Ruth v. Kutz
This text of 1 Watts 489 (Ruth v. Kutz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
One of the counts is incurably bad; the words contained in it impute acts which evince a libidinous temperament, but do not constitute an indictable offence. The defect was discovered too late to have it rectified; evidence having been given, and the verdict recorded on all the counts; consequently the rendition of the judgment on the good counts only, is not to be sustained. The question, therefore, is, whether the judgment is to be set aside and finally arrested, in which event the plaintiffs would have to begin again; or only suspended, in order to give them an opportunity to have damages assessed on the good counts by means of a venire facias de novo. Formerly judgment was said to be arrested when it was but [490]*490suspended for extrinsic causes, by setting aside the verdict or granting a new trial; but the term is more recently applied with greater accuracy to the perpetual stay occasioned by a defect in the record. That the judgment may, strictly speaking, be arrested in a case like the present, is unquestionable, for such has been the course of our practice; but that a more beneficial practice may be adopted without impugning our own decisions or the common law, is equally unquestionable. In Auger v. Wilkins, 1 Barnes 337, where entire damages had been assessed for several sets of scandalous words, some of which were not actionable, the plaintiff had a venire de novo to sever his damages, according to what was said to be an ancient rule of the court; and the same thing was done in Smith v. Howard, Ibid. 340. Barnes is good authority, I believe, for points of practice, though for little beside. But these two cases are taken for law by Sergeant Williams in his note to Hambleton v. Vere, 2 Saund. 171, c; at least so far as regards the common pleas, to which he seems to consider the rule as peculiar. That it were so, would furnish no objection to it here, as our own practice has been modelled principally on the practice of that court. But it is certain that the venire de novo is a common process in every court for the trial of causes, without distinction as to the peculiarities of the forum,
Judgment and verdict set aside and venire de novo awarded.
In Eddows v. Hopkins, Doug. 632, it seems to have been considered also as the rule of the king’s bench; and in Grant v. Astle, Doug. 696, it was held by all the judges of that court to be the proper course on a reversal in error.
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1 Watts 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruth-v-kutz-pa-1833.