Johnson v. Farwell

7 Me. 370
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMay 15, 1831
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 7 Me. 370 (Johnson v. Farwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Farwell, 7 Me. 370 (Me. 1831).

Opinion

Parris J.

delivered the opinion of the Court.

By the seventh section of the Stat. 1821, ch. 62, it is provided that all actions of trespass, &tc. shall be commenced and sued within six years next after the cause of such action; — and we are called upon to decide whether this action was so commenced.

The statute does not declare what shall be deemed the commencement of such an action; but in the 8th section it is provided that any action of the case or of debt, grounded upon any lending or contract, &c. which shall be actually declared upon ,in a proper writ, returnable according to law, purchased therefor, within the term of six years next after the cause of such action accrued, shall be deemed and taken to be duly commenced and sued within the meaning of this act. — It has been ingeniously argued that inasmuch as the actual suing out the writ is, by statute, the commencement of the suit, in certain actions mentioned in the 8th section, the various kinds of actions mentioned in the 7th section, are not considered as thus commenced : the peculiar phraseology in the 8th section, defining the commencement of the suit, being omitted in the 7th section, which provides for the limitation of actions of trespass. The cause of this apparent inconsistency of the two sections may, perhaps, be explained by a reference to the statutes of limitations of Massachusetts, from which these sections were exactly copied ; the 7th from an act passed in 1787, and the 8th from the act of 1794.

But from whatever cause it may have arisen, inasmuch as what shall be deemed the commencement of the action under the 7th section is not defined, we must construe these words, “ commenced and sued” as we should any others, by applying to them the common law definition, when not defined by statute. We know of no other guide or safe rule of construction.

At what time then, is an action commenced and sued ? The defendants’ counsel have referred to the practice of the King’s [373]*373Bench and Common Pleas, in England, and cited sundry cases to show that the suit is not commenced until the wri4 is served and returned.

Suits are commenced in this State btr original writs issuing from the office of the clerk of the court to which they are made returnable. The declaration is a necessary part of the writ, essential to its validity, and without which it is void. As no amendments are allowed which are inconsistent with the nature of the count or counts originally inserted, or for a different cause of action, the writ discloses to the defendant the whole subject matter to which he is called to answer.

But this course of practice differs so essentially from that of the English practice, that sometimes similar expressions convey meanings entirely different, and the same principles are inapplicable to the same nominal stage of the proceedings. Thus in the King’s Bench the writ issues merely to bring the defendant into court, and not at the same time to apprise him of the cause of action. The-cause of action may not even exist until the filing of the bill, and then, for the first time it is technically set forth to the defendant.

For some purposes an action in the King’s Bench may not be considered as commenced until after the date of the writ and the service, and even the appearance of the defendant in court; inasmuch as the cause of action may neither exist or be set forth till then 5 but for most purposes an action is considered as commenced at the date of the writ. Johnson v. Smith, 2 Burr. 950. In Bronson v. Earl, 17 Johns. 65, it is said, that it is the intention and act combined, which in fact constitutes the commencement of the suit. Because a writ filled up with no intention of service is altogether inoperative, as it may be filled up before the cause of action commences, or be antedated. The presumption is that the date of the writ is the true time when the action is brought; but this presumption may always be rebutted and the true time settled by actual proof of the fact. The date is not conclusive, and if the writ is antedated, the defendant will be allowed to show the time when it was actually issued. 6 Com. Dig. Temps, G. 6. Ballantine on limitations, 119, 120, 122.

[374]*374The phraseology of the Stat. of 21, James 1, being the English statute of limitations, is the same as ours, viz. actions shall be commenced and sued within certain periods ; and the form of pleading under that statute refers to the suing out and not to the service of the writ, the former and not the latter being considered as the commencement of the action. So in Massachusetts the action is considered as commenced at suing out of the writ. Ford v. Phillips, 1 Pick. 202. So in JYew York, it is not necessary to show that the writ has been returned, nor even that it was actually delivered to the sheriff, but it is sufficient if it appear that the writ was made out and sent to the sheriff or his deputy by mail or otherwise, with an absolute and hona fide intention of having it served. Burdick v. Green, 18 Johns. 14. Suing out the writ with a view to service is an act of legal diligence within the time of limitation. It shows that the party has not slumbered the period prescribed to bar his rights. Ballant. 121.

It is contended that the action is not commenced and sued within the meaning of the statute, so as to avoid the limitation, unless such service is actually made on the defendant as will give him notice of the subject matter of the plaintiff’s demand, thereby making the effect or avoidance of the limitation to depend upon the defendant’s knowledge of the plaintiff’s intention to enforce his demand. But Lord Mansfield held that the statute did not bar unless the plaintiff had acquiesced six years, without reference to the defendant’s knowledge of such acquiescence, and he adds that he who sued out a lati-tat, (which never includes the declaration) to bring the defendant into custody, did not acquiesce within the true meaning of the act. Ballant. on limitations, 121. Chief Justice Kent held that the action is commenced at the time of suing out of the writ, and that the good sense as well as truth on the subject concurred that the writ issues when it is delivered to the sheriff or his deputy, or sent to either of them with a Iona fide intention to be served upon the defendant. \

In the case at bar, the facts show such intention most conclusively. The writ had not only been sued out and placed in the hands of the officer before the limitation took effect, but had been partial[375]*375ly executed, the officer having made a facial attf-hment by virtue of it on the "i 'th of August, a number i / days yo nous to the time when the statute of limitations could have taken effect. We are clear that the action was “ commenced and sued” within the meaning of the statute on the day of the attachment, which, in this case, was the day of the date of the writ.

Tho next, question is as to tho admissibility of the testimony offered by tho defendants to prove that the booses tlo.-cribed in the declaration were houses of ill fame, at the time of their demolition ; and that, on ibis account, they wc-re so worthless that they could not be rented to persons of honest reputation. The only application which it is pretended such testimony could possibly have, is upon the question of damages; and upon this question the burden of proof was upon the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Me. 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-farwell-me-1831.