Wilkinson v. Pomeroy

29 F. Cas. 1266, 10 Blatchf. 524, 1873 U.S. App. LEXIS 1802

This text of 29 F. Cas. 1266 (Wilkinson v. Pomeroy) 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
Wilkinson v. Pomeroy, 29 F. Cas. 1266, 10 Blatchf. 524, 1873 U.S. App. LEXIS 1802 (circtsdny 1873).

Opinion

SHIPMAN, District Judge.

The questions presented for consideration in the present stage of this ease, and now to be disposed of, arise on the special demurrer interposed by the plaintiff to the first plea of the defendant. The demurrer is, in substance, that the plea should have been “non assumpsit,” instead of “not guilty.” It appears, from the record, that the defendant had been ordered by the court to file the general issue, and that, under such order, he filed the plea of ••not guilty,” to the first count in the declaration.

1. The plaintiff claims, that the first count in the declaration is a count in assumpsit, and that the general issue proper to be pleaded to such a count is non assumpsit. This claim is, undoubtedly, correct. The first count sets forth a promise of marriage, made by the defendant, to the plaintiff. May 30th, 1866, the breach of such promise by the defendant, his subsequent marriage to another woman, and a claim for damages, of twenty-five thousand dollars. This count is based upon a breach of contract, and is, properly, a count in assumpsit. The general issue appropriate to such a count is non assumpsit. The plea of not guilty, to this count, is, therefore, bad, and must be stricken out. 3 Chit. Pl. p. 908, note.

2. The defendant, on the other hand, claims, that the demurrer reaches back through the whole record, and attaches to the first substantial defect, and that there are defects of this character, both in the writ and in the declaration; that one count in the declaration is in tort, and the other is in contract, while the writ is an action in trespass, and for deceit and breach of promise of marriage; and that the whole is incongruous. These objections, certainly, deserve consideration.

The first question is, whether any incongruity in the writ, or any variance between the writ and the declaration, is reached by a demurrer. The writ requires the defendant to answer unto the plaintiff, “in a plea of trespass, and, also, to a certain bill of the said plaintiff against the said defendant, for damages, in the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars, for deceit and breach of promise of marriage.” Does this language describe a valid cause of action; and, if so, is that cause of action variant from the first count in the declaration? It is to be observed, that the writ, in this case, was served upon the defendant as a separate process from the declaration, which was filed afterwards. This practice has come to us from English parentage. We should, therefore, look, for light upon these questions, at the common law practice, as it existed when our American colonies became separated from the mother country.

Under the old English practice, the whole original writ was repeated in the declaration, and, if a material variance appeared between the writ and the declaration, the defendant might take advantage of it, either by motion in arrest of judgment, writ of error, plea in abatement, or demurrer. But. this was altered by rule of court, in 1654. ordering that declarations in actions upon the ease and general statutes, other than debt, should not repeat the original writ, but only the nature of the action. After this rule was made, the only way in which the defendant could take advantage of a bad original, or of a variance between the original and the declaration, was by praying oyer of the writ, or, in case of a bad original, by writ of error. But. the practice of praying oyer of the original having been much used for delay, the courts came to a resolution not to grant oyer of the original writ, so that no advantage whatever could be had of a defective oric-inal, or of a variance between it and the declaration. 1 Saund. 318. note 3. The effect of this rule was to abolish all pleas in abatement for any variance between the writ and the count, and it extended to all pleas in abatement which could not be proved with[1267]*1267out an examination of the .original writ. Gould, Pl. c. 5, § 64, note 9, and Id. §§ 82, 101. By statute of 13 Car. II. St. 2, c. 2, it was provided, that “the certainty and true cause of action” should be “expressed particularly,” in writs, bills and process issuing out of the courts of king’s bench and common pleas, and in all bailable actions, where the penalty exceeded the sum of forty pounds. If this provision was not complied with, the defendant was to be bailed upon his own bond for appearance. Blaekstone says: “This statute (without any such intention in the makers) had like to have ousted the king’s bench of all its jurisdiction over civil injuries without force; for, as the bill of Middlesex was framed only for actions of trespass, a defendant could not be arrested and held to bail thereupon for breaches of civil contracts. But, to remedy this inconvenience, the officers of the king’s bench devised a method of adding what is called a clause of ac etiam to the usual complaint of trespass, the bill of Middlesex commanding the defendant to be brought to answer the plaintiff of a plea of trespass, and, also, to a bill of debt, the complaint of trespass giving cognizance to the court, and that of debt authorizing the arrest.” 3 Bl. Comm. 288. The same practice was afterwards extended to the court of common pleas.

A question very similar to the one now under consideration was decided in 1769, in the case of Callaghan v. Harris, 2 Wil. 392. The sheriff was commanded to attach the defendants to answer the plaintiff “in a plea of trespass, and, also, that the defendants answer the plaintiff, according to the custom of the said court, in a certain plea of trover, and for converting of the goods and chattels of the said plaintiff, &c.” The defendants having been arrested upon this writ, and held to special bail, a motion was made for a rule to show cause why a common appearance should not be accepted for the defendants, alleging that the ac etiam in the writ did not particularly express the cause of action, as the statute of 13 Car. II. St. 2, c. 2, directs, for that there is no such cause of action a» a plea of trover, but, it ought to have been, in a certain plea of trespass upon the case, for converting the goods and chattels of the plaintiff, &c. But it was resolved by the court, that the cause of action was fully and clearly expressed, and that, although the ac etiam was not exactly clerical, yet nobody who read it could doubt of the cause of action. So, in the case under consideration, although the cause of action expressed in the ac etiam clause is “for deceit and breach of promise of marriage,” which is not exactly clerical, yet, actions for deceit belong to a class of actions well known as actions on the case, and the words, “breach of promise of marriage,” may be regarded as explanatory of the subject-matter to which the deceit was applied, or they may be rejected as surplusage. Gould, Pl. c. 3, § 170. The writ, then, may be regarded as disclosing a cause of action in trespass on the case.

Upon the question of variance between the writ and the first count, the authorities already cited show that a defect of this character cannot be reached by a demurrer. In Thompson v. Dicas, 2 Dow. 93, the writ was trespass on the case, and the declaration was trespass. On a rule for setting aside the declaration for variance, the court held, that, under the uniformity act, the declaration must be conformable to the writ; and the declaration was set aside, with leave to the plaintiff to declare properly under the writ, if he could do so. But, the court held, by Bayley, B., that the variance could not be taken advantage of on demurrer, because it was a “mere irregularity.” Chitty lays down the rule in such cases as follows: “Before the uniformity of process act (4 Wm. IV. c.

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Bluebook (online)
29 F. Cas. 1266, 10 Blatchf. 524, 1873 U.S. App. LEXIS 1802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilkinson-v-pomeroy-circtsdny-1873.