The fixtures and safe, it was agreed, belonged to the plaintiff, acquired by the same title by which all the other property named in the writ was acquired. The defendant had not, and did not claim to have, any title to or possession of the *28property; and consequently he is not entitled to a return. The plaintiff at the trial did not claim, nor attempt to show, that the defendant had intermeddled with these articles in any manner. The defendant was not in any manner put to cost or charge by reason of their being inadvertently or otherwise named in the declaration. It appears simply that, when the bill of sale and the officer’s return of his attachment were compared, something which before had been considered a part of that entity with which the parties had been dealing was not in fact a part of it, but such discovery made no change in the course of proceeding at the trial; the issue remained the same. That issue was simply, Were the bills of sale of what was in the shop from Joseph Ashton to his mother made in fraud of creditors? We think it would be doing injustice, upon pleadings such as are in this case, which were designed to present, and did present, the question in controversy between the parties, to treat the matter otherwise than as above stated. In legal effect, the answer of the defendant is an avowry of the taking, and, as is sometimes said in reference to an avowry, the defendant becomes a plaintiff and declares against the plaintiff as having wrongfully taken the property out of his possession; and we can treat the pleadings in this case only as a replevying of a stock in trade aggregated as a single thing, and a declaration by the defendant that he properly attached that chattel as the property of Joseph Ash-ton, who was once the owner, and between whom and the plaintiff there was a fraudulent agreement to put it out of the way of attachment.
We do not decide any more than this: that the parties having elected to go to "trial without regard to the technicalities of pleading, and having tried the cause upon its merits, must now be content with the result, and not be permitted to interpose a technical objection of pleading in order to obtain costs upon an issue which has never been tried, and in regard to which the defendant has no rights. Nor have we thought it necessary carefully to analyze the answer to see if it is competent under it to put in issue any other question than the question tried, that of a fraudulent transfer of the property to the plaintiff by Joseph Ashton. As above remarked, the parties proceeded in the trial as if fixtures and safe were stricken from the declaration. *29No inquiry was had in reference to them; if the parties had deemed it material, undoubtedly it would have been competent for the plaintiff to have proved that, although the defendant did not include in his return of his attachment fixtures and safe, yet his conduct at the time of the attachment amounted in law to an actual seizure of all the property of every description which was in the shop at the time, and which was the subject of the conveyance by the bills of sale claimed to have been fraudulent. That, however, was not an issue, and it would be unjust and inequitable for the court to assume that an issue had been found in favor of the defendant when it is entirely clear that such is not the fact.
The verdict was indeed in this form: “ The jury find for the plaintiff for the stock in trade of groceries and provisions, but not the fixtures and safe, and assess the damages in the sum of one dollar.” It is quite clear that no issue was presented to the jury upon the latter part of their verdict, “ but not the fixtures and safe,” and that part of the verdict may properly be rejected as surplusage, for it is not only competent for the court, but it is its duty, to put into correct form the finding of a jury. If the verdict as affirmed and recorded does not state with technical accuracy their finding upon the real issues tried, and the court can see how it should be corrected, it will reject what is surplusage in it, or in some proper mode make it conform to the real issue tried. This principle is recognized and sustained in Porter v. Rummery, 10 Mass. 64, in which the authorities in support of the principle reported in Foster v. Jackson, Hob. 52, 54, and Hawks v. Crofton, 2 Burr. 698, are referred to approvingly.
In a later case, Easton v. Worthington, 5 S. & R 130, which was an action of replevin, the same doctrine was maintained. That was a writ of error. At the trial in the court below, the jury were instructed that, if they found for the defendant, they should also find for him the value of the mare replevied and damages for the detention. The jury found for the defendant for one hundred dollars, which was the value of the mare, and four dollars interest. Upon this writ of error, the court held that the instruction of the court to the jury to find the value of the mare if they found for the defendant was *30erroneous, and reviewed all the authorities by which it had been held that the defendant was entitled to a verdict for the value of the replevied property, and held that such verdict was not proper in that case; and that a judgment for that sum ought not to have been entered, but instead of it the judgment should have been of retorno habendo and for four dollars damages, which the court held was intended by the jury as compensation for the taking and detention, though given by the name of interest; and the court held that the real issue between the parties having been passed upon, no injustice could be done the plaintiff by putting the verdict into its correct form, and by entering the judgment as it should have been in the court below; referring to a very strong case, Thompson v. Musser, 1 Dall. 458, decided by the same court.
Both upon principle and authority, then, we think this verdict should have been generally a verdict for the plaintiff; but, qualified as it is by the unnecessary additional words, it gives no right to the defendant for any return or for any costs.
The trial therefore having been had upon the understanding of both parties, throughout the case, that the only question between them was the validity of the sale, and the defendant having no right to any portion of the property if the sale were valid, and the jury having found it to be valid, it was not error in the presiding justice to refuse to instruct the jury to return a verdict for the defendant for any particular article; and the exceptions must therefore be Overruled.