Smith v. Fitzgerald

59 Vt. 451
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJanuary 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 59 Vt. 451 (Smith v. Fitzgerald) 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
Smith v. Fitzgerald, 59 Vt. 451 (Vt. 1887).

Opinion

[453]*453The opinion of the court was delivered by

Walker, J.

This is an action quare clausum fregit for cutting trees on land of which the plaintiff and his wife, Laura, were in possession in right of the wife, who held the same under a warranty deed from her father, and over which the plaintiff exercised such control and management as a husband may, in the laiv, exercise over the wife’s I’eal estate, and had no right or estate in the premises except such as a husband acquires by marriage in the l’eal estate of his wife. The wife was not joined as a party plaintiff in the writ. It is inferable, from the referee’s report, that the principal question before him was whether the locus in quo was within the limits of the plaintiff’s wife’s lot. The referee finds that the land is of small valué except for wood and timber, and that the trees cut and taken away by the defendant stood upon the land of the plaintiff’s wife, and were of the value of ten dollars. This was the extent of the plaintiff’s claim for actual damages, but' he claimed to recover exemplary damages in addition thereto, which the referee disallowed for the reason that the defendant cut the .trees to assert his right, as he believed, to the locus.

The defendant in this court relies upon three exceptions which he filed to the referee’s report in the court below, to wit: 1. That the County Court had no original jurisdiction of the action ; 2. That the judgment should be rendered for the • defendant upon the report, because of the non-joinder of the plaintiff’s wife as a party plaintiff; 3. That the referee committed error in excluding the testimony of Homer E. Hubboll.

I. The action was brought originally to the County Court, and the declaration charges the defendant with entering upon the plaintiff’s land with force and arms, and cutting and carrying away certain trees standing and growing thereon, and with other wrongs; and concludes to the damage of the plaintiff three hundred dollars.

The County Court had original jurisdiction of the action, unless it is within the jurisdiction of a justice of the peace. A [454]*454justice of the peace has jurisdiction of action of trespass on the freehold where the sum in demand does not exceed twenty dollars. R. L. s. 821. This is the limit of the jurisdiction of a justice of the peace in this class of actions; and it is immaterial whether the title to the land is in dispute or not.- To give the County Court original jurisdiction the sum in demand must exceed twenty dollars. So the determining fact is the sum in demand in the action. What constitutes the sum in demand in an action of trespass on the freehold is not an open question in this State. This was settled by the opinion of the court in Montgomery v. Edwards, 45 Vt. 75, which was an action quare clausum fregit, brought originally to the County Court. The declaration charged the defendant with cutting down and carrying away trees standing and growing on the plaintiff’s land of the value of fifteen dollars, and concluded to the damage of the plaintiff fifty dollars. The plaintiff claimed to recover treble damages, but did not declare upon the statute giving treble damages, and therefore could not recover such damages in the action. The plaintiffs testimony tended to show the value of the trees cut to be from six to eight dollars; the jury found their value to be five dollars and twenty-eight cents. The defendant in that action claimed that upon the proof the County Court had not original jurisdiction, and moved to dismiss the action. The County Court overruled the motion, and the defendant excepted. The Supreme Court, in passing upon the question, held that the action must be regarded as an ordinary action of trespass on the freehold; and that the ad damnum in the writ was the sum in demand, and that as the ad damnum exceeded twenty dollars the County Court had original jurisdiction of the action. Judge Peck, in the opinion of the court, says : “In actions of trespass on the freehold, and actions of assault and battery and the like, the ad damnum in the writ is the sum in demand determining the jurisdiction.” The learned judge also says, in substance, that if the rule of good faith be applied as it is in some other actions, there was no error in the decision of the County [455]*455Court, as the court may have found that the plaintiff, in good faith, supposed he could recover more than twenty dollars, in view of the fact that he claimed treble damages. The case cited and the case at bar are very similar. The ad damnum in each case exceeds twenty dollars. In neither was the value of the trees claimed to be over ten dollars. In one the plaintiff claimed to recover treble damages and failed in that claim ; in the other the plaintiff claimed to recover exemplary damages, and failed in that respect; and the good faith of the plaintiffs in their respective claims was not questioned in either case.

Upon the authority of the case cited it must be held that the County Court had original jurisdiction of the case at bar.

II. The next question to be considered is whether an action can be maintained in the name of the husband alone against a person for cutting trees upon the wife’s land during, the coverture.

As we have no statute law upon this subject the question must necessarily be determined upon the principles and authority of the common law.

The common law rule as to the joinder of husband and wife in actions for damages to the real property of the latter during coverture is said by some writers to be not quite clear. The rule, however, seems to be quite uniform in the elementary books and decisions of the courts.

In Chitty’s Pleading, vol. 1 (6th Am. ed.), page 85, the law is stated as follows : “In real actions for the recovery of the land of the wife,'and in a writ of waste thereto, the husband and wife must join. But when the action is merely for the recovery of damages to the land or other real property of the wife during the coverture * * * the husband may sue alone or the wife may be joined, her interest in the land being-stated in the declaration.”

In Waterman on. Trespass, vol’. 2, s. 937, the rule is stated as follows : “At common law, where the action is merely for the recovery of damages done to the real estate of the wife [456]*456during coverture, the husband may sue alone, or his wife may be joined.”

In Dicey on Parties to actions, 412, the rule is laid down as follows: “A husband may sue either alone, or jointly with his wife, for all injuries done during coverture to real property, of which the husband and wife are seized, or to which they are entitled in right of the wife.”

The same doctrine is asserted in Hilliard on Torts, vol. 2, page 502. It is there stated that an action for trespass for cutting trees on land hold by husband and wife in right of the wife, may be bi’ought by the husband alone, or by the husband and wife jointly, at his election.

The rule thus laid down seems to have been followed in the decisions of the courts where the common law governs and is supported by an unbroken line of authority. 2 Saunders Pl. & Ev., 81; 1 Roll, 348; 2 Vent. 195; Com. Dig. tit. Baron & Femme, V. W. & X.; 2 Bac. Abr. tit. Baron & Femme (K.); Cro. Car., 347; 1 W. Saunders, 291; Selwyn N. P. 310; Bidgood v. Way, 2 Black. 1236; Weller v. Baker, 2 Wils.

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59 Vt. 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-fitzgerald-vt-1887.