McKenna v. Fisk

1 Hay. & Haz. 179, 1844 U.S. App. LEXIS 467
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedApril 23, 1844
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Hay. & Haz. 179 (McKenna v. Fisk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKenna v. Fisk, 1 Hay. & Haz. 179, 1844 U.S. App. LEXIS 467 (D.C. Cir. 1844).

Opinion

In the original case the declaration contained three counts.

The first and third were, that the defendant, with force and arms, seized, &c., the goods and chattels of the plaintiff. In the second he is charged with having, with force and arms, broke and entered a certain shanty, &c., of the plaintiff' situate in the county of Washington.

The defendant pleaded not guilty, and issue was joined on that plea. ,

On the trial the court refused to permit the plaintiff to give in evidence, that the defendant came to the shanty of the plaintiff’, in Alleghany county, Maryland, with a large force of armed men, and also to show the value of the goods.

Exceptions were taken to the above ruling, and the case went to the Supreme Court through a writ of error. The Supreme Court sustained the exceptions taken by the plaintiff, and remanded the cause for further proceedings.

On the mandate of the Supreme Court being received, the declaration was amended as follows :

“And therefore the said Bernard McKenna, by Brent & Brent, his attorneys, complains for that heretofore, to wit, on the first day of September, A. D. 1839, at Washington county, in the District of Columbia, the said Charles B. [180]*180Fisk, with force and arms, seized, took and carried away, certain goods, chattels, bonds, promissory notes, accounts, evidences of debt and choses in action, to wit: one thousand gallons of spirituous liquors of different kinds, two thous- and pounds of coffee, and one thousand pounds of tea, four hundred suits of clothing ready-made for sale, two hundred bushels of Indian corn, all the promissory notes and accounts of sundry persons due to said Bernard to the amount of at least four hundred dollars, a large quantity of household furniture, beds and bedding, and kitchen utensils, all of which said goods, chattels, bonds, promissory notes, accounts, evidences of debt and choses in action, then and there belonging to said plaintiff", the property of said plaintiff, of great value, to wit, of the value of two thousand dollars, current money of the United States, the said defendant then and there converted and disposed of to his own use, and other wrongs to' the said plaintiff then and there did, against the peace, government and dignity of the Uuited States.
“ 2d. And also, for that, heretofore, to wit, on the first day of September, A. D. 1841, at the county of Washington, in the District of Columbia, the said defendant, with force and arms broke to pieces, spoiled, damaged and destroyed certain'other goods, chattels, bonds, promissory notes, accounts, evidences of debt and choses in action, to wit, bottles, decanters, barrels, casks, hogsheads, jugs and demijohns containing one thousand gallons of spirituous liquors of different kinds, and also destroyed one thousand pounds coffee, two hundred pounds of tea, one hundred suits of ready-made clothing, two hundred bushels of Indian corn, sundry promissory notes, bonds, bills and accounts due to the plaintiff", from sundry persons, to the amount of five hundred dollars and a large quantity of planks, timber, shingles and lumber of the said plaintiff of great value, to wit, of the value of two thousand dollars, current money of the United States, then and there being, and other wrongs to the said plaintiff" then and there did against the peace, government and dignity of the United States.
[181]*181“Whereby the goods, chattels, bonds, promissory notes, evidences of debt, accounts, choses in action, and effects particularly described in the first and second counts here'of, of the value above mentioned, were wholly lost to said plaintiff, wherefore, the said plaintiff saith he is the worse, and hath sustained damage to the value of four thousand dollars, and therefore he brings suit.”

The defendant pleaded “ not guilty ” ; on which plea issue was joined.

The plaintiff to sustain the issue on his side joined, produced a certain James McQ-ratt, a competent witness, who being duly sworn, said, that he was not present when the alleged trespass was committed, but arrived on the ground some time after ; that on his reaching the premises of plaintiff' he fouiid his house in the possession of the militia; that the house, or shanty, was then unroofed, the casks which held liquor out on the ground, the liquor running from the heads, which had been apparently bored through ; the papers and ready-made clothing scattered about in the house; that there were many citizens there; that the defendant was there, and witness saw him passing through the military and talking with them, as if giving orders, but could not hear what he said ; that he was on the premises the preceding day, when the militia were also there, but witness did not see defendant there; that plaintiff was taken and carried away, and about a week after witness saw him in jail at Cumberland, ironed, and afterward saw him at large about five weeks after. To all which testimony relating to the acts of the preceding day, and the imprisonment of plaintiff, defendant objected ; but the court overruled the objection, and suffered the evidence to go to the jury ; to which defendant, by his counsel, objected.

The plaintiff having given said evidence, the defendant then proved, on cross-examination of said witness, that the plaintiff had admitted the recovery and sale himself of a barrel of whiskey spoken of by said witness in his examination-in-chief as having been injured or destroyed by defendant, which had been taken, with the other articles [182]*182mentioned in the declaration, by the defendant. Whereupon, the plaintiff asked the witness to state all that the plaintiff said at the same time in regard to the injuries complained of in the declaration ; but the court refused to allow such question to be put, or the same to be answered; and the plaintiff excepted to such refusal.

After reciting certain evidence, the following prayers were, by the counsel for the plaintiff, asked to be given as instructions to the jury:

“That the act of Maryland,namedin the evidence and the proceedings offered in evidence by the defendant, do not justify the trespasses committed on plaintiff’s personal property, if the jury shall find from the evidence that said trespasses were committed by the defendant and those with whom he acted, provided they further find that at the time of said alleged trespasses the plaintiff was absent in the custody of the civil authorities, and that there was no person in his shanty at the time of entering the same, as described in the evidence, and committing said alleged trespass.
“ That the plaintiff is entitled to recover for any trespasses mentioned in the declaration and proved, if the jury shall believe from the evidence that the defendant was present ordering and abetting said trespasses, unless the jury should be of opinion that the said trespasses were all of them absolutely necessary to suppress the disturbances on the line of said canal.
“ That if the jury find from the evidence that defendant is guilty of the trespasses as alleged in the declaration, then the plaintiff is entitled to recover damages for the injury done to the personal property of the plaintiff by such trespasses, notwithstanding the jury may find that plaintiff afterwards recovered the whole of the personal property so trespassed upon.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Hay. & Haz. 179, 1844 U.S. App. LEXIS 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckenna-v-fisk-cadc-1844.