Sturdevant v. Heirs of Murrell

COLLIER, C. J.

— The first question raised in this case, is, as to the sufficiency of the declaration, verdict and judgment, to entitle the defendants in error to their writ *319of habere facias possessionem. The land sought to be-recovered, is described in the .declaration as “situate in the county of Mobile, on the south side of three mile creek, at, or near the place called the pass of suriague, bounded on the east by lands belonging to Benjamin Dubroca, on the north by three mile creek, and on all other sides by lands vacant at the time the same was granted to the said John Murrell, that is to say, on the seventh day of May, eighteen hundred and four.” The verdict merely negatives the truth of the plea, and finds the plaintiff guilty of the trespass charged m the declaration. The judgment adjudges to the defendant the possession, describing the land in the same general terms as are employed in the declaration.

By an act of the Legislature, passed in eighteen hundred and twenty-one, the fictitious proceedings in the action of ejectment, were abolished, and the action of trespass substituted as the mode of trying the right and title to lands, &c., and the laws then in force in relation to the action of ejectment, except so far as it related to the fictitious proceedings, were declared to be applicable to the action of trespass to try titles—(Aik. Dig. s. 41, 42, p. 265.) When the action of ejectment was first introduced into practice in England, very great certainty was required in describing the premises in controversy, by analogy to a praecipe quod reddat in a real action. But this severity has been relaxed in the courts of that country, and it is not now deemed necessary that the description should be so certain, that the sheriff, without the aid of the plaintiff, may know of what to give possession In such cases, the sheriff delivers the possession of the *320premises recovered, according to the plaintiff’s directions, who, in receiving it, acts at his peril — if he takes more or other land, he is a trespasser, and subjects himself to an action, or the court, in a summary way, will set right any injury the defendant may have sustained' by divesting him of the possession of land not embraced by the recovery against him — (Runnington’s Eject. 121, et post; Adams on Eject. 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25; 4 Day’s R. 448.)

The English practice on this subject has not been adopted in this State. In Jinkins vs. Noel, (3 Stew. R. 75,) this court say, “ that all reasonable and practicable certainty'of description should be required, and that the correct rule of law does not permit a successful plaintiff, by indemnifying the sheriff, or otherwise, to exercise an arbitrary discretion, as to the quantity or particular location of the lands to be delivered under his recovery; but that the verdict and judgment must ascertain, to a common intent, the precise lot or tract recovered, and that this must appear, either in the verdict and judgment, or by the usual reference to the declaration.” And in other States, a similar rule has been laid down. In Clark vs. Clark, (7 Vermont R. 190,) the court determined, that if lands are so imperfectly described in an action of ejectment, that it cannot be known for what the verdict was given, the judgment should be arrested. In Fenwick vs. Floyd’s lessee, (1 Har. & Gill’s R. 172,) it is said, that “an action of ejectment is a remedy given to the party to obtain the possession of lands which are wrongfully detained from him; and as the sheriff, after judgment, is to deliver the possession of the lands recovered, there must be such a description of them, as will enable him to effect *321that purpose.” In that case, the plaintiff in the ejectment claimed “two hundred and fifty-one acres, being part of a tract of land, called, &c. lying and being in the county,” &c. The entire tract was four thousand acres, and because a more particular locality was not given to the part claimed, the court held that the declaration, and a writ of possession conforming to it, were both defective.

In Seward vs. Jackson, (8 Cowen’s R. 427,) the relaxation of the rule which 'required a description of the premises in the declaration, to be so certain, that the sheriff might know from his execution, of what he - was to deliver possession, is said to have been productive of numerous and vexatious applications to correct the errors of the sheriff in delivering possession. And the settled rule of the Supreme court of New York, “ where a general verdict is given for the plaintiff, is,.to restrict him to the taking possession of so much only, as he gave evidence of his title to, on the trial”—(See also 1 Johns. Cases, 101.) In Gregory vs. Jacksons, (6 Munf. R. 25,) a verdict was returned in these words: “We, of the jury, find for the plaintiff, his term yet to come, in four hundred acres of land, parcel of the premises in the declaration mentioned, and in the possession of the defendant,” <fcc. The Court of Appeals of Virginia, .determined that the verdict was too uncertain to warrant a judgment for the plain-, tiff — inasmuch as it does not sufficiently designate the boundaries of the four hundred acres which it finds for the plaintiff, nor refer to any certain standard by which that defect may be supplied—(See also Clay vs. White et al. 1 Munf. 162)

*322In England, the action of ejectment is regarded as strictly, a possessory action, and determines nothing but the right of possession at the time of the demise laid in the declaration. Here, trespass to try title puts in issue not only the right to possession at the time of suit brought, but the fee simple title also, and the judgment is conclusive against both parties and their heirs. The inconclusiveness of a judgment in ejectment, and the unimportant consequences resulting from it there, compared with a similar proceeding here, may have induced the relaxation in the English practice. Be this as it may, we do not conceive that the ends of justice would be at all advanced by tolerating it in this State. Here, the lands have been surveyed, and numbered by surveyors acting under the authority of the federal government. These numbers may be easily ascertained by a person desirous of instituting a suit. If the lines have become so much effaced by time or other cause, that it is difficult to trace them, a county surveyor, with the aid of the field notes, may readily ascertain them. And if it is necessary before trial, to give to the premises in dispute a particular location, upon the legal sub-division of which it is a part, an order of survey may be obtained for that purpose, and the jury find by their verdict, the precise parcel of land, of which the defendant wrongfully withholds the possession from the plaintiff.

Again: if a plaintiff is put in possession of land, which he has never recovered, or of inore than he recovered, the defendant would be without an available redress, to compensate him for the time he was wrongfully kept out; where the plaintiff is unable to make *323good any loss he may sustain by the improper execution of the judgment; unless he bq allowed to look to the sheriff for reparation. In any event, his remedy would often be tardy and vexatious-, for unless the record discover what particular land was adjudged to the plaintiff, it would be necessary to show it by extrinsic proof, in order to set right the proceedings of the sheriff — a fact which it would be often difficult to prove.

Our conclusion is, that, in the action of trespass to try title, the declaration should describe the land in controversy with so much particularity and precision, as will inform the defendant what he is to defend against, and the court for what it is called on to render judgment. But, in the present case, the plaintiff in error cannot avail himself of an objection to the declaration — he is foreclosed by having pleaded not guilty in the Circuit court. The statute is express to the point—(Aik. Dig. s. 46, p. 266.) It is, however, competent for him to insist upon the insufficiency of the verdict and judgment.

The jury have found the plaintiff guilty of the illegal occupancy of lands belonging to. the defendánts, but where these lands can be found we are not informed. They are bounded on the east by lands belonging to Dubroca, on the north by three mile creek — but the record is entirely silent as to the extent of the lines running from north to south, or from east to west. These must be ascertained by a survey, aided by the Spanish Archives, in regard to the domain claimed by Spain in the year eighteen hundred and four, within the present limits of this State — a task requiring the exercise of judgment and industry. The land in dispute may, from *324any thing appearing to ns, contain five, or fifty thousand acres: the judgment does not warrant the issuance of an execution for any definite number, and because of its uncertainty, cannot be sustained.

The questions of law arising upon the hill of exceptions, we have not had leisure to examine, and as the defendant’s counsel has intimated that they will not arise upon another trial, we have declined their consideration.

The judgment is reversed,, and the cause remanded.