Low v. Ross

Melleit C. J.

In this case the declaration is general; not. describing any close in particular. The plea describes a close by metes and bounds, containing 150 acres; and states that the supposed trespass was committed in that close, and that it is the soil and freehold of Mary ITanscom, as whose servant the defendant did the act complained of. The replication states that the trespass was committed in a close of fifteen acres, being a part of the close of 150 acres; which part is described by metes and bounds; — and it further slates that it is the soil and freehold of the plaintiff; and contains a traverse that the whole close of 150 acres is the soil and freehold of said Mary Ilanscom. The defendant then in the rejoinder pleads to this new charge that he is not guilty of any trespass on the close of fifteen acres and concludes to the country. To this there is a general demurrer and joinder.

The pleadings appear to have been drawn rather inartificially; and for that very reason, the application of legal principles, in deciding the cause, is attended with more difficulty than in those cases where technical rules are observed.

The replication seems to have been intended as a new assignment; —and the facts disclosed are such as to render a new assignment necessary and proper; for the plaintiff does not in his replication assert a title to the whole close; but only to the fifteen, acres, in which he says the trespass was committed. c£ As the “ plaintiff may new assign the trespass in a different close, so he “ may new assign it in another part of the same close.” Lawes on Plead. 163. This is done in the present case; but the plaintiff has gone further and traversed the title of Mary Hanscom, to the whole close of 150 acres described in the plea. A new assignment of the trespass as committed in another close, need not and should not contain any traverse; for the object is to reduce to certainty the place where the trespass is intended to be proved; which was not attempted in the declaration, and which the plea has not done. u The plaintiff may new assign with or without “ taking issue on, or otherwise answering the special plea.” *258Lawes 240, 1 D. & E. 479, 636. The more correct mode of pleading in this case would have been for the plaintiff in his replication to have restricted the close described in the plea; and having butted and bounded the fifteen acres, as he has done, to have averred the same to be his soil and freehold, and traversed the title of Mary Hanscom to that particular part of the 150 acres. This would have been proper, as the defendant in his plea had alleged the whole close to belong to Mary Hanscom; of course, she and the plaintiff both claimed the fifteen acres. Had such been the traverse it would have brought the question between the parties to an end, and settled the cause. For if the small close is really the soil and freehold of Mary Hanscom; the plaintiff has no cause of action; or if this close belonged to the plaintiff, still if the defendant has not committed any trespass on the close of fifteen acres, then, also, the plaintiff has no cause of action. The defendant has by the general issue denied any such tresspass; and the plaintiff has demurred to that plea. If the replication in this case be considered, as it was without question intended, as a new assignment, the defendant, by pleading not guilty to it, has not been guilty of a departure. Besides, if a plaintiff vary in his replication from his count, or a defendant in his rejoinder from his plea, in a fact which is not material, this is not a departure. Com. Dig. Pleader F. 11. Chitty Pl. 622. 1 Salk. 222. 1 Ld. Raymond 120. Now, in the present case, by the replication, restricting the close described in the plea, and confining the question to the fifteen acres, it became appoint perfectly immaterial, who owned the residue of the 150 acres. In this view of the cause, considering the replication as a new assignment, and the defendant’s rejoinder as a general issue, denying the charge newly made against him; it would seem to be properly pleaded,and not to amount to a departure from the plea. We do not mean to decide, however, as to the correctness of this view; and accordingly, we rest our opinion upon another ground. Proceeding on the supposition that the rejoinder is bad, as being a departure; still on this demurrer, we must look back and see who has committed the first fault. The inquiry then is, whether the replication, not considered in the nature of a new assignment, is good and sufficient. As we have before stated, *259when the defendant had described a close distinctly, containing 150 acres, as the place where the supposed trespass was committed, and justified under Mary Hanscom as owner of it; the plaintiff, as he did not claim title in any part of it, except the fifteen acres described in the replication, very properly confined the assertion of his ownership to the fifteen acres; — thus drawing the question nearer to a point. Having thus replied, it at once became totally immaterial whether Mary Hanscom owned the residue of the 150 acres, as rve have stated before, or who owned it. The plaintiffs therefore should have traversed her title to the fifteen acres only; and not to the whole 150 acres. Chitty 597, says — t£ If a traverse be of a matter immaterial or an £t inference of law, or not to the substance and point of the action, u the other party may either demur specially, or pass it by and u tender another traverse.’’’’ According to this authority, as the defendant did not demur specially on account of the immateriality of this traverse, he cannot, perhaps, on the general demurrer of the plaintiff avail himself of it, by way of first fault, on the plaintiff’s part; but he might pass it by and tender another traverse. Has he so done in the present case ? Instead of taking issue on the traverse, he has taken no notice of it, but has denied having trespassed on the fifteen acres. And why is this not a traverse of a material fact ? If the plaintiff does own the fifteen acres he certainly ought not to recover of the defendant, if he is innocent. He pleads he is not guilty, and the plaintiff seems to have fairly admitted the truth of the rejoinder by his demurrer. On this point, the case of Richardson & al. in error v. The Mayor and Company of Oxford 2 II. Bl. 182, appears tobe an important one.

This case was decided, on error, in the exchequer chamber, and by the decision, the judgment of the Court of King’s bench was reversed. In the original action the mayor and company of Oxford brought trespass against the plaintiffs in error, for fishing in the plaintiff’s fishery. The defendant pleaded that the locus in quo was an arm of the sea, in which every subject of the realm had the liberty and privilege of free fishing. The plaintiffs replied a prescription for the sole and several right of fishing ; and traversed that every subject had the liberty ai,id privilege off *260free fishing in the locus in quo. This, on general demurrer, was held to be a bad traverse ; and that the defendants therefore, might well pass it by in the rejoinder, and traverse the prescriptive right of the plaintiffs, stated in the replication. Lord Chief Justice Eyre, in delivering the opinion of the Court says, “ The “ first traverse was of the right of all the King’s subjects to fish “ in the arm of the sea ; this was clearly a bad and immaterial “traverse ; for it was not only a traverse of an inference of law, “but it was so taken, that if at the trial it had been proved that “ it was the separate right of others, and not of the plaintiffs, the “issue must have been found for the plaintiffs, not only without “ their being obliged to prove either possession or right, but “ where in fact they had neither possession nor right.” So in the present case, if the defendant had taken issue on the traverse, he must have failed, unless he had proved a title in Mary Han-scom to tbe whole close of 150 acres, although the plaintiff had proved no title to the 15 acres ; and though the defendant had not committed any trespass whatever on that close. Reasoning which leads to such a.conclusion cannot be correct, and ought not to be sanctioned. The pleadings as they stand have perplexed the cause, requiring a minute and laborious examination ; but the authorities have led us to the conclusion that the demurrer must be'overruled; and the Court accordingly adjudge the rejoinder good and sufficient.