M'Gee v. Givan

Stevens, J.

M’Gee declared against Givan and Nave in an action of'trespass with force and arms, for entering into his close, breaking his stable door, and taking and leading away two certain geldings. The defendants by their plea admit that they did, in manner and form as charged, enter the close and break the stable door of Mm the said M’Gee, and take and lead away the said two geldings; but they justify the act, under and by virtue of two certain writs of execution of Ji.fa. which they allege were then in the hands of the sheriff of the county against a certain Mr. Teel, to be levied on the goods and chattels, <fec. of the said Teel; and that the said two geldings were the goods and chattels of the said Teel, and subject to said writs of execution; and that they, by the command of the said sheriff, and as Ms servants, entered with the said sheriff into the said close and stable, and took and led away said geldings as the goods and chattels of the said Teel, under and by virtue of the said writs of execution. M’Gee replied that the said two geldings were not the goods and chattels of the said Teel, but that they were the goods and chattels of him the said M’Gee. To which replication the defendants filed a general demurrer. The demurrer was sustained, and final judgment rendered for the defendants.

*17The only question presented by this case for our consideration is as to the sufficiency of the replication. The Court low declared it insufficient; and we are asked to do the same.

The objection raised is, that it does not sustain the declaration; that it abandons the cause of action set out in the declaration, and is what is called a departure in pleading. It is a well settled rule, that the replication must not depart from the allegations in the declaration. A departure in a replication is said to be, when the plaintiff quits or departs from the original cause of action in his declaration, and has recourse to another which is distinct from and does not fortify the first. In the present case the cause of action laid in the declaration, is the breaking and entering of the plaintiff’s close, and breaking down his stable door, &c. with force and arms, &c. The defence unqualifiedly admits the whole charge in the declaration to be true, but avers that the defendants might lawfully do so, because of, and by virtue of, two certain writs of execution, which it is alleged were in the hands of the sheriff, to be levied on the goods and chattels, &c. of one Teel, and that two certain geldings, the goods and chattels of the said Teel, were on the premises and in the stable of him the said plaintiff and that they broke and entered as charged, &c. to execute the said geldings as the goods and chattels of the said Teel, as they lawfully might, &c. Now if the whole of the facts alleged in justification are not true, the plaintiff’s cause of action stands confessed. . The justification set up consists of two distinct sets of facts. First, as to the existence of the writs of execution against the goods and chattels of Teel, &c. Secondly, as to the two geldings being the goods and chattels of Teel, &c. Both must be true or the plaintiff must recover. The writs of execution against Teel could not justify an entry into the close of a stranger, unless the goods and chattels of Teel were there: hence both sets of facts must be true, or the plaintiff must recover. All the plaintiff had to do, to sustain his declaration, was, in a proper manner to deny either one or both of these facts; for if either should prove to be untrue, the cause of action would stand confessed. The replication admits the fact of the existence of the executions to be true, but denies that the said geldings were the goods and chattels of Teel.

This replication is very informal, but it is clearly good in substance. The defendants have confessed that they are tres*18passers, in mariner and form as they stand charged, if these said geldings were not the goods and chattels of the said Teel, and the plaintiff has tendered an issue upon that fact. All the other facts in the case stand confessed on both sides, leaving that single allegation in dispute. If that allegation shall prove to be false, the plaintiff will recover his cause of action laid in the declaration, just as it is there laid. The simple question is, were these geldings the goods and chattels of Teel, and subject to these executions? It is perfectly immaterial to whom the geldings did belong, if they did not belong to Teel.

W. W. Wick and J. Morrison, for the plaintiff. C. Fletcher, for the defendants.

The demurrer to this replication is general and should have been overruled. There is nothing that presents even a shadow of a departure in pleading, and the informality of the replication cannot be reached by a general demurrer (1).

Per Curiam.

The judgment is reversed with costs. Cause remanded, &c.

In the case in the text, the plaintiff could not deny all the allegations in the plea, by tho general replication of de injuria sua propria absque tali causa,; because the execution, which is a matter of record, could only be denied by a replication of nul tiel record. But the plaintiff might, after admitting or protesting the execution, have replied de injuria sua propria absque residuo causee; and such a replication would have put the defendants on tho proof that the horses of the execution debtor wore in the plaintiff’s stable, and that the sheriff, and the defendants by his command, entered and seized the horses under the execution. Lucas et al. v. Nockells, 10 Bingh. 157.

The sheriff may break open the outer door of a bam or out house, detached from the dwelling houso, in order to execute a fieri facias, even without making a demand that the door should be opened. Penton v. Browne, 1 Sid. 181, 186. Wats, on Sheriffs, 173. Smith’s Lead. Cas. 45. In a loading case respcctingthe sheriff’s right to break open doors, the following points are resolved:

1. The houso of every one is to him as his castle and fortress, as well for his defence against injury and violence, as for his repose.

2. When any house is recovered by any real action or by eject firmce¿ the sheriff may break tho houso and deliver tho seisin or possession to the demandant or plaintiff.

3. When the king is a party, the sheriff (if the doors be not open) may break the party’s house, either to arrest him or to do other execution of the process, if otherwise he cannot enter. But before he breaks it, he ought to signify the cause of his coming, and to make request to open the doors.

4. When the door is open, the sheriff may enter the house and do execution, at the suit of any subject, either of the body ox of tho goods; but the sheriff cannot, (on request made and denial,) at the suit of a common person, bréale the defendant’s house, sc., to execute any process at the suit of any subject.

*195. The house of any one is not a casile or privilege but for himself, and doos not extend to protoct any person who flies to his house, or the goods of any other which are brought into his house, to prevent a lawful execution and to escape the process of law. Semaynes case, 5 Coke’s Rep. 91.

If the defendant, after an arrest on civil process, escape to the house of a stranger or to his own house^ the officer may, upon fresh suit, break open the outer door in order to íetake him. And in criminal cases, tho outer door of tho house of the defendant or a stranger may bo broken opon by the officer, in order to arrest the defendant in the first instance. Foster’s Cr. Law, 319, 329. So, also, such door of a stranger’s house may be broken, for tho purpose of levying an execution on the defendant’s goods, if they be fraudulently concealed there. Wats, on Sheriffs, 59, 174.

In the cases, whether criminal or civil, in which tho sheriff may break open the outer door of a dwelling house, either of the defendant or of a stranger, to execute process, a demand of admission should first be made. Burdett v. Abbott, 14 East, 1, 163.—Lannock v. Brown et al. 2 Barn. & Ald. 592.-—Foster’s Cr. Law, 319, 320.—Hutchison v. Birch, 4 Taunt. 619.

The inner door of a house, though it be the door of a lodger’s room, and cupboards, trunks, &c. may bo broken opon by an officer, even in civil casos, to execute the duty of his office, without any demand that they should be opened. Lee v. Gansel, Cowp. 1.—Hutchison v. Birch, supra.—Lloyd v. Sandilands, 8 Taunt. 250.

The sheriff enters the house of a stranger at his peril. If the defendant or his goods be not found there, tho sheriff is a trespasser. It is otherwise, however, if the sheriff enter the defendant’s own house. He may not find tho defendant or his goods there, and still justify the ontry. And it is held, that under a fieri facias against the goods of an intostate, in the hands of his administratrix, or of her husband'and her, in her right since the marriage,—tho sheriff may justify an entry into the husband’s house to search for goods of the intestate, though nono bo found there, that being the most natural custody for them. Cooke v. Birt, 5 Taunt. 765.

On tho subject of this note, vide Smith’s Leading Cases, 39 and notes.—State v. Thackam et al. 1 Bay’s Rep. 358.—State v. Smith, 1 New Ham. Rep. 346.— Haggerty v. Wilber, 16 Johns. Rep. 287.—1 East’s Cr. Law, 321 to 324.