Whitaker v. Bramson

29 F. Cas. 947, 2 Paine 209
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1855
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 29 F. Cas. 947 (Whitaker v. Bramson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitaker v. Bramson, 29 F. Cas. 947, 2 Paine 209 (circtsdny 1855).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Assumpsit on two promissory notes. One note dated October 14th, 1824, for $281 25, payable six months after date; the other, dated December 17th, 1824, for $424 50, payable in six months. The declaration also contains the common money counts, and counts in indebitatus assumpsit. To this declaration the defendant pleaded: 1, the general issue; 2. the exemption of his body from imprisonment because of certain insolvent discharges; and 3, to the counts up[948]*948on the promissory notes, a former recovery for the same canse of action, 3

The latter plea is the one immediately drawn in judgment; it is, after the formal commencement, as follows: “Because, he says, that after the making of the respective promissory notes by this defendant in the said two first counts of tlio said declaration mentioned, to wit, on the 2Sth day of November, 1S25, the said plaintiffs impleaded this defendant by the name of John Bramson, before the judges of the district court for the city and county of Philadelphia, in the commonwealth of Pennsylvania, in a plea of trespass on the case for the same identical promissory notes in the first and second counts of the said declaration of the said plaintiffs mentioned; and such proceedings were thereupon had in the said district court before the judges aforesaid, to wit, on the 2d day of June, 182G; that the said plaintiffs, by the consideration and judgment of the same court, recovered against this defendant, by the name of John Bram-son, in the plea aforesaid, their damages for [949]*949the non-payment of the said two identical promissory notes in the said two first counts of the said declaration mentioned, and whereof this defendant, by the name of John Bram-son, was convicted, as by the record and proceedings thereof still remaining, &e.”. To this plea the plaintiff replied nul tiel record, upon which issue was taken.

On the trial of the cause, the defendant produced a record of a judgment in the district court for the city and county of Philadelphia, which he offered in evidence in support of his plea. The record was duly authenticated pursuant to the act of congress of May 26th, 1790. The counsel for the plaintiffs objected to the competency of this proof to sustain the issue, because the record upon its face showed that no final judgment had been rendered in that court upon this matter; and its admissibility was objected to on account of variances between the record produced and the plea of the defendant.

First, as to variances. These are supposed to consist in this: 1st, that it is aver[950]*950red in the plea that the plaintiffs recovered in that court their damages for the non-payment of the two notes, whilst the record shows that judgment was íendered for want of an affidavit. That part of the record supposed to contain the judgment of the court upon those demands, is in this form: “And now, to wit, on the second day of June, 1820, the plaintiffs, by their said attorneys, come and sign judgment against the said defendant, in the words following to wit: ‘June 2, 1826, I sign judgment in this case for want of an affidavit of defence. John C. Lowber.’ And, therefore, the court direct judgment to be entered, accordingly, in favor of the said plaintiffs.” 2d, that the plea avers that the plaintiffs, by the consideration and judgment of the said court, recovered their damages, &e., whereof the said defendant was convicted; but that it nowhere appears by the record that the matter was determined by the consideration and judgment of the court, or that the defendant was convicted of anything claimed by the plaintiffs’ suit.

It is urged for the defendant, that the law does not exact a literal correspondence of the record with the plea, and that it is enough to plead a record according to its effect, without regarding the precise phraseology in which it may be framed. It certainly cannot be regarded as a conclusive criterion whether a definitive judgment has been rendered, that the entry employs or omits the accustomed form of “ideo consid-eratum est.” Judgments are final, and subject to review by writ of error, as well when entered without that clause as with. Yates v. People, 6 Johns. 338. Neither generally in pleading a judgment, need the precise words of the record be observed. Surplus-ages or immaterial omissions in matters of substance, in pleading records, are attended with no other consequences than in other cases. Archb. Civ. Pl. 362, 376. But as to matters of description it is otherwise, and there the record produced must conform strictly to the plea. It has been considered that if any circumstances descriptive of the record be untruly stated, though they were not necessary to be stated at all, it will be fatal on nul tiel record. Lawes, Pl. 670. This is because the issue puts in question the identity of the record set up as evidence of a former recovery.4

The party, by pleading a record with a prout paret, proffers that issue, and it is incumbent on him to maintain it literally (Purcell v. Macnamara, 9 East, 160); this, as well where the averment has reference to particulars which need not be specifically stated upon the record, as to those which must be so. Upon these principles, if the phraseology in which the judgment is narrated in the plea is to be taken as descriptive of the record evidencing such judgment, no departure from it in the proofs can be allowed. A record described as determining the rights of the party, by the consideration and judgment of the court, and the conviction of the defendant, would not be identical with one directing the same results, but in a different way. Philipson v. Mangles, 11 East, 516. The like rule prevails in relation to other instruments. A declaration upon a note, as containing the words “for value received,” cannot be supported by proving a note without these words (10 Johns. 418); yet they add no efficacy to the instrument. 9 Johns. 217; Bayley, Bills, 24, 25. These doctrines are discussed and applied in the elementary books. 3 Starkie, Ev. 1531-1533, 1593, 1596, 1598, 1600, 1604. The current of the cases, and the principles on which they rest, clearly tend to show that all the particulars set forth in pleading, descriptive of the record or instru[951]*951ment on which the party relies, must be established by his proof, or the variance will be fatal. In my opinion, this case falls within those principles. The record of the former judgment is the only evidence the defendant can offer in support of his plea; and as his plea makes various allegations prout patet, or as contained upon the record, it is manifest that it assumes to describe the precise contents, so as to identify the record on which the defendant relies. The record produced not comporting with this description, the variance is fatal. The defendant, however, insists that if his record cannot be given in evidence under the plea, on account of the variance, yet that he may avail himself of it under the general issue.

Such, no doubt, is the rule of evidence (1 Chit. Pl. 572; 2 Saund. Pl. & Ev. 134; 1 Saund. 92; 3 Wend. 272); but it is intimated to be questionable whether the proof would be received without a notice of the special matter (3 Cow. 120; 4 Cow. 558). I do not purpose to discuss this point, as my judgment will be placed upon the other leading point in this ease, to wit, whether this record proves a final judgment; although I am free to say that the inclination of my opinion is.

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Bluebook (online)
29 F. Cas. 947, 2 Paine 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitaker-v-bramson-circtsdny-1855.