Whitaker v. Freeman

12 N.C. 271
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 15, 1827
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 12 N.C. 271 (Whitaker v. Freeman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitaker v. Freeman, 12 N.C. 271 (N.C. 1827).

Opinion

The case was held underadvisemenf until May Term, 3 827, when the Ciuee Justice delivered his opinion as follows:

This is an action on the ease, founded on a libel published by the Defendant, fichas pleaded not guilty, and has also justified the words as being true.

At the trial, the Plaintiff gave in evidence a letter written by the Defendant to his correspondent in Raleigh, for the purpose of being shewn to others, which contains substantially the charges stated in the declaration, but in different language.

The Plaintiff insisted at the trial, 1st, that the plea of justification admitted the publication of the libel charged in the declaration, and dispensed with the necessity of proving it. Sdly. That the letter given in evidence sup[275]*275ported fhe declaration. — The Jury fount! a verdict for the Plaintiff, subject to the opinion of the Court on the , . J , 1 tvio ¡joints reserved.

1. On the first point, tiie Plaintiff produced cases to show, that the [ilea of justification contains a formal admission of the words charged in the declaration, and would not be good without such admission. It must confess and'avoid the charge.

He then insisted, that this being a confession on record, wTas stronger than a confession made orally in the country, and estopped the party from denying it. In support of this last proposition, he relied on the generally' admitted dignity of record evidence, and cited Goddard’s case (2 Co. Rep. 4, 6.)

in Goddard’s case, the Court, after saying, (t that the jurors who are sworn to say the truth shall not be es-topped, for an estoppel is to conclude one to say fhe truth,” added, “ but if the estoppel or admittance be within the same record in which issue is joined upon which the jurors shall give their verdict, then they cannot find any thing against that which the parties have affirmed and admitted of record, although the truth be contrary; fora Court ought to gi\e judgment upon a tiling confessed by the parties, and the Jurors are not to be charged with any such thing, but only with things in which the parlies differ.”

In Goddard’s case, as was very properly remarked by the Counsel for the Defendant, there was a single plea, and the admission and agreement of parties, to which the observation of the Court applies, are made in the particular and single issue which the Jury was sworn to tiy. The language of the Court is applicable to such a case. only. The Jury, though not generally “ es-topped to say the truth,” is estopped “ if the admittance be within the same record in w hich issue is joined upon winch the Jurors shall gue their verdict.” When [276]*276this case was decided, a record contained a single issue, and the word record might be used generally, in the same sense with the word issue. The relative “ which,” jn j]te ¡ast instance, refers to “ issue,” upon which issue the Jurors shall gh e their verdict. This is proved clearly by the reason the Court assigns why a Jury is estopped from finding the truth contrary to sucji admission. It is that “ a Court ought to give judgment upon a thing confessed by the parties, and the Jurors are not to be charged with any such tiling.” Now the Jurors are charged with every issue of the cause, and must pass on every issue. The Court cannot give judgment until a verdict is Sound on each. Indeed, i do not understand the Plaintiff to contend, that the admission in one plea estops the. Jury from finding the truth in an issue made upon a different plea : but that the admissions in one. plea may be given in evidence in support of a different issue in the same cause. Goddard’s case then, turns on a principle entirely distinct from this, and inapplicable to it. In Kirk v. Norvill & Butler (1 T. R. 118) Budleii Justice said, that several pleas in the same cause, were “ as unconnected as if they were in separate records.”

In England, under the statute of the 4th & ofh of J¡nne, c. 16, the Defendant is allowed to plead several pleas with leave of the Court. In commenting upon this statute, Bacon says, in his Abridgment, (v. 5, p. 448) It hath been frequently insisted upon that a Defend&nt could not, within this act, plead contradictory and inconsistent pleas ; as non assumpsit and the statute of limitations, &c. But the Court has allowed such jileas, observing, that if the benefit of the statute was to be confined to such pleas as are consistent, it would hardly be possible to plead a special plea and a general issue, the one always denying the charge, the other generally confessing and avoiding it; and the statute itself makes no distinction herein.” In conformity with this rule. [277]*277the English books on the subject of pleading, in all their-forms of special pleas, state the general issue as being first pleaded. This wouldbc entirely useless, if the admissions contained in almost every special plea in bar could be used to disprove the facts alleged in the general issue. The English books do not, I believe, furnish a decision, or even a dictum to countenance the idea that the matter of one plea can be brought in evidence against another. Their entire independence of each other has been often held, in Grills v. Manville others (Willes’ Rep. 378) tiie attempt was made to aid one. plea to which a demurrer bad been filed, by an averment in a subsequent plea. Lord Chief-Justice Willes, in delivering the opinion of the Court, said, “ Though he has denied it in Ins second plea (that the opposite party was seised in fee) that will make no alteration, it being a known pule, and never controverted, that one plea cannot be taken in to help or destroy another, but every plea must stand or fall by itself.”

This opinion undoubtedly applies to the sufficiency of a plea in point of law. It asserts that one plea cannot be affected in point of law, by a fact averred in a different plea$ not that such facts may not be used as evidence — but it shows that distinct pleas in the same cause are entirely independent on each other, and have no technical connexion. The same principle is laid down in the case of Kirk v. Norvill & Butler, in first Term Reports. ’That was an action of trespass, in which the general issue and three special pleas in bar were pleaded. The Jury found three issues for the Plaintiff, and the last for the Defendant. The Plaintiff obtained a rule to show cause why judgment should not be entered up in his favor, because the last plea, on which the verdict was found for the Defendant, was no bar to the action. The defect in the fourth plea was cured by an averment in the second and third $ but the Court made the rule absolute; [278]*278and Butter said, “ There never was such an idea before, as the Counsel against the rule have suggested, that one , . , ^ , ® , , ”® . . . plea might be supported by what was contained in ano-Each plea must stand or fall by itself.”

it is admitted, that these cases apply only to the entire independence of different pleas in point of law ; but they certainly show that the facts alleged in one plea, has no more influence on an issue made upon a distinct jilea in the same cause, than if the same matter had been pleaded in a different cause. E'.er since the statute of Jlnne, it has been usual in England, where the Defendant meant to justify, to plead also the general issue.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Scott v. Statesville Plywood & Veneer Co.
81 S.E.2d 146 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1954)
Claverie v. Fabacher
48 So. 578 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1909)
State v. . Bradley
2 N.C. 463 (Superior Court of North Carolina, 1797)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 N.C. 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitaker-v-freeman-nc-1827.