Lytle v. Fenn

15 F. Cas. 1196, 3 McLean 411
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Ohio
DecidedJuly 15, 1844
StatusPublished

This text of 15 F. Cas. 1196 (Lytle v. Fenn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lytle v. Fenn, 15 F. Cas. 1196, 3 McLean 411 (circtdoh 1844).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT.

At the last term a judgment was obtained against the casual ejector, and a motion is now made to set the judgment aside, on the following grounds: (1) There was no security for costs given by the plaintiff. (2) The tenant in possession was instructed by his counsel that no steps would be taken in the case at the last term. (3) The notice was defective, in not being directed to the tenants in possession.

It is insisted that the lessor of the plaintiff being in default, for not having given security for costs, as required by the rule of court, that no default could be enforced by a judgment against the casual ejector. The want of security may be taken advantage of by motion at any time during the progress of the cause; but after judgment, by default or otherwise, this objection cannot be made. If this were not different from an ordinary judgment, this motion could not now be heard. For after the expiration of [1197]*1197the term the court cannot ordinarily set aside or modify a judgment. They may correct any clerical error in the entry of the judgment, hut this is the extent to which their power may be exercised under the common law. In Waters’ Heirs v. Harrison, 4 Bibb, 87, it is said, that in ejectment thé court need not be very strict in requiring cause to be shown to set aside a judgment .against the casual ejector. 1 Caines, 503. The court will go further to protect the possession, when it can be done without injury to the plaintiff’s claim, than it is willing in ■other cases to proceed. Judgment against the casual ejector irregularly obtained, will, •as a matter of course, be set aside (5 Cow. 418); and as the situations of claimant and defendant in ejectment, are materially different, the courts are liberal in their rules for setting aside judgments against the casual ejector, although regularly signed; and will grant them, even after execution executed upon affidavit of merits or other circumstances which at their discretion they may deem sufficient Doe v. Roe, 4 Burrows, 1996; Dabbs v. Paffer, Strange, 975; Doe v. Roe, 5 Taunt. 205.

When judgment has been obtained against the casual ejector and writ of possession has been executed, on an affidavit of merits and of fraud or surprise, and the payment of costs, the court will set aside' the writ and award restitution. The misapprehension of the counsel as to the proceedings of the last term, that no step would be taken, •can afford no ground on which to set aside the judgment at a subsequent term.

As to the defectiveness of the notice: The notice in this case is not directed to any of the tenants, but the person serving the declaration swears that he served a copy of the declaration on James Denham and other tenants in possession. In Craig v. Clarke, 3 A. K. Marsh. 252, it is said that a notice in ejectment is in the nature of process, and cannot be aided by any statement of the person serving the declaration, or by the defendants’ appearing and excepting, unless they enter into the common rule, and the court say that a defect cannot be aided by -any statement of the person serving the declaration. In Beal v. Siverts, 1 A. K. Marsh. 154, the court say that the declaration and notice answer the place of process to coerce •an appearance, and the notice should, with -the certainty of an original writ, state to what court the tenants are to appear. Til-linghast’s Adams, 229. The name of the tenant in possession must be prefixed to the notice. And again, the notice must contain the Christian and surname of the tenant or tenants in possession. But it seems from Doe v. Roe, 5 Moore, 73, that the notice will be sufficient, although the address to the tenant be altogether omitted, provided it be stated in the affidavit of service, that the tenant was duly served with a copy of the declaration before the assoign day, and acknowledged such service.

In the present case there was no acknowledgment of the service by the tenants. The court could not know who were tenants, unless the affidavit of the person making the service be taken; and on that alone judgment was entered against the casual eject- or. The consequence of such a judgment is to turn out of possession all the tenants on whom a notice was served. It seems to us that the tenants against whom the action is brought, should be named in the notice, and this should govern the person making the service. Any departure from this certain and safe rule would occasion great uncertainty and confusion. If the notice, as is manifest, is in the place of process to bring the party into court, the naming of the persons in possession would seem to be indispensable. How is the person who serves the notice to know who are in possession, He must go beyond the process to ascertain the fact. And if he may do this in so important a matter as this, why may he not do the same thing in the service of other process. When the tenants are named in the notice, the service is made on the responsibility of the plaintiff, as it should be, and, in case of a mistake, he is accountable for the costs. It seems to us that in this case the notice was. essentially defective, and did not authorise the judgment.

The affidavit of Denham shows that he has been in possession forty years, has defeated several ejectments in the state court, on the title now set up, and that he claims under a patent from the United States. Stronger merits could not be shown, and on this ground, connected with the other circumstances of the case, we think the judgment against the casual ejector should be set aside. Judgment set aside, cause entered and consent, rule, &c.

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Related

Jackson ex dem. Sutherland v. Stiles
5 Cow. 418 (New York Supreme Court, 1826)
Waters's heirs v. Harrison
7 Ky. 87 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1815)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 F. Cas. 1196, 3 McLean 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lytle-v-fenn-circtdoh-1844.