LeBlanc v. Deslandes

90 A.2d 802, 117 Vt. 248, 1952 Vt. LEXIS 131
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 6, 1952
Docket944
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 90 A.2d 802 (LeBlanc v. Deslandes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LeBlanc v. Deslandes, 90 A.2d 802, 117 Vt. 248, 1952 Vt. LEXIS 131 (Vt. 1952).

Opinion

Adams, J.

This is an action of fraud and deceit based on alleged false and fraudulent representations in connection with the sale of the defendants’ farm and personal property thereon to the plaintiffs. Trial was by jury at the September Term 1950 of the Orleans County Court. Verdict and judgment was for the plaintiffs. The case is here on exceptions of the defendants.

The bill of exceptions states that the defendants filed an answer in this cause which included the general issue and a further plea questioning the jurisdiction of the court to proceed with the trial by jury and that the grounds of the plea to the jurisdiction are fully set forth in the answer. It then states that the court before trial overruled the defendants’ plea to the jurisdiction contained in the answer and allowed the defendants an exception. It further states that, for the purpose of apprising this court with the subject matter relating to the defendants’ plea to the jurisdiction, a foreclosure petition brought by these defendants against these plaintiffs in the Orleans County Court of Chancery and the answer and cross bill thereto are made a part of the bill of exceptions.

A plea to the jurisdiction is the first plea in the regular order of common law pleading. Coolbeth v. Gove, 108 Vt 499, 503, 189 A 858; Howe v. Lisbon Savings Bank & Trust Co., 111 Vt 201, 216, 14 A2d 3.

The plea here upon the defendants’ theory is a plea to the jurisdiction and we treat it as such. It sets up that the Orleans County Court of Chancery had acquired full, complete and exclusive jurisdiction over the subject matter of the plaintiffs’ complaint *250 in this action setting forth the reasons therefor. It was filed with an answer pleading the general issue. A plea to the jurisdiction is analogous to a plea in abatement; and if the defendents file any other plea like the general issue, as they did here, it is waived, as a plea of the general issue confesses jurisdiction. Lyman v. Central Vermont Railroad Co., 59 Vt 167, 175, 10 A 346; Roddy v. Fitzgerald Estate, 113 Vt 472, 475, 35 A2d 668. That is, as said in the latter case, it constitutes such a waiver, if the infirmity is one that can be waived. Such is the case here, and the plea, for that reason, if for no other, was properly overruled.

The plea is also bad for the reason that it was signed on behalf of the defendants by their attorney. A plea to the jurisdiction must be signed by a defendant in person. ' An attorney is supposed to have signed by leave of the court. This is a tacit admission of the jurisdiction. Kenney & Downer v. Howard, 67 Vt 375, 380, 31 A 850; 1 CJS 244, note 64.

Moreover, the plaintiffs in the chancery case referred to in the bill of exceptions, the defendants here, pleaded to the cross bill of these plaintiffs as defendants in that action. There they objected to the cross bill being filed and considered in that cause on the ground that these plaintiffs had elected to proceed at law for the same fraud set up in the cross bill by reason of previously bringing a suit at law therefor that had been discontinued and that if allowed to proceed by their cross bill these defendants as plaintiffs in the chancery action would be deprived of their constitutional right to trial by jury of that issue. Then, as we have seen, when these plaintiffs later proceeded at law in this action and, for aught that appears, before the court of chancery had taken any action on the cross bill or disposed of these defendants’ plea thereto, they here plead that the court of chancery had, by reason of the cross bill obtained exclusive jurisdiction and objected to a trial by jury of the same issue that they there claimed should be tried by jury, and to which they were entitled as a matter of constitutional right. This statement shows the inconsistency of the defendants’ position. The exception to the overruling of the plea is not sustained.

We make no comment about the dilatory plea to the jurisdiction having been filed out of time, nor about the question of jurisdiction being raised by a plea in the law action, nor about the record being silent as to a ruling of the court on the plea and the only mention *251 thereof and of any exception thereto being in the bill of exceptions, as none of these matters were mentioned in the briefs or relied upon in any way.

The negotiations between the parties for the sale and purchase of the property took place on October 1 and 2,1948. The deed was dated November 24 and the plaintiffs took possession of the farm, stock, tools and produce on December 22. The purchase price was $40,000.00, of which a purchase price mortgage and note were given for $23,000.00 and the balance was paid in cash or its equivalent. Among other things, the alleged false representations consisted in statements as to the amount of tillage land, the supply of water, the amount of hay the farm would cut, the amount of stock that could be kept with hay left to sell each year, the condition of the dairy as to being free from disease, the amount the defendants had received for milk, the amount of timber and wood, the condition of the sugar bush and number of buckets that could be hung, the ■condition of some of the tools, the number of sap buckets and condition of the buildings.

One of the questions for the jury to determine was whether or not the cows or some of them had mastitis at the time of the sale and the defendants’ knowledge thereof. The plaintiffs claimed that they introduced evidence tending to show that fact through the testimony of a veterinarian who saw the cows on March 22, 1949, and at various times subsequent thereto and that he found some of them had mastitis and treated them for it; also by the introduction of certain exhibits found on the premises after the plaintiffs took possession and which the veterinarian testified were commonly used in the treatment of mastitis and by the testimony of one of the plaintiffs, Ernest Leblanc, as to some of the cows being sick, some giving bad milk and one having a part of an udder very swollen when possession was taken. Much of this testimony was subject to objection, exception and motions. It is not necessary to pass upon these at this time. Upon a retrial they are not likely to occur in the same form again.

However, it may not be amiss to make some general observations. A cardinal principle is that the condition of the cows, the presence of mastitis and the defendants’ knowledge thereof cannot be left to speculation and conjecture. Cano v. Ladd, 115 Vt 53, 54, 50 A2d 425. There was no testimony of the condition of the *252 cows when the plaintiffs took possession except the above noted general condition which would be of little help, if any, standing alone as showing the presence of mastitis at that time. There was no testimony from the veterinarian or otherwise that the condition of the cows as to mastitis which he found on March 22 could be dated back even to the time the plaintiffs took possession.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

ALLING CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, INC. v. Bissette
318 A.2d 666 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1974)
Greenleaf, Inc. v. MANCO CHEMICAL COMPANY
492 P.2d 889 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1971)
Pond v. Carter
229 A.2d 248 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1967)
Vermont Electric Power Company v. Whitcomb
181 A.2d 63 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1962)
Farr v. State Highway Board
166 A.2d 187 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1960)
Jones v. Jones Estate
149 A.2d 738 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1959)
Viens v. Lanctot
144 A.2d 711 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1958)
Gulf Oil Corporation v. Morrison
141 A.2d 671 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1958)
Vermont v. Haskins
139 A.2d 827 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1958)
Green Mountain Junior College v. Levine
139 A.2d 822 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1958)
Gates v. Gates
138 A.2d 611 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1958)
Latchis v. State Highway Board
134 A.2d 191 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1957)
Smith v. De Metre
118 A.2d 346 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1955)
Hanley v. United Steel Workers of America
110 A.2d 728 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1955)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 A.2d 802, 117 Vt. 248, 1952 Vt. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leblanc-v-deslandes-vt-1952.