Jenkins v. Parkhill

25 Ind. 473
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 25 Ind. 473 (Jenkins v. Parkhill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jenkins v. Parkhill, 25 Ind. 473 (Ind. 1865).

Opinion

Gregory, J.

Parkhill sued Jenkins and Curtis on two undertakings alleged to bave been executed by tbem, to obtain two temporary restraining orders in suits by Jenkins against Parkhill for tlie recovery of the possession of 360 acres of land, on which there is a steam saw mill and much timber. The suits were brought in the Jennings Circuit Court. The restraining orders were granted by the Common Pleas judge, restraining Parkhill from running the mill and cutting timber. It is averred that the suits were finally determined in favor of the appellee, and that the papers, restraining orders and undertakings sued on are lost. There are four paragraphs of the complaint. The first and second are on the undertaking in the first suit, and the third and fourth on the undertaking in the' last. Answer, general denial, with an agreement that all matters of defense might be given in evidence. The defendants denied the execution of the last named undertaking under oath. Trial by jury; [475]*475verdict as follows: “We the jury find for the plaintiff upon the first and second paragraphs of the complaint as against both of the defendants, and .assess- his damages upon these paragraphs at $460, and we find for the plaintiff upon the third and fourth paragraphs of the complaint, as against Alfred Jenkins, one of the defendants, and assess his damages on these paragraphs of the complaint at the sum of $100.” Motion for a venire de novo overruled. Motion for a new trial overruled, and judgment on the verdict.

It is claimed that the verdict is defective in not finding for or against Curtis on the issue joined on the third and fourth paragraphs of the complaint. If a jury finds but part of the matter put in issue, and says nothing as to the rest, the verdict is ill, and a venire facias de novo shall issue if no judgment is given, but if judgment is given upon such verdict it shall be reversed. Rex v. Hayes, 2 Lord Raymond 1518; Cattle v. Andrews, 3 Salk. 372; Middleton v. Quigley, 7 Halst. 352. A motion for a venire de novo is the proper method to reach such a defect. Basseker v. Cramer, 18 Ind. 44. It is true that it has been held in some criminal cases that a verdict finding a defendant guilty on one of several counts of an indictment, and saying nothing of the other counts, is, as to such other counts, equivalent to an express finding of not guilty, evidently upon the hypothesis that jeopardy had attached, and the defendant could not be twice subjected thereto. But clearly, in a civil suit, there must be a finding and judgment to protect the defendant from another action. That the matter was in issue is not sufficient.

It is claimed that the motion for a venire de novo was a waiver of the motion for a new trial. We do not think so. It is not a motion in arrest. Mr. Stephen, in his work on pleading, says: “A venire facias de novo, that is, a new writ of venire facias, will be awarded when, by reason of some irregularity or defect in the proceedings on the first venire, or the trial, the proper effect of that writ has been frustrated, or the verdict has become void in law; as for [476]*476example where the jury has been improperly chosen, or has given an uncertain, ambiguous or defective verdict. The consequence and object of a new venire ai’e of course to obtain a new trial, and accordingly this proceeding is, in substance, the same with a motion for a new trial.” Stephen on Pleading, 8d Am. Ed., p. 100. Technically, a motion for a venire de novo is neither a motion for a new trial nor in arrest of judgment. 2 Tidd’s Practice, 2 Am. Ed., 854; 2 Graham & Waterman on New Trials, 36 — 38. Under our practice there is no reason why a motion for a venire de novo should be a waiver of a motion for a new trial. In their logical sequence the former comes before the latter.

It is made the duty of the clerks of the several courts of record in this State,_to “ enter -in the proper record books all orders, judgments and decrees of such courts, and in final record books, within one month after the same are finally determined, a complete record of all causes where the title to land is involved.” 2 G. & II., § 3, p. 13. It will be presumed, after the lapse of the time mentioned, that such complete record has been made. A duly authenticated transcript.’of such record, in the absence of the original, is the highest evidence of the contents thereof, and secondary evidence will not be admitted without proof of the destruction or non-existence of such record. The court below erred in allowing secondary evidence as to the time of the commencement of the land suits, and in admitting parol testimony of the contents of the undertakings.

After the plaintiff had proved by the present clerk of the Jennings Circuit Court that the papers in the first land suit were not in his office, the defendants offered to prove by B. F. Lewis that he had, at the request and instigation of the appellee, taken the papers from the Jennings to the Switzerland Circuit Court, but the court refused to admit the evidence. This was error. The proof offered tended to show that the papers were not lost; that they were in the power of the appellee, and were where he had placed them by his own act.

[477]*477We think it was for the plaintiff to show that the restraining orders made by the Common Pleas judge, in vacation' of the Circuit Court, related to some matter pending in the latter court. 2 6. & II., § 21, p. 25. The defendants were not estopped from showing a want of jurisdiction in the judge granting the orders'over the subject matter of the suits. If the orders were void, they were no restraint on the plaintiff', and the undertakings were of no validity against the makers. The record) or a duly authenticated copy thereof, is the best evidence of the time of the commencement of the land suits, and is the only legal evidence of such fact, in the absence of proof of the destruction or non-existence of such record.

It is claimed that the execution of the undertaking mentioned in the first and second paragraphs of the complaint, not being denied under oath, is admitted as alleged. On the other hand, it is urged that an affidavit is not necessary, under the code, to put in issue the execution of a lost instrument; that as there can be no inspection given, the necessary means are not afforded to enable the adverse party to make the oath.

In the case of Hill et al. v. Jones, 14 Ind. 389, Davidson, J., in delivering the opinion of this court, after setting out section 80 of the code, (2 G. & H., p. 105,) says: “We are referred to this statutory rule, but it is at least doubtful whether the rule applies at all to the case at bar. It seems right that a party should have inspection of the written instrument before he swears to the pleading which denies its execution, but such inspection cannot be had in cases where the suit is founded upon a lost note.” The point, however, was left undecided.

In the case of Cleveland v. Roberts, 14 Ind. 511, this court held that a complaint on a promissory note averring the loss of the note, with an affidavit of its loss and contents, is sufficient without a copy of the note. If the loss is an excuse for not complying with section 78 of the code, we see no good reason why it is not also an excuse for not com[478]

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Bluebook (online)
25 Ind. 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenkins-v-parkhill-ind-1865.