Jordan v. Wyatt

4 Va. 151
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedOctober 15, 1847
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Va. 151 (Jordan v. Wyatt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jordan v. Wyatt, 4 Va. 151 (Va. 1847).

Opinion

Baldwin, J.

The instruction moved for by the defendant in the action must be taken as conceding that the injury in question was occasioned by his negligence. He asked the Court to instruct the jury, that “if they [153]*153should believe from the evidence, that the plaintiff’s wood was cut off the defendant’s land with his consent, and was lying thereon, and that the defendant, with a view of clearing another part of the land, set fire to the rubbish on the last mentioned pare of his land, and not with the intention of burning the plaintiff’s wood, and the fire escaped from him, and passed on to the part of the land where the plaintiff’s wood was lying, and consumed it, that this action will not lie, and the jury must find for the defendant.” It will be seen that the proposed instruction did not assert that the fire was kindled with due precaution and circumspection, or that it escaped from the defendant without his default, or that he made the proper efforts to arrest it. It cannot be doubted, therefore, in the case supposed, that the plaintiff is entitled to redress, and the question we have to decide is, whether he has sought it in an improper form, by an action of trespass, instead of an action of trespass on the case.

The distinction as to the proper form of action, where the injury to the plaintiff is occasioned by an act of the defendant, is thus stated by an approved writer: If the injury be forcible, and occasioned immediately by the act of the defendant, trespass vi et armis is the proper-remedy ; but if the injury be not in legal contemplation forcible, or not direct and immediate on the act done, but only consequential, then the remedy is by action on the case.” 1 Chit. Pl. 122. The force adverted to in this passage, it will be seen, is not merely actual force but also force implied by law; and as the law always implies force where the injury is immediate to the person/ or property of another, it is obvious that the substantial' distinction is between direct and immediate injuries on the one hand, and those mediate or consequential on the other. And so it is regarded by Blackstone in his Commentaries, vol. 3, p. 123, where he says: “ It is a settled distinction, that where an act is done which .is in itself [154]*154an immediate injury to another’s person or property, there the remedy is usually by an action of trespass vi et armis; but where there is no act done, but only a culpable omission; or where the act is not immediately but only by consequence and collaterally; there no action of trespass vi et armis will lie, but an action on- the special case, for the damages consequent on such omission or act.” And again, in the same vol. p. 208, 9, the author says: “ Whenever the act itself is directly and immediately injurious to the person or property of another, and therefore necessarily accompanied with some force,, an action of trespass vi et armis will lie ; but if the injury is only consequential, a special action of trespass on the case may he brought.” And to the same effect, Lord Oh. J. De Grey said in the noted case of Scott v. Shepherd, 3 Wils. 403, “ Whether the injury occasioned by the act be immediate and direct or not is the criterion; and not whether the act be unlawjful or not. If the injury be immediate .and direct, it is «trespass vi et armis, if consequential, it will be trespass on- the case.”

The distinction thus taken is perhaps..as well drawn as it could be in a brief definition, but there is some degree of vagueness in the terms employed, so as to vary the sense according to the mode or circumstance of the act in reference to which they are understood; and this requires some precision and even nicety in ascertaining the proper mode or circumstance. The terms “ immediate” .and “consequential” should, as I-conceive, be understood, not in reference to the time which the act occupies, or the space through which it passes, or the place from which it is begun, or the intention with which it is done, or the instrument or agent employed, or the lawfulness or unlawfulness of the act; but in reference to the progress and termination of the act, to its being.done on the one hand, and its having been done on the other, f If .the injury is inflicted by the act, at [155]*155any moment of its progress, from the commencement the termination thereof, then the injury is direct or im-f mediate; but if it arises after the act has been com-V pleted, though occasioned by the act, then it is conse-j quential or collateral, or, more exactly, a collateral consequence. )

There is no better illustration of the distinction than the familiar case, commonly put, of throwing a log into a highway, which in its flight or fall, hits or strikes a person: there the injury is immediate, and the remedy may be trespass; but if, after it has fallen and while lying on the ground, a passenger stumbles over it and is hurt, the injury is consequential, and the remedy must be case.

So, if one digs a ditch or trench, which diverts a stream of water from his neighbour’s land, or makes a dam across the stream, which obstructs or checks its current and throws back the water upon the complainant’s land; if the work be done upon or extended into the plaintiff’s land, there is an immediate injury, from the digging into the plaintiff’s ground, or the throwing up of the earth or stones or logs upon it, to be redressed by an action of trespass vi et armis ; in which the consequential damages from the diversion or reflux of the water may be recovered under a per quod, or by way of aggravation. But if the work be not done upon or extended into the plaintiff’s land, the injury is consequential merely, and can be redressed only by an action of trespass on the case. In these instances, and all others-that can be put, it is the progress of the act or which does the immediate injury; and it is the completion of the act or work which thereafter gives rise to the consequential or collateral injury.

Now, in the case before us, the act of the defendant was the making of a fire, which consumed his own stubble and the plaintiff’s wood: the injury was immediate from the progress of the flames, and did not arise there[156]*156after, when they had run their course. It is immaterial whether the stubble or the wood was the first consumed, or whether the torch was applied to the wood or to inflammable matter touching it, or near it, or at whatever distance from it, or whether the flames expired with the wood, or extended beyond it. \ The whole conflagration was one continuous, entire, immediate act, embracing in its progress the plaintiff’s property, completed only by the destruction thereof, and followed, as between these parties, by no collateral consequence whatever. It was therefore a trespass; and any mode or circumstance of the act that has been, or can be relied upon, to shew it was not, will be found upon examination to be utterly irrelevant. I

It can avail the defendant nothing that the act was done upon his own land, for it destroyed the plaintiff’s property, which was there by the consent and contract of the parties, and as much under the protection of the law there as if lying on adjacent land of the plaintiff’s.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Va. 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jordan-v-wyatt-va-1847.