Oney v. Clendenin

28 W. Va. 34, 1886 W. Va. LEXIS 67
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 28 W. Va. 34 (Oney v. Clendenin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oney v. Clendenin, 28 W. Va. 34, 1886 W. Va. LEXIS 67 (W. Va. 1886).

Opinion

Opinion by

Gkeen, Judge :

I will consider first the fourth assignment of error ir. the petition of the plaintiffs in error, the defendants in the court below. The verdict of the jury was : “We the jury find for the plaintiff the land in the declaration described” (fixing its boundaries by specified metes and bounds) “and fix his damages at one cent,” and thereupon the court rendered a judgment “that ‘the plaintiff do recover of the defendants the possession of the real estate iu the verdict of the jury discri-bed and also one cent, the damages assessed by the jury, &c.” Now iu the ease of Low v. Settle, 22 W. Va. 888, point 4 of syllabus, it was decided by this Court, that “the verdict of a jury in an ejectment case is fatally defective, which finds, that the plaintiff is entitled to recover the lands in' the declaration mentioned, but which fails to specify the estate found in the plaintiff, even though the declaration states that the plaintiff had been possessed of the land in fee-simple.” This' decision was rendered after a careful review of the cause ; and the reasons which led us to this conclusion are given at length on pages 895-402; and we expressly overruled the case of Elliott et al v. Sutor, 3 W. Va. 37, so far as it was in conflict with this conclusion. I have again, examined this question and see no reason for questioning the conclusion reached by us in Low v. Settle. The Code, eh. 136 sec. 27, expressly requires, that in every action of ejectment “the [42]*42verdict must specify the estate found in the plaintiff, whether it be for fee or for life, or whether it be for a term of years, and specify the duration of such term.”

As shown in that case, when the statute abolished the writ of right and permitted an action of ejectment to be brought, not only when an action of ejectment could formerly be brought but also in any case, in which a writ of right would formerly be brought (Code p. 518), it became necessary that the statute should fix the form of the verdict in this new action of ejectment, as the verdict in an actiou of ejectment had always been different from that in a writ of right. This the statute did; and, if the verdict fails to find what estate in the land in the declaration mentioned is found, it can not be held, as has been contended, that it should be treated, as though the verdict had specified, that the plaintiff was entitled to a fee-simple estate in the land in the declaration mentioned, without danger under our statute of doing gross injustice to the defendant. (22 W. Va. 402).

Objection is urged to the form, in which this question is made. It is argued that it could not be raised by a motion by the defendants to set aside the verdict and award a new trial but only by a motion in arrest of judgment; and Hawley v. Twyman, 24 Gratt. 516 is referred to as sustaining this position. That case was reviewed by this Court in Low v. Settle, 22 W. Va. 397; and it is there strongly intimated, that this case in its reasoning could hardly be followed, though it was not definitely decided, that in a case in which the verdict was worded, as it was in this Virginia case, it might not perhaps be followed (see p. 399). In that case the supposed error from the defect in the verdict was sought to be corrected hy a motion in arrest of judgment; but while the court did not hold, that'this error, if one had existed, in the verdict might not be corrected by motion in arrest of judgment, it did not hold, that that would be the proper mode of correcting such error, but held, that the judgment ought not to be corrected in this case, because the verdict was sufficient. In Low v. Settle, 24 W. Va. 391, the question was raised by a motion by the defendant, that the court grant him a new trial; and the court having refused to grant him a new trial, the judg[43]*43ment of the circuit court was reversed, and a new trial awarded.

It may be that this question might properly be raised by a motion in arrest of judgment; but since the decision in Low v. Settle, 24 W.Va. 404, this Court can not hold, that it may not be raised by a motion for a new trial; and if so, as the grounds, on which the motion for a new trial was made, need not be specified on the face of the record in any case, it would follow, that the-fact, that the record does not on its face show, that this was one of the grounds, on which the defendant relied in his motion for a new trial in the court below, will not prevent him from relying on this ground in this Court. We have decided in this State, that when a motion is made before a court to set aside a verdict and grant' a new trial, and the counsel puts his motion on particular grounds as in this case, neither the court below nor this Court is confined to the grounds, upon which the motion is based, but may properly set aside such verdict for any sufficient reason shown by the record (Shrewsbury v. Miller et al, 10 W. Va. 115, point 4 of Syllabus and p. 120 et seq.) There is no necessity for determining, which is the most proper mode in such a case as the one before us of calling the attention of the court below to the fact, that the verdict of the jury is fatally defective, because it fails to find the estate of the plaintiff in the land as required by our law, whether by motion in arrest of judgment, as was done in Hawley v. Twyman, trustee, 24 Graft. 516, or by a motion for a new trial as in the case of Low v. Settle, 22 W. Va. 391. I would say however, that, though probably either mode would answer, yet a motion for a new trial would seem to be most appropriate. The case seems to i'esemble that, where a jury finds a special verdict and omits to find in such special verdict some fact, which is essential to enable the court to enter up any judgment on such special verdict. .In such case it does not seem to be the practice tor a motion tobe made in arrest of judgment, but the court awards venire facias de novo, that is, grants a new trial. (Geddy v. Butler, 3 Munf. 345; Cropper v. Carlton, 6 Munf. 277; Brown v. Ferguson, 4 Leigh. 37). These causes also show, that a new trial may be granted by the court be[44]*44low ou such defective verdict being rendered ; but they show further, that this may be done, though no motion is made for a new trial; and that, if it be not done by the court below, it may be done by the appellate court.; and that it may be done by the appellate court, though the attention to the fatal defect in the special verdict be called to the attention of the court only after the case reaches the appellate court, and the record shows, that there was no motion in arrest of judgment, no motion for a new trial, and no motion for a venire facias de novo in the court below.

From these cases I infer, that, when the verdict of thejury in an ejectment case is for the plaintiff for the lands claimed in the declaration, but the jury in their verdict fail to state, as the statute requires, what estate the plaintiff has in said land, though there was no motion for a new trial in the court below nor motion in arrest of judgment by the defendant, yet upon writ of error the appellate court will set aside a judgment rendered on such defective verdict and grant a new trial; and that is the reason why neither the court of appeals of Virginia in Hawley v. Iwyman, 24 Graft. 516, nor this Court in Low v. Settle, 22 W. Va.

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Bluebook (online)
28 W. Va. 34, 1886 W. Va. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oney-v-clendenin-wva-1886.