection without a pretence of right, on their part, as they stand before the court in the character of tort-feasors.

In the progress of the cause, the plaintiff proved himself to be the owner of the ship; and even if it was admitted that the proof before given was. insufficient, a new trial ought not to be awarded on the ground of want of proof of title in the plaintiff, when that very proof was befoi’e the jury, and is now spread on the record. In no point of view have the defendants entitled themselves to a new trial on this part of the bill of exceptions.

Under the second exception, it has been urged, that the matters set forth in the notice ought to have been admitted in mitigation of damages, and as a bar to the suit. They were overruled in both respects; first, because they formed no bar to the suit; and, secondly, because the plaintiff’s counsel had distinctly stated and admitted, that the defendants had not been influenced by any malicious motives in making the seizure, and that they had not acted therein with any view or design of oppressing or injuring the plaintiff. The presiding judge held that such admission precluded the plaintiff from claiming any damages [152]*152against the defendants by way of punishment or smart money, arid that after such admission the plaintiff could recover only the actual damages sustained, and he gave that direction to the jury*

The defendants have no cause of complaint, that the facts set out in the notice were not admitted' in mitigation of damages; for the admission made by the plaintiff’s counsel, was held tó¡ ■preclude him from recovering any thing-beyond the actual damages sustained. If the matters- contained irt' the notice do not'bar the plaintiff’s recoyery, he was entitled, at all events, to recover his actual damages ; and it is not pretended that he has recovered beyond that amount*

The-question, then,, presents itself, and it is the only grave one in the case, whether the matters contained in the notice, if proved^ would operate as a bar to the plaintiff’s /right; of action.. -This question, in the státe -of the present record; wé should be justified in refusing to hear discussed.' The pleas in bar embrace the same matters insisted on in the notice. These pleas have .been.-demurred to, and have been adjudged to be bad* It is true . there was not an argument Upon them, but it was hot a judgment oy'default. When the cause was called, the defendants5 counsel' appeared, and declined to argüe them, whereupon judgment was given-, for the plaintiff, on the defendants’ counsel declining the argument. This act can be viewed in no other light than as-evincing a consciousness, on the part of the counsel, that the pleas were not to be supported.; and it is a well-settled principle of practice, -that no court will hear the merits of a case discussed after judgment. Virtually, we have -already declared the pleas bad, -and we should be justified in refusing to hear counsel tell us that a. decision in the same cause is incorrect. We ‘were disposed, however, as it had been suggested that this cause wbuld not probably rest here, to hear the points argued; and; oil two grounds, wé are' decidedly of opinion, .that. the facts stated in ‘the notice, ifpíovéd, ought not to preclude the plaintiff’s recoyery. We believe that the sentence of r'esti-' tution, in the district court, is final and conclusive; that sentence not having been appealed'from; and still remaining in full force*

It appears that this ship \vaslibelled, as forfeited, to the United States, on the ground that she was fitted out at New-York, with the intent that She should be employed in the service of a foreign state, to wit, that part of the island of St. Domingo which was-tinder the government of JPetion, to commit hostilities upon the - [153]*153Subjects of another foreign state,"with which the United State's of America were then at peace, to wit, that part of the island óf St. Domingo which was then under the government of Christ'ophe, contrary to the statute in thát case provided. •

The plaintiff appeared before the district court, as fclaimant of the ship, and filed his answer to the libel; and, on full hearing; the libel was dismissed,- and the ship was decreed to be restored to the plaintiff; and a Certificate of reasonable cause for the seizure was denied.

It would seem, at once, to be unjust and improper, in an action brought to recover damages for the seizure of property, after it has been restored by the sentence of a court of competent jurisdiction, for any other court, and, especially, a common-law' court, to rehear the case, and to examine again into the propriety óf the sentence, in a collateral manner.. It would impugn a very salutary maxim, nemo debet bis vexari pro eadem causa ; and it would overturn the well-settled principle, that the judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction, proceeding upon a: tnatter of which it had cognizance, cannot be impeached collaterally, but that it stands firm until vacated or reversed. But Upon authority, without regarding the unreasonableness of the principle contended for, the sentence in this case is conclusive* In Scott v. Shearman and others, (2 Wm. Bl. Rep.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Johns. 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoyt-v-gelston-schenck-nysupct-1816.