McFaul v. Ramsey

61 U.S. 523, 15 L. Ed. 1010, 20 How. 523, 1857 U.S. LEXIS 479
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 18, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 61 U.S. 523 (McFaul v. Ramsey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McFaul v. Ramsey, 61 U.S. 523, 15 L. Ed. 1010, 20 How. 523, 1857 U.S. LEXIS 479 (1858).

Opinion

Mr. Justice GRIER

delivered the opinion of the court.

Ramsey, the plaintiff below, instituted this suit in the Dis *524 trict Court of the United States for the district of Iowa. The parties have beeñ permitted by that court to frame their pleadings, not according to the simple and established forms of action in courts of common law, but according to a system of pleadings and practice enacted by that State to regulate proceedings in its own courts. This code commences by abolishing “all technical forms of actions,” prescribing thé following curt rules for all cases, whether of law or equity:

“Any pleading which possesses the following requisites shall be deemed sufficient;
“1st. "When to the common understanding it conveys a i’easonable certainty of meaning.
“2d. "When, by a fair and natural construction, it shows a substantial cause of action or defence. ■ -
/“If defective in the first of the above particulars, the court, on motion,' will direct a more specific statement; if in the latter, it is ground of demurrer.”

If the right of deciding absolutely and finally all matters in controversy between suitors were committed to a single tribunal, it might be left, to collect the nature of the wrong complained of, and the remedy sought, from the allegations of the party ore ienus, or in any other manner it might choose to adopt. But the common law, which wisely commits the decision of questions of law to a court supposed to be learned in the law, and the decision of the facts to a jury, necessarily requires that the controversy, before it is submitted to the tribunal having jurisdiction of it, should be reduced to one or more integral propositions of law or fact; hence it is' necessary that the par? ties should frame the allegations which they respectively make ■ in support of -their demand or defence into certain writings called pleadings. These should clearly, distinctly, and succinctly, state the nature of the wrong complained of, the remedy sought, and the defence set up. The end proposed is to bring the matter of litigation to one or more points, simple and un-ambiguous. At one time, the excessive accuracy required, the subtlety of distinctions introduced by astute logicians, the introduction of cumbrous forms, fictions, and contrivances, which seemed only to perplex the investigation of truth, had brought the system of special pleading into deserved disrepute, notwithstanding the assertion of Sir William Jones, that “if was the best logic in the world, except mathematics.” This system is said to have come to its perfection in the reig'n- of Edward III. But in more modern times it has been so modified by the courts, and trimmed of its excrescences, the. pleadings in every form of common-law action have been so completely reduced to simple, clear, and unambiguous forms, that the *525 merits of a cause are now never submerged under folios of special demurrers, alleging errors in pleading, which, when discovered, are immediately permitted to be amended. This system, matured by the wisdom of ages, founded on principles of truth and sound reason, has been ruthlessly abolished in many of our States, who have rashly substituted in its place the suggestions of sciolists, who invent new codes and systems of pleading to order. But this attempt to abolish all species, and establish a single genus, is found to be beyond the power of legislative'omnipotenee. They cannot compel the human mind not to distinguish between things that differ. The distinction between the different forms of actions for different wrongs, requiring different remedies, lies in the nature of things; it is absolutely inseparable from the correct administration of justice in common-law courts.

The result of these experiments, so far as they have come to our knowledge, has heen to destroy the certainty and simplicity .of all pleadings, and introduce on the record an endless wrangle in writing, perplexing to the court, delaying and impeding the administration of justice. In the case of Randon v. Toby, (11 Howard, 517,) we had occasion to notice the operation and result of a code similar to that of Iowa. In a simple action on a. promissory note, the pleadings of which, according to common-law forms, would not have occupied a page, they were extended to over twenty pages, requiring two years of wrangle, with exceptions and special demurrers, before an issue could he formed between the parties. In order to arrive at the justice of the case, this court was compelled to disregard the chaos of pleadings, and eliminate the merits of the ease from a con-fussed mass of fifty special demurrers or exceptions, and decide the cause without regard to these contrivances to delay and impede a decision of the real controversy between the parties. In the case of Bennet v. Butterworth, (11 Howard, 667;) originating under the same code, the court were.unable to discover from the pleading the nature of action or of the remedy sought. It might, with equal probability, be called an action of debt, or detinue, or replevin, or trover,, or trespass, or a bill in chancery. The jury and the court below seem to have labored under'the same' perplexity, as the verdict was for $1,200, and ' the'judgment for four negroes. In both these cases this court . have endeavored to impress the minds of the judges of the District and Circuit Courts of the United States with the impropriety of permitting these experimental codes of pleading and practice to be inflicted upon them. In the last-mentioned case, the Chief Justice, in delivering the opinion of the court, says: -“The .Constitution of the United. States has recognised thedis *526 tinction between law and equity, and it must be observed in the Federal courts.” In Louisiana, where the civil law prevails, we have necessarily to adopt the forms of action inseparable from the system. But in those States where the courts of the United States administer the common law, they cannot adopt these novel inventions, which propose to amalgamate law and equity by enacting a hybrid system of pleadings unsuited to the administration of either.

We have made these few introductory remarks before proceeding to notice the merits of the controversy, as developed by the record, in order that the bar and courts of the United States may make their records conform to these views, and not call upon us to construe new codes and hear special demurrers or pleadings, which are not required to conform to any system founded on reason and experience. To test such pleadings by the logical reasoning of the common law, after requiring the party to disregard all forms of action known to the law under which he seeks a remedy, would be unwarrantable and unjust.

The plaintiff’s petition sets forth his grievances in plain, intelligible form, if not with technical brevity and simplicity.

1st. He alleges a contract with defendant to deliver, to him eight hundred hogs, on or before a certain day; in consideration whereof, the defendant agreed to pay plaintiff $5.50 per hundred pounds net. He avers that he did deliver according to contract, at the time and place, the number of eight hundred hogs; that defendant refused to receive over five hundred and fifty of them, or pay for the remainder.

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Bluebook (online)
61 U.S. 523, 15 L. Ed. 1010, 20 How. 523, 1857 U.S. LEXIS 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcfaul-v-ramsey-scotus-1858.