Deitsch v. Wiggins

Belfobd, J.

This was an action of trespass, de bonis asportatis, commenced by appellees against William Z. Cozens and Moritz Deitsch, Isidor Deitsch and Jonas Deitsch in the district court of Gilpin county, in which the appellees recovered a judgment against said William Z. Cozens and Moritz Deitsch for the sum of $2,315.90, and from this judgment Deitsch appeals. The declaration alleged that the defendants took and carried away certain goods and chattels in the declaration mentioned, on the 4th day of May, 1867, of the value of $2,315.90.

The defendants jointly plead the general issue, and also a special plea alleging that the goods and chattels in the declaration mentioned were the goods and chattels of O. S. Buell & Co., on the said 4th day of May, 1867, and that, on the 3d day of May, 1867, a writ of attachment was issued out of the district court of Gilpin county in favor of the firm of Deitsch & Bro., directed to the sheriff of said Gilpin county, commanding him to attach so much of the estate, real and personal, of the said O. S. Buell & Co., as should be of sufficient value to satisfy the sum of $1,478.90, and costs ; that, on the said 3d day of May, 1867, the said William Z. Cozens was sheriff of Gilpin county; that, on said day, the writ of attachment was delivered to said Cozens to *304execute, and that, on the 4th day of May, 1867, he levied upon the goods and chattels mentioned in the declaration as the property of the said O. S. Buell & Co., by virtue of said writ of attachment, which were the supposed trespasses complained of. Appellees filed several replications, denying that the goods and chattels mentioned were the property of O. S. Buell & Co., on the 4th day of May, 1867; also denying that the writ was issued as alleged in said plea, and that Cozens levied upon said goods under and by virtue of such writ, and that Cozens was sheriff of Gilpin county. The above is a brief and, we believe, a correct abstract of the pleadings. During the progress of the trial, the defendants offered in evidence a certain affidavit, bond and writ of attachment, and sheriff’s return indorsed thereon, in case of Moritz Deitsch, Jonas Deitsch and Isidor Deitsch, against said Oliver S. Buell & Co., then pending in said court, and being the writ of attachment under which the defendants sought to justify. To the introduction of this evidence the plaintiffs objected. The objection was sustained and the defendants excepted. The action of the court in excluding this evidence is the principal matter complained of.

It is urged by the appellant that the appellee, having joined issue on the special plea, was by the joinder precluded from objecting to the introduction of evidence under it; that the filing of the replication cured whatever defects existed in the special plea. Under the ruling of the court below three questions present themselves. First, was the special plea defective in substance? Second, did the appellee, by pleading over, waive any substantial defects that existed in the special plea ? Third, the plea being defective, could the appellees object to the introduction of evidence under it ? It must be admitted, at least it will so appear after a careful examination, that there is no allegation in the special plea that O. S. Buell & Co. were, at the time of the alleged trespass, indebted to Deitsch & Bro. Giving the plea the most liberal construction, it simply avers that on the 3d day of May, 1867, a writ of attachment was issued *305out of the district court of Gilpin county, at the suit of Moritz Deitsch, in favor of said Moritz Deitsch, Isidor Deitsch and Jonas Deitsch, partners doing business under the firm name of Deitsch & Bro., and which said writ commanded the sheriff to attach as much of the estate, real and personal, of Oliver S. Buell & Co., as should be of the value sufficient to satisfy the sum of $1,478. ' It might be inferred that this sum of money was due from Buell & Co. to Deitsch & Bro., but it is not so averred. The omission to aver an indebtedness we regard as a substantial and fatal defect. When a creditor, sued in trespass by a vendee of goods, contests the plaintiff’s title on the ground of fraud, if he justifies under a writ of attachment against the vendor he must show a debt against him, or a judgment if he justifies under an execution. Damon v. Bryant, 2 Pickering, 411, and authorities cited; Noble v. Holmes, 3 Hill, 194. There was no allegation of an existing debt in the plea, nor was there any offer made to prove one on the trial. The plea is bad for another reason. It does not show that. an affidavit was filed before the writ was issued, nor does it show the return of the writ. Davis v. Bush, 4 Blackford, 330. But there is still another objection which we regard as fatal, and one that applies equally to Cozens & Deitsch. They both joined in the special plea. In the case of Moors v. Parker et al., 3 Mass. 310, it is held, that when several defendants join in pleading in bar, if the plea is bad as to one defendant it is bad as to them all. The rule on which it is founded is correctly laid down in 1 Saund. 28, n. 2. “If two or more in pleading join in a defense which is sufficient for one but not for others, the plea is bad as to all— for the court cannot sever it, and say that one is guilty and the others not, when they all put themselves upon the same terms.”. This is upon the principle that a plea is'entiré and not divisible, and, therefore, if bad in part is bad in whole.

In the case of Bradley v. Powers, 7 Cow. 330, it is held, that when two plead a justification jointly or a plea involving a justification which fails as to one, the plea, being entire, faffs as to both. To the same effect is Middleton v. Price, *30611 Strange, 1184, and see Merrill v. Forbes, 5 Wend. 238. Were it deemed necessary, authorities on this point might be greatly multiplied. The plea being thus substantially defective, was it cured by pleading over % We think not. A judgment entered on the plea could have been arrested. While all merely formal defects in a pleading are aided and cured by pleading over, except on special demurrer, assigning this for cause, yet such defects as would be fatal on general demurrer are not aided or cured by pleading over. Gould on Pleading, § 11, p. 496. While a plea that states a fact, but states it defectively, would be cured by pleading over, still the authorities nowhere hold, that an omission to state a substantial and material fact will be cured by pleading over, unless the party replying to the plea affected by the omission supplies the omitted fact by setting it up in his own plea. If one party expressly avers a material fact, before omitted on the other side, the omission is cured. For the defect in the pleading of the one party is thus supplied by the other; and it may thus appear from the pleadings on both sides taken together, that he, on whose part the omission occurs, is entitled to judgment, although his own pleading, taken by itself, be insufficient. Thus, when in trespass the plaintiff complained of the defendant for taking a certain iron hook without alleging possession in himself (which in that action is material),-the defendant’s plea, in which he confessed and justified the taking of the hook from the plaintiff s hand, was held to aid the declaration, inasmuch as it expressly acknowledged the plaintiff’s possession. Gould on Pleading, § 192, p. 166.

The special plea being defective, could the plaintiff below object to the introduction of evidence under it %

It is claimed by the appellant that the plaintiff below, having failed to demur, and having joined issue on this plea, was estopped from objecting to the introduction in evidence of matters alleged in it. If the plea was substantially defective, and so we adjudge it to be, and was not cured by .pleading over, then it was no defense to the action, and being no defense to the action, it was entirely competent *307for the court to disregard it and exclude the evidence sought to be introduced under it. Kemp v. Moundel, 9 Leigh, 12. The mere fact that a party joins issue on a plea fatally defective does not and cannot impose upon a court the duty of hearing and admitting evidence under it, when it becomes apparent that no judgment could be sustained if rendered on such plea. Having said this much on the subject of the special plea, it is proper to 'inquire, whether, under the general issue, it was competent for the defendants to introduce in evidence the writ of attachment with the affidavit annexed. In the case of Rosenburg v. Angel, 6 Mich. 509, it is said: “In trespass de bonis, the ■defense that the goods were taken under attachment against n third person, alleged to be the owner, is not admissible under the general issue.”

The same rule is laid down in Chitty’s Pl., vol. 1, p. 500, 502. In an action for trespass for injuries to real or personal property, the plea of not guilty puts in issue the trespass alleged in the place mentioned, and operates as a •denial of the plaintiff’s possession or right of possession. 'The substance of the declaration is, that the defendant has forcibly and wrongfully injured property in the possession ■of the plaintiff, and under the general issue the plaintiff must prove, first, that the property was in his possession at the time of the injury, and this rightfully as against the defendant. Second, that the injury was committed by the defendant with force. Under the general issue the defendant may give in evidence any facts tending to disprove either of the propositions which we have seen the plaintiff is obliged to make out to maintain his action. Every defense which admits the defendant to have been prima ,facie a trespasser must be pleaded specially, but any matters which go to show that he never did the act complained •of may be given in evidence under the general issue. Puterbaugh’s Pr. 464. In the extended examination given this .subject, we have found but two cases where proof tending to justify a trespass has been allowed to be introduced under the general issue. The first is the case of *308Anthony v. Gilbert, 4 Blackf. 348, in which the supreme court of Indiana held, that “the defendant may show, in mitigation of damages, under' the general issue, that the-goods at the time of taking belonged to a third person, and that the plaintiff was not liable for them to the owner.'1'1

In the case of Squire v. Hallenbeck, 9 Pick. 551, it is held that “in trespass de bonis asportatis the defendant may prove, in mitigation of damages, that the goods did not belong to the plaintiff, and that they came to the use of the owner, although in taking them the defendant acted without authority.” But the ruling in each of these cases is made to rest on special grounds. In Hew York, by statutory provision, the plea of not guilty is equivalent to a plea of justification. Merrill v. Forbes, 5 Wend. 239. It is further claimed by the appellant that the court erred in refusing to allow the defendants below to introduce proof of Sherman’s want of authority to sell the goods to Hart, Wiggins & Co. It must be borne in mind, that Deitsch’s interference with the property in controversy could only be justified on the ground that he was a creditor; that he had a valid subsisting debt against O. S. Buell & Co., and that, as such creditor, he was assailing the title of Hart, Wiggins & Co. These matters could only be introduced under a special plea, and we have already held that the special plea was fatally defective and no proof could be admitted under it. It is therefore not necessary for us to discuss or decide whether the sale made by Sherman to plaintiffs below was a valid sale, or whether it could or ought to be upheld against existing creditors of Buell. It is further urged by the appellant that the court below erred in the instructions given the jury on the subject of damages. We have carefully considered this point and find no error. In the case of Anthony v. Gilbert, supra, it is said : “We know of no standard by which damages in action of trespass can at all times be measured. The nature of the injury complained of renders it impracticable to establish such a rule, the first inquiry should be the amount of injury actually sustained, which, together with interest, is a good general *309measure of damages in the absence of circumstances of aggravation. But to limit the investigation to the pecuniary loss of a plaintiff would frequently do him injustice, and always to extend it beyond such loss would as often be unjust to the defendant.” If, however, we confine the measure of damages to the value of the property when taken, we see no injury sustained by the defendant for the reason that the damages assessed by the jury did not exceed in amount the value of the goods as fixed by the evidence.

We have carefully considered the other objections urged, and find no reasons why the judgment should be reversed.

Judgment affirmed, with costs.

Affirmed.