McKay v. Lane

5 Fla. 268
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJuly 1, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 5 Fla. 268 (McKay v. Lane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKay v. Lane, 5 Fla. 268 (Fla. 1853).

Opinion

ANDERSON, C. J.:

This case is brought up by apj>eal from the Circuit Court for the County of Hillsborough.

The plaintiff in the Court below, "William Lane, brought an action of assumpsit against McKay to recover from the defendant damages on account of the alleged unsoundness of a certain negro slave, which the plaintiff had bought from defendant under a warranty of soundness, and which slave afterwards died from disease alleged to have existed at the time of purchase.

The plaintiff also declared that he had been put to expense and charges in and about the taking care of the said negro.

Besides the special count setting out the purchase and warranty and nnsoundness of the negro, the common money counts are in the declaration.

The nature of the other pleadings will be stated in our consideration of the assignment of errors.

There was a verdict and judgment for plaintiff for the sum of $692 40, from which judgment an appeal was taken. •

The errors assigned are twelve in number, and so far as they are material to the proper adjustment of the rights of the litigant parties we shall consider them in their order.

[270]*270The first and second errors assigned, though, involving an interesting and important question of practice, we find upon an examination of the whole case, it is not necessary to decide ; for admitting that the Judge’s ruling was erroneous, the appellant was not prejudiced, as we shall presently show. As the point is of very general interest and application, and the case before us does not require its decision, we think it our duty to reserve it to a more favorable opportunity, when we may have access to more books than we can procure here, and thus have the benefit of fortifying, or of correcting, our present opinions.

The question as stated in the assignment is this, whether on the failure of a Judge to hold the term of Court at which a summons ad respondendum is made returnable, it is nevertheless a term for jfieadihg, and whether the defendant is bound to plead to the declaration filed at said term.

Under the ruling of the Court upon this point, the defendant was obliged to withdraw a demurrer which he had filed to the declaration, and this he complains of as error; but at a subsequent stage of the case, when he had pleaded to the declaration, the plaintiff demurred to one of his jfieas, and thereby the defendant had the full benefit of his own demurrer to the declaration, upon the well settled rule of pleading that a demurrer at any stage of the pleading opens all the antecedent pleading. 1 Chitty, 707.

Under the authority of this rule, his Honor in the Court below, doubtless deemed it his duty to look into the sufficiency of the declaration, as the plaintiff had previously requested him to do ; and in like manner we shall consider ourselves as bound to give him the full benefit of his demurrer. Thus as we have said, he is in nowise injured by the ruling of the Court in the point presented in his first and second assignment of errors.

The third error assigned is as follows : The Court erred [271]*271in ruling the defendant to plead to plaintiff’s declaration before' the covenants and warranties upon which said declaration was based were filed in the cause.

We cannot find in the record any such ruling as is here stated. The Court, it is true, ruled the defendant to plead instanter to the declaration, as a condition of having a default opened ; .but he had made no complaint (except in a demurrer which, as we shall see, was not the propermode,) as to the omission of the particulars, or asked for an order to have them supplied. In an action of assumpsit, as this is, the warranty for the breach of which damages are demanded in the action, need not be filed, certainly not without an order first asked for and obtained.

The assignment is not in precise and correct terms, but so far as the actual ruling of the Court was, which is sought to be presented, we see no error. We shall consider further the subject of particulars at a subsequent point of this opinion.

It is assigned further for error, that the Court erred in ruling defendant to withdraw his demurrer to plaintiff’s declaration, and plead thereto, there being no bill of particulars filed and there being no Court holden the preceding term.

As we have already seen, the defendant was subsequently to this ruling, admitted to all the benefits of his demurrer,- and it has been our uniform practice and it is the practice of all revisory Courts, not to consider an assignment of error which is presented as a mere abstraction, when the party complaining of it has been in no degree damnified, and where the error, if it is one, is either corrected by the Judge himself, or is rendered harmless by the-subsequent events of the trial, as in the case before us. We decline, therefore, the further consideration of this al[272]*272leged error, and pass on to those having a practical bearing on the case.

It is alleged in the fifth assignment of error, that the Court erred in its ruling whereby it decided that plaintiff’s declaration was good, and defendant’s third plea bad.

Our consideration of this assignment will involve-, as we have already intimated, an inquiry into the_ merits of the defendant’s demurrer. The demurrer alleged that the declaration is not sufficient in law, first, because no bill of particulars was filed with the declaration.

The oipission of a bill of particulars is not a proper subject of demurrer, as must be obvious from, a moment’s consideration of tiie object and effect of this form of pleading. A defendant may move for an order requiring a bill of particulars, and on proof of such order the plaintiff will either be stayed in his proceedings until the bill is furnished or subjected to other penalties appropriate to his default.

It is said secondly, that the declaration is not sufficient because the general conclusion is informal and insufficient.

In what particulars it is supposed to bo so, we are not informed, and we perceive nothing on examination to warrant the allegation.

It is said thirdly, to be insufficient, because no specific indebtedness is stated in the counts for money paid, and money had and received, on the part of defendant.

These counts are connected by the copulative conjunction with the one immediately preceding, in which the indebtedness of the defendant to the plaintiff is stated specifically to be the sum of one thousand dollars, and the use of the words u and for so much money,” have direct reference to the sum stated, and are in accordance with the most accustomed forms.

The same remark applies to the fourth point in the demurrer.

[273]*273The defect alleged, fifthly, to wit: that it was not stated that the slave had not been tendered back to defendant, is not sustained by any authority or principle. The allegation was not necessary in this form of action. The count is no otherwise vague and indefinite than arose from the omission of the bill of particulars, which omission might have been supplied as we have stated, upon the motion of the defendant.

It is stated, sixthly, that the venue of the first count is laid at Key West, and not in Hillsborough County.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Fla. 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckay-v-lane-fla-1853.