Mitchell v. Baratta

17 Va. 445
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 15, 1867
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Va. 445 (Mitchell v. Baratta) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mitchell v. Baratta, 17 Va. 445 (Va. 1867).

Opinions

MONCURR, P.

I think the Circuit court did not err in permitting the heirs of Henry Clarke to be made co-defendants in these suits, under the provision in the Code, chapter 135, $ 5, which provides that “if a lessee be made a defendant at the suit of a party claiming against the title of his .landlord, such landlord may appear and be made a defendant with or in the place of his lessee.” This privilege is given by law as well for the benefit of the landlord as of the tenant. The tenant has a right to be defended by the landlord, and the landlord has a right to defend his title whenever it is assailed by an action of ejectment against his tenant. This right of the landlord cannot be surrendered or prevented by any act of the tenant. The tenant cannot dispute the landlord’s title, but having received possession from him, is bound to restore it at the termination of the lease. The whole property in controversy in these two .suits was leased for eight years by Henry Clarke to Nicholas Riviera, a defendant in one of the suits, by deed dated the 14th dajr of January, 1852, A few days after the execution of this deed, to wit: on the 28th day of the same month, an agreement was entered into by and between R, D. and W. Mitchell (the former and assignee of the latter of whom are the plaintiffs in these suits), of one part, and the said Nicholas Riviera and Angelo Baratta, a defendant in the *other suit, of the other part, whereby it was, among other things, agreed that in the event the said Mitchells should establish their right to the said property, by a judgment or de[420]*420cree of any competent tribunal, then the said Riviera and Baratta should occupy the said property for the term of five years from the date of said agreement, at the annual rent of $300, which they were, in that event,' to pay to the said Mitchells. By an arrangement between Riviera and Baratta, the property seems to have been divided equally between them and held in severalty, and these suits were brought severally against them for their several portions. Riviera having become the tenant of Clarke by the deed of the 14th of January, 1852, did not and could not, by the subsequent agreement and arrangement aforesaid, prejudice the right of the latter as landlord or lessor, and his heirs had therefore the same right to be made defendants in the suit against Baratta as in the suit against Riviera. Indeed, those heirs are the only substantial defendants in the suits, and must have been contemplated as such in the agreement of the 28th of January 1852. The Mitchells were to establish their right by a judgment or decree. But against .whom? certainly not their own tenants, whom they could not expect to sue, except pro forma; but the adverse claimant, who was Clarke. As to there being no proof of the execution of the deed of lease, it was not denied by the plaintiffs, who resisted on other grounds the motion of the heirs of Clarke to be made defendants in the suits.

I am of opinion that the statement of the evidence, documentary and oral, copied into the records in these suits under the head of “cases agreed,” ought to be regarded as part of the said records by .this court, in reviewing the judgment of the Circuit court, although not made so by a bill of exception. The usual and regular *mode of making such matter a part of the record is by bill of exceptions, but it is not always the only mode. It may be embodied in the judgment, either verbatim, or by being referred to and identified therein as part thereof. In these suits the judgments recite that “the matters arising upon the pleadings, the statement of evidence and the deeds, plat, books and writings therein mentioned, agreed by the counsel for the respective parties, and by them submitted to the judgment of the court, being maturely weighed, it seems to the court, ’ ’ &c. ; and the statement under the head of “cases agreed,” immediately follows the judgments in the certified records before us. That statement affords unmistakable evidence that it was intended by 'the parties to be a part of the. records and to be so regarded in this court. It contains an express agreement that “Henning’s Statutes,”, and “Iddings’ map,” and “Bates’ map,” and “the plat made by T. M. Badd,” should be exhibited and used in the appellate court without being copied into the record. It is not pretended that the statement copied into the record is not the true statement referred to in the judgments, aiid a certiorari has not been applied for to complete or verify the record. This state-mént, though called in the records “cases agreed,” is not a case agreed in lieu of a special verdict, but merely a statement of evidence agreed by the parties to be read by the court on the trial of the issue between them, they having waived their right to have a jury and agreed that the whole matter of law and fact might be heard and determined, and judgment given by the court.

I am further of opinion that the settled general rule of practice, which requires a certificate of facts instead of evidence to enable an appellate court to revise a judgment of an inferior court upon a motion to set aside the verdict of a jury and grant a new trial, does not apply to a case in which the parties waive the right to have a *jury, and the judgment sought to be reviewed is that of the inferior court upon the whole matter of law and fact; in which case, as in every other case tried by a court upon the whole matter of law and fact, it is sufficient to make the evidence a part of the record, to enable an appellate court to revise the judgment.

My views upon this subject are fully set forth in the opinion of the dissenting judge in Pryor v. Kuhn, 12 Gratt. 615, and also in the opinion of Judge Daniel in Wickham, &c. v. Lewis, Martin & Co., 13 Id. 427, in which I concurred. I therefore think it unnecessary for me to say anything more on the subject, especially as my brother Rives, who I am glad to find entertains the same views, has fully and clearly set them forth in his opinion, in which part of it I entirely concur. I will repeat, however, that I consider the rule laid down in the case of Dudleys v. Dudleys, 3 Leigh 436, as the true rule which ought to govern the appellate court in all such cases; and I do not think the judgment of the court below ought to be reversed upon the ground that it is contrary to evidence unless it plainly appears to be erroneous, especially if the evidence or a part of it be oral, and more especially if there be a material conflict in such evidence. “The credibility of witnesses,” said Judge Cabell in that case, ‘ ‘depends on a variety of circumstances, which may be seen and .known by those who are present at their viva voce examination, but which cannot be transmitted through their written testimony to an appellate court. On a mere question of credibility, therefore, when there is nothing in the record to throw light on the subject, this court will always presume, that the inferior court, which saw and heard the witnesses examined, has decided correctly. ’ ’ Id. 441.

I am also of opinion that if the plaintiffs in these suits would have been entitled in a writ of right, at the time *the Code took effect and at the time : : ■ : of the institution of these suits, to recovei the land in controversy, if the Cpde had not been enacted, they are entitled to recover it in these actions of ejectment under the provisions in the Code, ch. 135, §§ 2 and 38, and ch. 149, (j 19. But the proceedings in any such action must of course be such [421]*421as are prescribed by the Code, whether the subject of controversy might have been recovered in an action of ejectment or could only have been recovered in a writ of right if the Code had not been enacted.

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Related

Pryor v. Kuhn
12 Gratt. 615 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1855)
Wickham & Goshorn v. Lewis Martin & Co.
13 Gratt. 427 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1856)

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Bluebook (online)
17 Va. 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-baratta-va-1867.