Richardson v. Fletcher

52 A. 1064, 74 Vt. 417, 1902 Vt. LEXIS 151
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedAugust 21, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 52 A. 1064 (Richardson v. Fletcher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richardson v. Fletcher, 52 A. 1064, 74 Vt. 417, 1902 Vt. LEXIS 151 (Vt. 1902).

Opinion

Watson, J.

This case is here on general and special demurrer to the declaration. No' such right of action exists at common law, and the statute on which the action is based is plenal. Blaine v. Curtis, 59 Vt. 120, 7 Atl. 708, 59 Am. Rep. 702.

The first ground of demurrer is the lack of any direct allegation that the action is founded on a statute or statutes. It is contended that the declaration should allege that the acts constituting the ground of action w’ere against the form of the statute. The only reference to the statutes made in the declaration is in the last paragraph, which reads: “And the plaintiff avers that by reason of the allegation and facts set forth as aforesaid, an action hath accrued to her, the said plaintiff, by virtue of the provisions of sections 2050, 2051 and 2052 of the Revised Taws of Vermont, which are identical with the provisions of sections 2357, 2358 and 2359 °f the Vermont Statutes, to have and recover of the said defendant a penalty,” etc.

It is fundamental that in penal actions founded wholly on a statute it should appear that the action is brought upon the statute, and in stating the offense charged, the facts constituting it must be set out, and as a part and parcel of such facts, it must be stated as a substantive allegation that the offense was committed against the form of the statute; and if the declaratnon counts upon more than one statute, the allegation must be against the form of the statutes. Wells [421]*421v. Iggulden, 5 Dowl. & Ryl. 13; Fuller v. Fuller, 4 Vt. 123; 1 Chit. Pl. 272; 2 Saund. Pl. & Ev. 1026.

In Wells v. Iggulden, the action was brought upon a statute (55 Geo. 3, Ch. 137, Sect. 6), to recover penalties against an overseer for supplying provisions to the poor of his parish for his own profit. A motion was made in arrest of judgment on the ground that none of the counts of the declaration alleged in the introductory part that the defendant, “not regarding the statute,” committed the offense, nor in the concluding part that the offense was committed “against the form of the statute.” The counts concluded with the allegation, “whereby and by force of the statute in such case madte and provided, the defendant hath forfeited for his said offense the sum of £100 and thereupon an action hath accrued,” etc., and it was argued that this might be considered as a substantive allegation that the act complained of was against the statute, and so supply the other defect. Hereon the court said the words used were stated as an inference of law, arising from the premises, and giving a description of the defendant as having forfeited the penalty for his said offense, and therefore insufficient; that there miust be a substantive allegation that the offense was committed against the form of the statute, and the motion in arrest was made absolute.

The reason for this rule is stated in Reed v. Northfield, 13 Pick. 94, 23 Am. Dec. 662, by Chief Justice Shaw, thusr “The reason upon which the rule is founded is, that all indictments, informations, and penal actions will be presumed to be founded on the common law, unless they expressly refer to the statute, and the averment that the act was done against the statute, is a substantive allegation making it an offense, and therefore if this averment is not made, the statement in the clause ‘whereby an action hath accrued,’ etc., is a conclusion which does not follow from the premises, because it is the [422]*422breach of the statute and the averment of it, which alone constitutes the averment of an offense.”

That the rule does not apply if a cause of action existed at common law is Well illustrated in the case of Fuller v. Fuller, supra. .That was an action on the case brought on the statute to prevent fraudulent and deceitful conveyances. The declaration concluded, “wherefore, to recover the forfeiture incurred” by the defendant, “by force of the statute aforesaid, * * * brings this action on the case upon the statute aforesaid,” etc. The defendant moved in arrest of judgment on several grounds, one of which was that the declaration should have concluded against the form of the statute, or have an allegation somewhere that the offense was committed against the form of the statute. It was held that if a penal offense is created by statute where no offense existed at common law, the declaration to recover the penalty must either at the close or in some other part allege the facts constituting the offense to be against the form of the statute; but that the offense under the statute upon which that action was based, was similar to' that under the statute of 13 Eliz. Ch. 5, regarding which the court, quoting Lord Mansfield, said, “that the principles and rules of the common law, as now universally known and understood, are so strong against fraud in every shape, that the common law was calculated to attain every end and purpose of the statute of 13 Eliz. C. 5,” and therefore the omission of such an allegation in the declaration was not error. In Burnell v. Dodge, 33 Vt. 462, the action was against a justice of the peace to recover the penalty under the statute for marrying the plaintiff’s minor daughter to another person, without her parent’s consent. The declaration contained no specific averment that the defendant’s acts were against the form of the statute. The court, in overruling a motion in arrest of judgment, said the form of declaration [423]*423there used had been regarded as an approved form for the recovery of the forfeiture under that statute since its use in the case-of Ellis v. Hull, 2 Aik. 41, which was based upon a statute having substantially the same provisions, and that such mode of declaring should be treated as having become incorporated into the common law of procedure in this State; but that it was to be understood that the decision was not designed to constitute a precedent by way of authority except in actions brought upon that particular statute.

In Montgomery v. Edwards, 45 Vt. 75, the plaintiff sought to recover cumulative damages under a statute providing that such damages should be given to a party aggrieved by an action founded on that statute. The declaration made no reference to the statute except by the concluding words, “contrary to the form and force of the statute in such case made and provided.” It was held that the declaration did not sufficiently count upon the statute to make the action founded upon it. But the rule above stated regarding declarations in actions upon penal statutes wa§ fully recognized by Judge Peck, for he said: “The common mode of counting upon a statute is to designate the action in the commencement of the declaration, as an action upon the statute with the proper description of the form of action, and a reference to the statute” ; but “that it has often been held that in an action by the party aggrieved, on a statute which gives cumulative damages to the party aggrieved, the declaration need not contain all that would be required in a declaration on a penal statute for the penalty; that it need not conclude against the form of the statute.”

The cases of Bayard v. Smith, 17 Wend. 88, Palmer v. Bank, 18 Me. 166, 36 Am. Dec. 710, and Reed v. Northfield, above cited, are relied upon by the. plaintiff in support of his contention that an averment that the act was done against the [424]*424statute is not essential. All of those cases, like Montgomery v.

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State v. Alexander Ikey's Estate
79 A. 850 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1911)
State v. Scampini
59 A. 201 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1904)
Richardson v. Fletcher
56 A. 981 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1904)

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Bluebook (online)
52 A. 1064, 74 Vt. 417, 1902 Vt. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-fletcher-vt-1902.