Stockton v. Copeland

23 W. Va. 696, 1884 W. Va. LEXIS 27
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 23 W. Va. 696 (Stockton v. Copeland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stockton v. Copeland, 23 W. Va. 696, 1884 W. Va. LEXIS 27 (W. Va. 1884).

Opinion

GreeN, Judge:

The judgment of the court below to be reviewed by us was rendered on a case agreed. The rules, which govern in such cases, are similar to those, which govern on a special verdict; and if it be too uncertain for the court to determine in whose favor the judgment should be rendered, it should be set aside and further proceedings should be directed. (Brewer et ux. v. Ohio, 1 Call 212). And if in the case agreed an important fact be omitted, it must be set aside and further proceedings directed. (James v. McWilliams et ux., 6 Munf. 301). So in Sawyer v. Corse, 17 Gratt. 248, 249, whether the judgment should be for the plaintiff or for the defendant depended upon whether Fleming in the carriage of the mail had used ordinary care. This fact was not agreed, though facts were stated, from which it was supposed the court would draw the inference, whether he had or had not used such care. But unless expressly authorized to draw such inference, by the agreement, it could draw none, unless they resulted as a legal conclusion. This important fact not being agreed, the court reversed the judgment of the court below but rendered no judgment on the merits of the case but set aside the case agreed and ordered a venire facias de novo.

It would seem therefore, that a case agreed should be such as that on the facts stated the court should be able to determine, whether there should be a judgment for the plaintiff or [701]*701for the defendant; and if the ease agreed is such that the court cannot render a judgment either for the plaintiff or for the defendant, as the court might conclude the law to be for the one or for the other, the court ought to refuse to render any decision on such defective ease agreed, but should set aside the case agreed and proceed with the case as if no-such agreement had been entered into. It is true that in a case agreed the parties need not agree upon all the facts in the in the case, but may state such facts as are pertinent to a particular question of law, and agree that the judgment be entered for the plaintiff or for the defendant according as the opinion may be in favor of the one or the other party upon the facts stated. When the parties thus rest their case upon the decision of a particular point of law, the enquiry of the court will be narrowed accordingly so as to exclude all other matters, and the court in such case- will enter up its judgment in favor of the plaintiff or of the defendant according to its opinion on this point of law submitted. (Royall v. Eppes, Administrator of Royall, 2 Munf. 479.)

In this case the parties might have agreed, that judgment should be entered for the defendant, if in the opinion of the court as a matter of law the plaintiffs were precluded from setting up any claim to the tract of land in controversy as against the defendants by the record in the former ejectment suit set out in the agreement of facts; and if the court was of opinion as a matter of law, that the plaintiffs were not bound by the record in the former action of ejectment for the same tract, then that judgment should be entered up for the plaintiffs. And this was in effect the agreement which was entered into, except that after stating all the facts there was added to this agreement a further stipulation, which was perfectly inconsistent with what had preceded and shows most clearly, that it was not the intention of the parties to rest the case upon the decision of this point of law, except as to the legal effect of the record in the former ejectment suit.

This appended agreement was as follows: “ If the court on said facts find for the defendants” (as it was bound to do if it decided the law in their favor) then judgment shall be entered in this action for the defendants subject to any writ of error, to which the plaintiffs may in law be entitled.” [702]*702But instead of providing, as it should have done in order to make this agreed case one on which the court should have rendered any judgment: “if the court finds lor the plaintiffs, on said facts” (as it must have done if the court decided the law in their favor) “then judgment for the plaintiffs should be entered in this action subject to any writ of error, to which the defendants may by law be entitled,” this agreement provided, that if the court so found, it should not enter up a judgment for the plaintiffs; but that instead thereof “ a jury should be empanelled for the trial of the action on any other defences, that the defendant may set up or prove under the issue of not guilty;” and it was further agreed that “no facts herein agreed are to be used by either party against the other on such trial by the jury.” In other words the facts agreed were to be regarded as true, if the court should be of opinion, that on the law the plaintiffs were barred from setting up any claim against the defendants for the tract of land in dispute by the record in the former action of ejectment; but if the court should be of the contrary opinion, none of these facts agreed were to be regarded as true either‘by the court or jury. This it seems to me was clearly no agreed case, on which the court should have acted. It should have set aside the agreed case and proceeded with it regularly, as if no such agreement of facts had been made. It was in truth no agreement of facts; for the defendants on the very face of the agreement stipulated in effect, that, unless the court should hold the law to be in their favor, they were to be at liberty to disprove every fact in it agreed to by them and were in no manner to be affected or prejudiced by this agreement of facts. In short on the face of this agreement it appears, that these facts have never been agreed to by'tlie parties as the facts of the case, but they have simply agreed, that they may be considered as facts by the court not in determining the case and rendering judgment thereon in favor of the party entitled thereto, but they are to be considered as facts merely for the purpose of getting the opinion of the circuit court on the law, as to whether the plaintiffs are estopped from bringing this suit by the record of the former ejectment suit. This of course could have been obtained on the trial of the case by a demurrer to the evi-[703]*703deuce or by an instruction to the jury. But this novel mode of obtaining the judgment of the circuit court on this point of law seems to have been devised for the sole purpose of getting the decision of this Court on this one question arising in the case without waiting for it to be regularly raised in the course of the trial.

If we should examine this question and should arrive at a different conclusion, then according to this agreement we would have to remand the case tor a trial by jury; and any other points of law arising in the case could be again brought before us by a second writ of error. If such a-course could be pursued, I cannot see why, if wo should reverse this case after determining this law question, counsel might not by an agreement of like character make out a fictitious state of facts involving some other point of law', which they might suppose would arise on the trial, and get the judgment of the circuit court and of this Court on such point of law, so •wording this agreement of facts, that no judgment could be rendered on the case agreed against one of the parties, but that it must still be tried by a jury without regard to the fictitious agreement of facts. In this manner this Court might be called upon to decide in advance many of the points of law, which counsel might suppose would arise on the trial.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 W. Va. 696, 1884 W. Va. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stockton-v-copeland-wva-1884.