Maynadier v. Duff

16 F. Cas. 1255, 4 D.C. 4, 4 Cranch 4
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia
DecidedApril 15, 1830
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 16 F. Cas. 1255 (Maynadier v. Duff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maynadier v. Duff, 16 F. Cas. 1255, 4 D.C. 4, 4 Cranch 4 (circtddc 1830).

Opinion

Cranch, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court, (Morsell, J., dissenting.)

In this case it is contended by the appellant, that the justice of the peace had not jurisdiction of this suit because it was in the form of an action of detinue, of which the jurisdiction is not given to a justice of the peace, either by the laws of Virginia [5]*5existing on the 27th of February, 1801, or by the Act of Congress of March 1, 1823, [3 Stat. at Large, 743,] “ to extend the jurisdiction of justices of the peace,” &c.

It is said that the justices have jurisdiction only in actions ex contractu, and that detinue is an action ex delicio. 1 Tidd, 1.

Mr. Tidd, in p. 1, says, Actions upon contract are, account, assumpsit, covenant, debt, annuity, and scire facias; ” and in p. 5, “ actions for wrongs are case, detinue, replevin, and trespass vi et armis.” Yet in p. 10, he says, and there is a case where it was held that debt and detinue might be joined in the same action,” and for this he cites Gilbert’s Com, Pleas, 5, and 1 Bae. Ab. 30. And in p. 93, he says, Formerly it was not usual to proceed in the King’s Bench by original writ in debt, detinue, or other action of a mere civil nature.” And in p. 95, 96, he says, “ In actions of account, covenant, debt, annuity, and detinue, the original writ is called a prcecipe, by which the defendant has an option given him, either to do what he is required, or show cause to the contrary; but in assumpsit and actions for wrongs it is called a pone, or si te fecerit securum, by which the defendant is peremptorily required to show cause in the first instance. In point of form the original writ is special or general — nominatum vel innominatum. The former contains the time, place, and other circumstances of the demand very particularly; the latter only a general complaint without expressing the particulars, as the writ of trespass quare clausum fregit,” &c. And in p. 105, he says, “ The first process or proceeding upon the original writ in actions of account, covenant, debt, annuity, and detinue, is a summons thereby classing detinue with the actions ex contractu. It appears therefore very clearly from Mr. Tidd’s own book, that he committed a mistake in his first page in not classing detinue with the actions upon contract. Whether he also erred in p. 5, by classing it with actions for wrongs, is not so clear, yet there is no more wrong in the unjustly detaining a chattel from a man to whom it belongs, than there is in unjustly detaining money which he owes and refuses to pay.

When, in detinue, the cause of action is bailment of a thing to be redelivered, it is clearly an action ex contractu; when the cause of action is finding and refusing to deliver the thing to its owner it partakes of the nature of a tort; but still the form of action is ex contractu, and the plea is non detinet, and not non culpabilis as in the action of trover and conversion, which, in form, is ex delicto. In detinue, the gist of the action is the unjust detainer; in trover, it is the unlawful conversion. In the former the grievance is temporary ; in the latter the loss is total. -

Mr. Chitty seems to have fallen info the same mistake. In his [6]*6first volume on Pleading, p. 87, he classes detinue under both heads. He says, “ Personal actions are in form, ex contractu, or ex delicto ; or, in other words, are for breach of contract, or for wrongs unconnected with contract. Those upon contracts are, principally, assumpsit, debt, covenant, and detinue; and those for wrongs are case, trover, detinue, replevin, and trespass vi el armis.” Yet in a note in p. 117, he says, “ as debt and detinue may be joined in the same action, though the judgment is different, (Browlow, Redivivum, 186 ; Gilb. C. P. 5; 2 Saund. 117, b,) and as it has been stated that detinue is not sustainable when the goods come tortiously into the defendant’s possession, (3 Bl. Com. 152, post, 119,) I have therefore considered this action under the head of actions ex contractu.”

In p. 117, 118, he says, “ It lies upon a contract for not delivering a specific chattel in pursuance of a bailment or other contract. But as, to support this action, the property in some particular chattel must be vested in the plaintiff, assumpsit, or debt in the delinet, is the only remedy for the non-delivery of corn, &c., sold, where no specific corn was contracted for.”

In page 121, he says: “ This action is, in most cases, still subject to wager of law; on which account it was not much in use till that mode of trial became obsolete, but now it is frequently adopted.”

In page 122, Mr. Chitty again says: “Personal actions, in form, ex delicto, and which are principally for the redress of wrongs unconnected with contract, are case, trover, detinue, replevin, and trespass vi el armis.” And in a note to the word “ detinue,” in this passage, he says: “ We have already considered this action, which, we have seen, lies for the non-delivery of goods according to a contract, and therefore it is unnecessary to give it further consideration.”

Mr. Chitty seems to have confounded two ideas which ought to have been kept distinct, namely, the cause and the form of action. The cause of action may really arise ex delicto, and yet the party may, perhaps, in some cases, by waiving the tort, have remedy by an action in form, ex contractu; and this may be the reason why Mr. Chitty has classed detinue under both heads. .When the owner has lost his goods, and they are found by a stranger, who refuses „to deliver them to the owner, detinue lies ; and yet there was no contract unless the law, in civil cases, will imply that every man has contracted to do what, in law, he was civilly bound to do. The cause of action, if not exactly ex delicto, is quasi ex delicto; yet our ancestors, more than six hundred years ago, gave a remedy by a writ in form, ex contractu, and even gave the very writ of debt itself, as well as detinue, for [7]*7goods unjustly detained. See the forms of writs of debt in the Registrum Brevium, 139; 1 Bao. Ab. 30; 2 Id. Debt, F, and the cases there cited; Rastell’s Entries, 150, (a) where there is the form of a declaration in debt for money, joined with detinue for goods, in the same count, and wager of law as to both causes of action. And in Rastell’s Entries,,fol. 174, (a) is the form of the judgment, in a like case, for the plaintiff’s debt and damages, and also for ten quarters of malt, or the value thereof, and a dis-tringas awarded as to the malt, and a writ of inquiry of damages for the detention of the malt and of the value of the malt, in case it should not have been delivered to the plaintiff. And in Coke’s Entries, 158, (a) pi. 32, is an action of debt, for money, in the débet and detinet, and for goods in the detinet, in one count. See, also, Fitzherbert’s Natura Brevium, 273, 274; Debt for Chattels; 3 Woodeson’s Lectures, 103; 1 Rol. Ab. 604; Brook’s Ab. Debt, pl. 211.

The judgment in debt,” Mr. Woodeson says, “is for money or goods demanded, and if the goods cannot be had, then for the value, which, if not found by the original verdict, may be ascertained by a writ of inquiry and verdict thereon.”

Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 F. Cas. 1255, 4 D.C. 4, 4 Cranch 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maynadier-v-duff-circtddc-1830.