delivered the opinion of the court. These three cases are precisely alike, and present the same questions for decision. They were actions of ejectment brought in the Circuit court of the city of Biehmond. In each of them the declaration was filed at rules, on the first Monday in February, 1860, with proof of service of notice thereof according to law; andthere
It is contended that the judgment is erroneous on one of two grounds, viz: 1st, that section 44, of chapter 171 of the Code, does not apply to an action of ejectment; and, if it does, 2ndly, that it was competent for the court after the fifteenth day of the term, for good cause shown, to permit the defendants to plead to issue and set aside the office judgment; and good cause was in fact shown.
We will proceed to consider the first of these grounds to-wit: Whether the said section applies to an action of ejectment. It is in these words:
“Every judgment entered in the office in a ease wherein there is no order for an enquiry of damages, and every non-suit or dismission therein, shall, if not previously set aside, become a final judgment, if the case he in the general or a Circuit court, of the last clay of the next term, or the fifteenth day thereof (whichever shall happen first), and if it be in a county or corporation court, of the last day of the next quarterly term, and have the same effect, by way of lien or otherwise, as a judgmentPage 426ren^ere^ *n the court at sucli 'term. Every such, judgment for any plaintiff shall be for the principal sum due, with interest thereon from the time it became payable (or commenced bearing interest) till payment, unless it be in such action as is mentioned in the 11th section of chapter 144, in which ease it shall be according to that section.”
The above section, it will be perceived, is expressly confined to office judgments in cases-wherein there is no order for an enquiry of damages, and the question at once aiqseSj wliat are those cases ? The next two preceding sections answer the question. The 42d section, providing for an office judgment against a defendant in default, directs that “judgment shall be entered against him, with an order for the damages to be enquired into, when Such enquiry is proper.” The 43d section is in these words:
“There need be no such enquiry in an action of debt upon any bond or other writing for the payment of money, of against the drawer or endorsers of a bill of exchange or negotiable note, or in action of debt or sci-re facias upon a judgment or recognizance.”
Then follows the 44th section before recited, commencing with the words, “Every judgment entered in the office in a case wherein there is no order for an enquiry of damages;” thus obviously referring to the cases mentioned in the 43d section, and having the same meaning as if the 44th section had commenced in these words : “Every judgment entered in the office in an action of debt upon any bond or other writing for the payment of money,” &c., as set out in the 43d section. That the 44th section was intended to be confined to those eases, is further shown by the latter branch of the section, which declares, that “ Every such judgment for any plaintiff shall be for the principal sum due, with interest thereon from the time it became payable,” &e.
The 43d section is the only law which dispenses with the necessity for an enquiry of damages; which, therefore, is necessary in every ease not enumerated in that section, of an office judgment against a defendant. Before the enactment of that section, such an enquiry was dispensed with, only in an action of debt upon bond, bill, promissory note, or other writing for the payment of money or tobacco. In every other action in which a judgment was obtained in the office by the plaintiff, an order for an enquiry of damages, was made at the same rule day at which the conditional judgment was confirmed. 1 Rob. Pr. old ed. p. 170. And the law declared, that “all judgments by default, obtained in the office for want of appearance or plea, in which no writ of enquiry shall be awarded, and which shall 'not be set aside on some day of the next succeeding term; and all non suits and dismissions obtained in the office and not so set aside, shall be considered as final judgments of the last day of the term, and executions may issue thereupon accordingly,” &c. 1 R. C. 1819,. p. 508, § 79. There have been several decisions of this court upon the construction of that law; most which are stated ill 1 Rob. Pr. cited supra.
In Hunt, &c., v. McRae, 6 Munf. 454, the declaration was in debt for money lent, but said nothing of any contract in writing, and a judgment was confirmed in the office which became final. This court was of opinion, that the judgment was erroneous, in being made final on a declaration claiming a debt due for money loaned, and not alleged to be founded on any specialty, bill, or note in writing. It was therefore reversed, and
Metcalfe v. Battaile, Gilm. 191, it was held that a neg°tiable note was not, as to the indorser, a note for the payment of money, within the meaning of the law in question; and that, consequently, judgment could not q,e ren(jere¿ jn gueh case, without the intervention of a jury. That was an action of debt against the indorser of the note; whose contract, the court said, was not a writing for the payment of money absolutely, but a collateral contract to pay it under certain circumstances.
In Hatcher v. Lewis, 4 Rand. 152, a joint action of debt was brought against drawer and 'endorsers of a negotiable note, and it was held that an office judgment could not be confirmed against all or either of the defendants without a writ of enquiry.
In Rees v. Conococheague Bank, 5 Id. 326, the action was against the maker of a note, which was protested for non payment, and the protest had this indorsement upon it, “$550 has been received, at sundry times, on account of the within note, July 19th, 1819.” An office judgment was entered for the whole amount of the note, without allowing the credit. There was reason-to believe that the plaintiff intended to contest the credit. This court was of opinion, that “a final judgment, when no plea is filed, may be rendered in the office at rules for principal and interest, when the action is founded upon any instrument in writing for the payment of an ascertained sum of money. But if the plaintiff, by any paper filed by himself, shows that the defendant is entitled to a credit, the judgment ought either to be entered subject to such credit, or, if the plaintiff refuses to take a judgment in that way, a writ of enquiry should be awarded.” And’ accordingly the judgment was reversed,' and the cause remanded with direction to award a writ of enquiry.
These cases clearly show that under the Code of 1813, the award of a writ of enquiry was necessary in every case of an office judgment against a defendant, except case of an action of debt upon an instrument of writing for the payment of an ascertained sum of money, absolutely and unconditionally. The present Code, ch. 171, § 43, seems to have made no other change in this respect than to extend the exception to an action of debt against endorsers, as well as the drawer, of a bill of exchange or negotiable note;'and to an action of debt or scirefacias upon a judgment or recognizance; in which cases it had been held, as we have seen, that a writ of enquiry was necessary, under the Code of 1819. It follows, therefore, that an order for an enquiry of damages is necessary, under the present Code, when an office judgment is entered against a defendant in ejectment; unless, as is contended, there be something in chapter 135 of the Code, concerning “the action of ejectment,” which dispenses with the nécessity for such an order. Let us examine that question.
That chapter makes most important and radical changes' in the nature of the action of ejectment. It abolishes the fictitious features of the action; requires it to be conducted in the names of the real parties; gives it the effect of a writ of right, as well as of an action of ejectment under the former law; applies it to the recovery of dower, and to the recovery not only of the principal subject itself of the action, but of the mesne profits, &c., which were formerly recoverable only in an action of trespass therefor, brought after the conclusion of the action of ejectment; makes the judgment in the action
Anciently, the action of ejectment had no other object hut to recover damages by a lessee against any person who ousted him of his term. Afterwards, complete justice was done in the action by applying it to the recovery, as well of the term itself, as of damages for the ouster and detention. Still later, it was used mainly for trying titles, and a string of legal fictions wasinvented to make it available for that purpose. In this last phase, the title or possession of the subject was the only substantial object of the suit, and damages for the ouster and detention, though still declared for, were merely nominal in the action itself, but were recoverable in a separate action of trespass for mesne profits. The present Code dispenses with the necessity of an action of trespass for mesne profits, and makes the damages recoverable in the action of ejectment. It requires the declaration to claim damages, and provides that “if the plaintiff file with his declaration a statement of the profits and other damages which he means to demand and the jury find in -his favor, they shall at the same time, unless the court otherwise order,
We conclude, upon this branch of the subject, that an office judgment in an action of ejectment, does not
The conclusion to which we have come upon the first ground of error, renders it unnecessary to express any opinion upon the other; and it would be improper to do so, especially as that ground impugns the decision of this court in Enders' ex'ors v. Burch, 15 Gratt. 64, which was a - unanimous decision of a court of four judges, whereas the court now sitting Consists of but three. As, however, the question was argued by the counsel in these cases, and has, to some extent, been reconsidered by the court, (all the members of which were also members of the court that decided that case,) it may be proper to state that two of the judges now sitting entertain some doubt of the correctness of that decision, and the court is therefore of opinion that a re-argument of the question ought to be heard whenever it may come up for decision before a full court.
In each of the three cases the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded to the Circuit court, with instructions to allow the plaintiffs in error to plead to issue if they shall again offer to do so, and for further proceedings therein to a final judgment, in conformity with the foregoing opinion.
Judgment reversed.