Richmond v. Hays

3 N.J.L. 492
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 15, 1809
StatusPublished

This text of 3 N.J.L. 492 (Richmond v. Hays) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richmond v. Hays, 3 N.J.L. 492 (N.J. 1809).

Opinion

[*] Kirkpatrick, C. J.

When this case was first mentioned at the bar, the replication appeared to me to be a very extraordinary pleading. I have looked into it during the vacation, with some care, and am perfectly satisfied it cannot be supported.

I admit in its most extensive signification, the old maxim quod nemo Ms vexari debet si constat cuñae quod sit pro una eadem-causa. Every final judgment is conclusive as to its own subject matter, and may. be pleaded in any subsequent litigation between the Same parties, concerning the same thing; and that not in personal actions' only, but in all actions of what nature or kind soever. Some confusion seems to have crept in on this subject. A distinction has been made between personal actions, and actions which concern the realty; as if in the former, one trial were conclusive, but in the latter, there might be divers verdicts on the one side, and - divers on the other, and yet the parties could come to no finite end, as Ld. Coke says in his 8 Rep. But I apprehend, that there is nothing in this distinction, that Ld. Coke has hot always been correctly understood in this [373]*373place, and that the confusion has arisen from the great variety of actions devised for the recovery of real property under different circumstances, and from the not attending particularly to the nature of each particular action, and the, not seeing distinctly the subject mutter upon which it operates. It must be admitted too, that if the pleadings be so conducted as that issue is joined upon any precise point, even though it be a collateral one, the verdict on such point, followed by judgment, will, if properly pleaded, foreyer estop the party against whom it is found, from saying, in any other action, the same thing.

Now, in the case before us, it is not pretended that the subject matter is the same in the two actions, or in other words, that the trespass here complained of, is the same as that upon which judgment was rendered in the former action. It is manifest that it is totally distinct, and therefore the former judgment is not pretenAeAsie^fe^^iet up as a bar. But inasmuch as Richmond H^dg^SiS^t&l^acfeon, that the land on which, &c. was hiswpwper soil anoTipehold, and inasmuch as issue was takelL om th a verdict and judgment had thereon afa^ilmogeMpurrdOT whom the present defendant now sets u» title, it is contended that that verdict and judgment is coM^^BSh^tStfiat matter, and that the defendant is estoped to^my aught toJRff’contrary.

The principle is correct. ThS^cis^faiid judgment are conclusive as to the matter then put in issue. But how does this apply to the present case? That the locus in q%io, ¿¡~c. should have been the proper soil and freehold of Richmond on the 1st Aug. 1805, is in no way inconsistent with its being the proper soil and freehold of Rogers on the 1st Nov. 1806, when this trespass is alleged to have been committed. It does not therefore, carry with it the most essential requisite of a good plea, to wit: that it should conclude the allegation of the adverse party to which it is an answer.

Indeed as long as freeholds are terminable, and possession changeable, as long as lands are subject to alienations in various ways, and of course may belong to one to-day and another to-morrow, I cannot see how a verdict and judgment in a former action, upon an issue of this hind, can ever be pleaded either in bar or by way of estoppel, unless the second action be for the very same trespass, ejectment, or other injury, and that apparently so upon the record.

I distinguish between an issue taken on not guilty, liberum tenementum, or such other plea as puts the title generally in question, and an issue upon what the books call a precise point. The old writ of entry went to disprove the title of the tenant by showing the unlawful commencement of his pos[374]*374session, to wit: that it washy intrusion upon the demandant. The writ of assize, that of mort d’ancestors for instance, put in inquiry whether the demandant’s ancestor were seized on the day of his death, and whether the demandant himself were the next heir. Now this intrusion, and this dying seized, [*] and being the next heir, are what I understand to be precise points, in the sense of the books, which being once -determined, can never again be agitated between the samé parties; but such determination may be pleaded either in bar or by way of estoppel, as circumstances may require. So if one plead a prescriptive right, setting forth his prescription, or if he otherwise pleaded specially, setting forth his title on the record, and this prescription or title set forth on tho record be traversed, and issue had thereon, it would, in either case be a precise point, and being forever and unalterably the same, when once determined could never again be-questioned between the same parties. But it is not so easy for me to see how a verdict and judgment on not guilty, or-any other pleading which puts title generally in issue, can be set up in another action, for another injury, either as a bar or by way of estopel.

I have been referred in the vacation, to a case determined in K. B. in England, and reported in 3 East. 346, as illustrative of this subject. It was an action of trespass, for digging coal, &c. wherein the defendants justify, and make title to themselves under one Zouch, who, they say was seized and by indenture conveyed to one Johnson and others, particularly averring, that the coal mines in question,- were parcel of the mines, delphs, and veins of coal conveyed by the said indenture, and then, through the said Johnson, by sundry mesne conveyances, they deduce title to themselves. The plaintiff replies; that the defendants ought not to be admitted to aver in their plea that the coal mines in question, were parcel of the mines, delphs and veins of coal conveyed by the said indenture of -Zouch, because that very fact, that precise point, had been' put in issue in a former action of trespass for digging, &c. in this same place, between the same parties, and found for the plaintiff. And this replication was holden good, and the defendants estopped, &c. That is to say, the question whether the coal mines in controversy were parcel or not, of the premises conveyed by the indenture of [*] Zouch, having been once put in issue, and found for the plaintiff, it shall never again be questioned by the same defendants in that, or any other action.

But what resemblance has that to the case before us? Certainly none. In that, the issue is taken on a precise point, which Ld. Mansfield says, in Evelyn v. Haynes, is [375]*375always necessary to create an estoppel, and which being once determined, is forever determined between the same parties. In this it is taken on liberum, tcnementum generally, and being found for the now plaintiff, though conclusive against the defendant as to his, Richmond’s, possessory right at the time of the supposed trespass, it can conclude nothing further. For this right being liable to be defeated or changed a thousand different ways, it can never be inferred from such finding that it still remains in the same person.

I cannot express my sentiment on this subject so well in any other way, as by adopting the words of Ld. Ellenborough in the very case above mentioned j when in speaking of this same subject, he says, “A verdict and judgment, even in a real action, would not operate by way of a bar to future actions of trespass, or bring the parties to a finite end as Ld.

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3 N.J.L. 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richmond-v-hays-nj-1809.