Parks v. Turner

53 U.S. 39, 13 L. Ed. 883, 12 How. 39, 1851 U.S. LEXIS 634
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 18, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 53 U.S. 39 (Parks v. Turner) 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
Parks v. Turner, 53 U.S. 39, 13 L. Ed. 883, 12 How. 39, 1851 U.S. LEXIS 634 (1851).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice TANEY

delivered the opinion of the court.

The material facts in this case may be stated in a few words. Turner and Renshaw, the defendants in error, filed their petition in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Louisiana, alleging that Parks, the plaintiff in error, was indebted to them in the sum of fifty-nine hundred and sixty-nine dóllars and twenty cents, upon a promissory note for that sum, drawn by Parks, payable to his own order, and by him indorsed to the plaintiffs. A copy of the note is exhibited with the petition.

Parks in his answer states, that he denies all and singular the allegations in the petition except as therein afterwards admitted: — and says that the said note was given without any consideration whatever, and is therefore a nudum pactum, and void.

Upon this- issue the case was tried by a jury, who returned a verdict in the following words: “ We the jury find for the Plaintiff.”

And upon this verdict the court gave judgment in favor of Turner and Renshaw for the sum due upon the note; and the present writ of error is brought by Parks to reverse that judgment.

Two objections are taken by the plaintiffs in error.

1st. That the verdict merely finds for the plaintiffs, in the Circuit Court, but does not find how much was due to them ; and that no judgment therefore could be lawfully entered on that verdict.

2d. That the Circuit Court gave no reason for its judgment.

• These objections have been argued altogether upon the laws of Louisiana regulating the proceedings in its courts of justice; and which, under the act of Congress of 1824, are supposed to be obligatory upon the Circuit Court of the United States;

Article 522 of the Code of Practice declares, “ that the form of a general verdict consists in the foreman indorsing on the back of the petition those words: ‘ verdict for the plaintiff for so much, with interest,’if it has been prayed for; or verdict for defendant, according as the verdict is for plaintiff or defendant.”

And the 70th article in the new Constitution of Louisiana, adopted in 1845, provides that “ the judges of all the. courts within the State, shall, as often as it may be possible'so to do, to every definitive judgment, refer to the particular law in virtue of which such' judgment may be rendered; and in all cases adduce the reasons on which their judgment is founded.”

*43 It is evident, therefore, that if this case depended upon the laws and practice of Louisiana, the judgment of the Circuit Court could not be maintained. Either of the objections would be fatal. And the case of Hosea’s widow and heirs v. Miles, 13 Louisiana Reports, 107, is directly in point upon both grounds.

But it is difficult to apply the rules of Louisiana practice in d case where the validity of a verdict is in question. The appellate court of that State has jurisdiction of the fact as well as of the law; and in deciding upon the fact, the court is not bound by the finding of the jury in the inferior court, but may decide in opposition to the verdict, if'they think it was not warranted by the testimony in the record.' And when they reverse the judgment of the court below, for error in fact or in law, they ai>the same time give the judgment which the inferior court ought to have given.

Upon an appeal, therefore, to the Supreme Court of the State, for errors like those now adeged to have been committed by the Circuit Court of the United States, although the judgment would have been reversed, yet the State court would at thé same time have given judgment in favor of the defendants in error for the full amount of their debt. They would not have been delayed in the recovery of their money by mere technical objections to the proceedings in the inferior court, nor subjected to the expense of another trial, and perhaps another appeal. The case of Hosea’s Widow and Heir v. Miles, shows the course of proceeding in the State courts. For precisely the same errors now alleged in the case before us, were committed in that case by the court below; and although the Supreme Court reversed the judgment, on both grounds, they at the same time gave judgment in favor of the appellee for the amount due upon the note.

Now as to the first objection, we certainly cannot adopt in this court the practice and mode of proceeding in the appellate court of Louisiana. ■ For a writ of error can bring up to this court nothing but questions of law. And as the whole practice of Louisiana capnot be adopted in a case of this description, is the Circuit Court bound to follow it ? and must the validity of this verdict depend upon the rules of the common law, and the acts of Congress, or upon the formula prescribed by the Louisiana code of practice 1 Unquestionably the force and operation of the verdict when the case is brought here, depends upon the rules of the common law. It is conclusive upon this court as to the fact found, while in Louisiana it is open to revision and reversal in the appellate court. And if the conclusive force and effect of a-verdict depends upon the rules of the common law, it would seem to follow, that what is a sufficient finding by the jury to *44 constitute a legal verdict upon the issúes joined, and to make it operate as such, must also depend upon the rules of the common law, except in so far as they may be modified by acts of Congress. And while this court is bound to give effect to the verdict according to the rules of the common law, it can hardly be required to look elsewhere, in order to ascertain what finding of the jury is a verdict, and entitled to the conclusive effect which the common law gives ifi And if in this case it had appeared that the verdict had been delivered orally by the foreman and recorded by the court, and not indorsed on the back of the petition, this court could not on that account have treated the finding as a nullity, and refused to it the authority and force of a verdict.

Besides, the enforcement of the Louisiana practice in the Circuit Court of the United States, would place the suitors m that court in a worse condition than the suitors in the State courts, and an accidental departure from the'-'prescribed form would be much more injurious in its consequences. We think the sufficiency of tiie verdict, in its form, as well as the question of its force and effect must, depend upon the rules of the common law ánd the statutes of the United States. And that the qualified adoption of the practice of Louisiana by the act of 1824 was not intended to carry it to the extent now contended for by the plaintiff in error.

We proceed, therefore, to consider the case upon the principles of the common law and statutes of the United States.

The answer of the plaintiff in error, by necessary implication, admits that he executed and indorsed the note. For the only defence he takes in his answer is that it was given without consideration, and was nudum pactum. The issue was joined upon this point only. The answer contains no other objection to the validity of the note, nor does it allege that any part of the note had been paid, nor that he had any set-off against it, and'upon these pleadings and issue the jury say they find for the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
53 U.S. 39, 13 L. Ed. 883, 12 How. 39, 1851 U.S. LEXIS 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parks-v-turner-scotus-1851.