Whitesides v. Russell

8 Watts & Serg. 44
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 15, 1844
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 8 Watts & Serg. 44 (Whitesides v. Russell) 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.

Bluebook
Whitesides v. Russell, 8 Watts & Serg. 44 (Pa. 1844).

Opinion

[46]*46The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Rogers, J.

This was an action to recover the value of twelve tierces of rice, shipped at New Orleans on board the steamer Norfolk, then lying at New Orleans, bound for Pittsburgh. The defendants agreed to deliver the goods, in good order, at the port of Pittsburgh, (the dangers of the navigation excepted), reserving the privilege of reshipping the same in good boats. The rice was reshipped at Cincinnati on board the steamer Levi Welsh, which it is agreed was a good boat. At Blannerhassett’s island the Levi Welsh struck upon a stone in the Ohio river and knocked a hole in her bottom, by which the rice was damaged and lost. The declaration contains two counts, one on the special agreement, in which the pleader omits to state the value of the rice; the other is a common count for one thousand dollars, money laid out and expended for the defendants at their instance and request. The cause was submitted to the court on certain facts agreed upon by the counsel in the nature (as it is expressed) of a special verdict. After stating the facts they proceed to say: If, on the above facts, the court should be of opinion that the defendants are responsible, they shall enter judgment in favour of the plaintiff for the sum of-. If the court should be of opinion that the defendants. are not responsible, they will enter judgment for the defendants, with leave to either party to take out a writ of error. After argument, the court entered judgment for the plaintiff generally; this was a judgment for no certain sum or amount, as no sum is ascertained and inserted in the case stated. On the judgment so entered, a writ of inquiry was awarded, and the inquest assessed the damages at $419.65; but, on motion of the defendants, the writ was set aside.

Why the court made the rule absolute does not appear, but Judge Grier supposes it was set aside because it was thought to be a final and not an interlocutory judgment. That the judgment was not interlocutory admits not of doubt, and the only difficulty is, whether it is either final or interlocutory, or, in other words, whether the case is not so defectively stated as that the court could not render a judgment, there being nothing in the case to render judgment upon. The inquiry, which lies at the root of the case, I take to be this. Is the case so stated as that a valid judgment can be entered upon it? And this question will depend upon whether an agreed case, in the nature of a special verdict, is to be assimilated to a special verdict, or is it to be governed by the rules applicable to demurrers to evidence, judgments by default, nil (Licit, or by confession ? That it is to be likened to the former, and not the latter, appears to be plain, as well on authority as the reason of the thing. When the facts are agreed upon, as in the nature of a special verdict, something more is intended than to enable the parties to take a writ of error, as has been erroneously supposed. The parties agree that the facts shall be considered as [47]*47if found by special verdict. A case stated is a substitute for a special verdict, adopted for convenience to save the labour and expense of finding the same facts by the jury in the form of a special verdict. It is, therefore, but a reasonable construction of the agreement that it shall be attended with the same effects, and liable to the same incidents. This is the obvious and plain import of the word. And this is supported by authority, for that the same particularity is required in an agreed case as in a special verdict, appears from several adjudged cases. Thus, if the case stated or referred to in the verdict of the jury be too imperfect for the court to determine the question of law arising upon it, the same course will be pursued as upon a special verdict which is defective; that is to say, the verdict will be set aside and a venire ele novo awarded. Pegran v. Isabell, I Hen. & Mun. 388. And in Brewer and wife v. Opie, 1 Call. 212, it is said: As the jury may find, so the parties may agree to all the facts belonging to the case, and refer to the court the law arising therefrom. Such a case agreed should be as full and certain as a special verdict. If the case agreed be too uncertain for a judgment to be given thereon, it will be set aside and further proceedings directed. So in Jones v. M’ Williams, 6 Munf. 301, it is ruled that when a verdict has been found subject to the opinion of the court, or a case agreed is defective, having omitted some important fact, a venire de novo is awarded. In Robinson’s Practice 374, it is stated, and in this we entirely concur, that whether there be a special verdict subject to the opinion of the court on specific points, or a case agreed by the parties, the jury should always find, or the parties should agree, for what the judgment shall be rendered in case the law be determined to be in favour of the plaintiff. Sometimes, it is true, according to our loose practice, for a supposed convenience the case stated contains a stipulation that the amount shall afterwards be ascertained by the parties; but such an agreement cannot be inferred when the clause is omitted. When the parties neglect to ascertain the sum for which judgment is to be rendered in the event of an opinion favourable to the plaintiff, it is the duty of the court peremptorily to refuse to proceed to the argument until the case stated is perfected; and where the parties refuse to amend, as they may, to award a venire de novo. A little attention in this particular, as in many other cases which have come under the notice of the court, would have avoided great perplexity and no inconsiderable delay. If, then, a case stated, or a case stated in the nature of a special verdict, is governed by the same rules as a special verdict, the point is ruled in Miller v. Hare, 2 Rawle 52, where it is decided that where a jury omitted to assess the amount, even in an action of debt, it was a mistrial. A verdict in debt finding no specific sum is void. Mr Justice Huston observes: It is useless to talk about judgments for default of a plea, or by nil dicit, &c. There a writ of inquiry will ascer[48]*48tain the sum, or it may be done by the officers of the court; but who ever heard of a writ of inquiry of damages, or the sum being ordered to be ascertained by a prothonotary, after a jury being sworn at the bar, trying the cause and giving a general verdict ? And the same, with equal truth, may be said of an agreed case, or a case stated in the nature of a special verdict. But for what amount is the judgment to be given, and by whom is it to be ascertained? The plaintiff cannot have a writ of inquiry, for it is a final and not an interlocutory judgment, nor are there any data on which a calculation can be made by the officers of the court. It would be manifestly unjust'to give judgment for nominal damages, and equally so for the amount laid in the declaration; for although there are two counts, and one a money count, yet we cannot shut our'eyes to the fact that the value of the goods lost is the gravamen of this action. If the value of the rice had been stated, or appeared in any way on the record, as unfortunately it did not, then the case in 2 Serg. & Rawle 152 might perhaps be an authority for the course pursued here. In that case it is said, that when judgments are confessed, if the plaintiff’s demand is in the nature of a debt, which may be ascertained by calculation,

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Bluebook (online)
8 Watts & Serg. 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitesides-v-russell-pa-1844.