UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LOS ANGELES LAW LIBRARY C 5 COMMON-LAW PLEADING: ITS HISTORY AND PRINCIPLES. COMMON-LAW PLEADING: ITS HISTORY AND PRINCIPLES. INCLUDING DICEY'S EULES COJSTCEROT^G PARTIES TO ACTIONS AND stephe:n^'S rules of pleading. BY R. ROSS PERRY, OF THE BAB OF THE DISTBICT OF COLUMBIA. LECTUKEK ON COMMON-LAW PLEADING IN THE GEORGETOWN (d.C.) UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL. BOSTON: LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY. 189T. T Copyright, 1897, By E. Koss Peret. University Press: John Wilson ahd Son, Cambridge, U.S.A. PREFACE. In my experience as a lecturer to students upon Common-Law Pleading, I have felt the need of a text- book containing the discoveries (for such they may properly be called) upon the subject made in the last twenty-five years by such men as Pollock and Maitland in the mother-country, and Bigelow, Holmes, Thayer, Ames, and others among ourselves. I have here endeavored to gratify that need. The fundamental principles of the common-law with respect to actions can never be better stated than they have been by Chitty. Stephen has performed a like task for the rules of pleading, while Dicey has embraced the law governing the selection of the parties to an action in an admirable series of rules. These three treatises have been, so far as was practicable, combined here, and the language of their authors has been used with the fewest possible modifications. Free use has been also made of the third book of Blackstone's Commentaries. Therefore this work, if I may venture to give it that name, pretends to be only a re-statement in a con- densed form of what has been said upon its subject by 818201 Vi PREFACE. many authors in many books. Indeed, wherever the language of the particular author seemed to be the most appropriate it has been adopted. The only scope for original writing upon this subject is in the line of discovery followed by the distinguished men whom I have already named ; this path is necessarily closed to the lawyer in active practice at the bar. As this book is intended for the student and is de- signed to teach the principles of a science which was long since perfected, no effort has been made to digest recent decisions, or even to refer to them (save for some special purpose). The cases cited are almost exclusively the leading English authorities referred to by Chitty and by Stephen. Indeed, Saunders' Reports furnish the best collection of cases to be consulted by the student, who should supplement his studies by a close perusal of those Reports or of Ames' Cases on Pleading. As the subject of this work is pleading as it existed at common-law, the present tense is frequently used in describing things which have long since ceased to exist. It will perhaps be objected that in speaking (pp. 46, 47) of the modern conception of a contract, I have unduly magnified the element of consent at the expense of that of consideration. Sir Frederick Pollock is my authority for what I have said. In " The Principles of Contract " (p. 2), he states : " The first and most essen- tial element of an agreement is the consent of the parties. There must be the meeting of two minds in one and the same intention." Again (p. 8), " Perhaps PEEFACE. VU it (consideration) is to be regarded rather as a condi- tion generally (though not always) imposed by a posi- tive rule of English law as needful to the formation of a binding contract than as an elementary constituent of an agreement." I am much indebted to Joseph J. Darlington, Leonard H. Poole, Henry W. Sohon, and E. Richard Shipp, of the District of Columbia bar, for assistance in the revision of proof, and also for suggestions as to the body of the work. The index and the tables of cases and of contents have been carefully prepared by J. M. Gould of the Massachusetts bar, to whom I am under obligations for that part of the work. E. ROSS PEERY. Washikgton, D. C, July 26, 1897. TABLE OF CONTENTS. Page Introduction 1 CHAPTER I. Of Remedies 11 Self-help 12 by the mere act of the parties 15 by the joint act of all parties concerned 17 by sole operation of law . . 18 CHAPTER 11. Of Courts ... 20 Courts of record ... 21 not of record ... 21 in general 21 Ancient prominence of law of procedure 22 Anglo-Saxon courts 24 Anglo-Norman courts 28 The Curia Regis 28 Rise of the Court of Exchequer 29 Justices in Eyre 30 Birth of the Court of Common Pleas 31 Court of King's Bench 31 The judicial circuits 32 Jurisdiction of Court of King's Bench 34 of Court of Common Pleas 35 of Court of Exchequer 35 Court of Exchequer Chamber 36 House of Peers 36 CHAPTER m. Of forms of Actions 38 Real actions 40 development of . 42 X TABLE OF CONTENTS. Page Mixed actions 45, 93 Quare Impedit and Waste 45 Personal actions 46 division of, into (1) Formed actions ex contractu, which include : — debt 48 detinue 55 covenant 57 account 60 scire facias 60 (2) Formed actions ex delicto, or in tort, which include : — trespass 63 replevin 73 Inadequacy of formed actions 77 Actions on the case 77 assumpsit 82 trover 90 Ejectment 93 mesne profits 100 Consequences of a mistake in choosing the form of action . . . 101 Extraordinary forms of actions 102 mandamus 102 procedendo • 103 prohibition 103 quo warranto 104 informations 105 habeas corpus 105 certiorari 107 writs of error 108 CHAPTER IV. Of the joinder and election of Actions 109 Joinder of actions 109 Election of actions Ill CHAPTER V. Parties to Actions . 116 Dicey 's rules for the selection of parties 116 The persons who can sue and be sued 116 General rules applicable to all actions 117 Actions on Contract — Plaintiffs — General Rules 117 principal and agent 118 partners and unincorporated companies 119 TABLE OP CONTENTS. Xi Page corporations and incorporated bodies 120 husband and wife 121 bankrupt and trustee 121 executors, administrators, and heirs 122 Actions on Contract — Defendants — General Rules ..... 124 principal and agent 125 partners and unincorporated companies 126 corporations and incorporated bodies 126 infants 127 husband and wife 127 bankrupt and trustee 128 executors, administrators, and heirs 129 Actions for Tort — Plaintiffs — General Rules 130 principal and agent 131 partners 131 husband and wife 131 bankrupt and trustee 132 executors and administrators 132 Actions for Tort — Defendants — General Rules 132 principal and agent 133 partners 133 corporations 133 infants 134 husband and wife 134 bankrupt and trustee 134 executors and administrators 134 Ejectment 134 Consequences of Non-Joinder and Mis-Joinder of Parties .... 135 CHAPTER VI. Of the Original Writ 137 CHAPTER VII. Of the proceedings in an action from its commencement TO ITS termination 148 The process 148 Bill of Middlesex, latitat and quo minus 153 The appearance of the defendant 158 The pleadings , 159 Continuances 163 The declaration 164 Proceeding by bill 167 xii TABLE OF CONTENTS. Page Production of suit 168 The defence 169 Examination of the plaintiff's suit 1G9 Offer of proof 170 Origin of special pleading 171 The demurrer 174 Pleas 175 Dilatory pleas 175 Peremptory pleas 175, 178 The issue 179 Occasional pleas and incidents 182 Pleas puis darraign continuance 182 Demand of view 183 Voucher to warranty 184 Profert and oyer 185 Imparlances 187 Counter-pleas to oyer, &c 188 Demurrer-book — paper-book 189 Amendments 189 Entering the issue on record 190 Modes of trial 191 Decision of issues in law 191 Trial of issues in fact 191 old forms — (1) by witnesses 193 (2) by oath 193 (3) by ordeal 194 (4) by battle 195 Miscellaneous proofs 196 The trial by the record 196 Trial by jury 197 venire facias 201 trials at nisi prius 201 trial at bar 202 conduct of jury trial 203 variance 204 the verdict 205 incidents of jmy trial 205 Bill of exceptions 206 Demurrer to evidence 206 Special verdict 207 General verdict subject to a special case 208 Proceedings subsequent to verdict 209 motions, for a new trial 210 in arrest of judgment 211 for judgment non obstante veredicto 212 for a repleader 213 for a venire facias de novo 215 TABLE OF CONTENTS, xiii Page The judgment 215 for the plaintiff 216 for the defendant 217 by default, confession, &c \. 218 Entering judgment on record 220 Execution 221 Writs of error 222 CHAPTER Vm. Of the rules of pleading 226 Abstract of proceedings in a supposed case 227 CHAPTER IX. Op rules which tend simply to the production of an issue 231 Rule I. — After the declaration the parties must at each STAGE DEMUR, OR PLEAD BY WAY OF TRAVERSE, OR BY WAY OF confession and avoidance 231 I. Of demurrers 232 1. Of the nature and properties of a demurrer .... 232 2. Of the effect of passing a fault by without demurrer . 236 of the aider of faults by pleading over 236 of the aider of faults by verdict 237 of the aider of faults by the statutes of jeofails and amendments 238 8. Of the considerations which determine the pleader in his election to demur or plead 239 11. Of pleadings 240 1. Of the nature and properties of traverses 240 of common traverses 240 of general issues 241 of the traverse de injuria 2.51 of special traverses 255 the inducement 263, 264, 266 there must be no traverse upon a traverse . . . 264 Of traverses in general 266 (1) a traverse must deny " modo et forma " . . 266 (2) a traverse must not be taken on matter of law 268 (3) a traverse must not be taken upon matter not alleged 269 (4) a party to a deed, who traverses it, must plead " non est factum " 270 XIV TABLE OP CONTENTS. Page 2. Of the nature and properties of pleadings in confession and avoidance 272 of pleas in justification or excuse, and pleas in dis- cbarge 272 of color 273 3. Of the nature and properties of pleadings in general . 279 (1) every pleading must be an answer to the whole of what is adversely alleged 279 (2) every pleading is taken to confess such travers- able matters alleged on the other side as it does not traverse 281 of protestation 281 Exceptions to the rule 283 In case of dilatory pleas 283 pleadings in estoppel 283 new assignments 283 extra viam 285 Inference from the ride — that it is sufficient to demur, traverse, or confess and avoid 288 Exception, as to replication showing breach of award . . . 288 Rule II. — Upon a traverse issue must be tendered . . 289 Different forms of tendering issue 289 Another form of the rule, viz. , that upon a negative and affirmative the pleading shall conclude to the country, but otherwise with a verification . 290 Exception — that when new matter is introduced, the pleading should always conclude with a verification 290 Rule III. — Issue, when well tendered, must be accepted 292 Of the similiter 292 Of the joinder in demurrer 293 CHAPTER X. Of rules wniCH tend to secure the materiality of the ISSUE 295 Rule. — All pleadings must contain matter pertinent and material 295 Rules subordinate and illustrative — 1. Traverse must not be taken on an immaterial point . 295 But where there are several material allegations, it is in the option of the pleader to traverse which he pleases 297 - 2. A traverse must not be too large nor too narrow . . . 297 But a party may, in general, traverse a material alle- gation of title or estate to the extent to which it is alleged, though it needed not to be alleged to that extent 299 TABLE OP CONTENTS. XV CHAPTER XI. Page Of rules which tend to produce singleness or unity in the issue 303 KuLE I. — Pleadings must not be double 303 Of the nature of duplicity in general 303 Rules subordinate and illustrative — 1. A pleading will be double that contains several answers, whatever be the class or quality of the answer . . • 307 2. Matter may suffice to make a pleading double, though it be ill pleaded 307 3. But matter immaterial will not operate to make a plead- ing double 308 4. Nor matter that is pleaded only as necessary inducement to another allegation 309 5. Nor matters, however multifarious, that together con- stitute but one connected proposition or entii-e point — cumulative traverses 310 6. Nor a mere protestation 313 Of several counts 313 Of several pleas 317 effect of the statute 4 Anne c. 16, § 4 318, 320 Rule II. — It is not allowable both to plead and to DEMUR TO THE SAME MATTER 322 CHAPTER XII. Of RULES WHICH TEND TO PRODUCE CERTAINTY OR PARTICU- LARITY IN THE ISSUE 323 Rule I. — The pleadings must have certainty of place . 323 Of venue — of the form in which the venue is to be laid 323 of its effect upon the venire 328 of the state of practice as to laying the venue truly . . 329 Rule II. — The pleadings must have certainty of time . 334 Rule HI. — The pleadings must specify quality, quantity, and value 336 Rule IV. — The pleadings must specify the names of persons 339 Rule V. — The pleadings must show title 341 I. Of the case where a party alleges title in himself, or in another whose authority he pleads 341 1. Of alleging a title of possession 341 XVI TABLE OF CONTENTS. Page 2. Of alleging title in its full and precise extent . . . 342, 345 of the allegation of the title itself .... 341-344 of showing its derivation 315 as to estates in fee simple 345 as to particular estates 346 where a party claims by descent 34S where a party claims by conveyance 348 3. Of alleging a general freehold title 350 II. Of the case where a party alleges title in his adversary . 351 Exceptions to rule : No title need be shown where the opposite party is estopped from denying it 354 No title need be shown in avowries or cognizances for rent, &c 355 Rule VI. — The pleadings must show authority .... 355 Rule VII. — Ix general, whatever is alleged ix pleading MUST be alleged WITH CERTAINTY 358 SUBORDINATE RULES TENTJING TO LIMIT OR RESTRAIN THE DEGREE OF CERTAINTY. 1. It is not necessary, in pleading, to state that which is merely matter of evidence 362 2. It is not necessary to state matter of which the court takes notice ex oflBcio 364 3. It is not necessary to state matter which would come more properly from the other side 366 4. It is not necessary to aUege cii'cumstances necessarily implied 369 5. It is not necessary to allege what the law wUl presume . . 369 6. A general mode of pleading is allowed, where great prolix- ity is thereby avoided 370 7. A general mode of pleading is often sufficient, where the allegation on the other side must reduce the matter to certainty 372 8. No greater particularity is required than the nature of the thing pleaded will conveniently admit 377 9. Less particularity is required when the facts lie more in the knowledge of the opposite party than of the party l^leading 378 10. Less particularity is necessary in the statement of matter of inducement or aggravation than in the main allegations 379 11. With respect to acts valid at common law, but regulated as to the mode ot performance by statute, it is sufficient to use such certainty of allegation as was sufficient before the statute 380 TABLE OF CONTENTS. XVU CHAPTER Xin. Page Of rules which tend to prevent obscurity and confusion in pleading 382 Rule I. — Pleadings must not be insensible or repugnant . 382 Rule II. — Pleadings must not be ambiguous or doubtful IN meaning; and when two different meanings present themselves, that construction shall be adopted which IS most unfavorable to the party pleading 383 Of certainty to a common intent 388 Of negatives pregnant 384 Rule III. — Pleadings must not be argumentative .... 386 Rule IV. — Pleadings must not be hypothetical, or in the alternative 388 Two affirmatives or two negatives do not make a good issue 387, 388 Rule V. — Pleadings must not be by way of recital, but MUST be positive IN THEIR FORM 389 Rdle VI. — Things are to be pleaded according to their LEGAL EFFECT 390 Rule VII. — Pleadings should observe the known forms of expression, as contained in approved precedents . . . 391 Rule VIII. — Pleadings should have their proper formal commencements and conclusions 392 Rule IX. — A pleading which is bad in part, is bad alto- gether 401 CHAPTER XIV. Of rules which tend to prevent prolixity and delay in pleading 403 Rule I. — There must be no departure in pleading . . . 403 Rule H. — Where a plea amounts to the general issue it should be so pleaded 408 Rule III. — Surplusage is to be avoided 412 CHAPTER XV. Of certain miscellaneous rules 415 Rule I. — The declaration should commence with a recital of the original writ 415 Rule II. — The declaration must be conformable to the original writ 417 Rule III. — The declaration should, in conclusion, lay damages, and allege production of suit 418 Rule IV. — Pleas must be pleaded in due order .... 420 6 xviii TABLE OF CONTENTS. Page Rule V Pleas must be pleaded with defence .... 421 Rule VI. — Pleas in abatement must give the plaintiff a BETTER WRIT OR BILL 424 Rule VII. — Dilatory pleas must be pleaded at a prelim- inary STAGE OF the SUIT 424 Rule VIII. — All affirmative pleadings which do not CONCLUDE TO THE COUNTRY MUST CONCLUDE WITH A VERIFI- CATION 425 Rule IX. — In all pleadings, where a deed is alleged under WHICH the party CLAIMS OR JUSTIFIES, PROFERT OF SUCH DEED MUST BE MADE 426 Rule X. — All pleadings must be properly entitled of THE COURT AND TERM 431 Rule XI. — All pleadings ought to be true 432 Appendix 435 Index 453 ABBREVIATIONS, In Addition to such as are in Current Use. Anglo-Saxon Law . . Essays in Anglo-Saxon Law. Little, Brown, & Co., Boston, 1876. Bl. Com Blackstone's Commentaries, Hammond's edi- tion, 1890. Chit. PI Chitty's Pleading, Volume I., 4th London edition, 1825. Evans' PI Evans' Pleading, Edward J. Coale, Baltimore, 1827. Gould's PI. . . . Gould's Pleadmg, 4th edition, 1873. Hist. Pr. . , . . History of Procedure in England, by Melville M. Bigelow, 1880. Ker. Eq. Ju. . . . An Historical Sketch of the Equitable Jurisdic- tion of the Court of Chancery, by D. M. Kerly, 1890. Holmes' C. L. ... The Common Law, by O. W. Holmes, Jr., 1881. Min. Inst Institutes of Common and Statute Law, by John B. Minor, 1878. P. & M. Hist. . . . The History of English Law before the Time of Edward I., by Su- Frederick Pollock and Frederic William Maitland, 1895. Reeves' Hist. . . . Reeves' History of the English Law. Finlason's edition, London, 1869. Steph. PI Stephen's Pleading, Tyler's American, from 2d London (1827) edition. Thay. Jury .... Development of Trial by Jury, by James Bradley Thayer, 1896. TABLE OF CASES CITED. [the ebtekences are to the pages.] Abbot v. Chapman Adams v. Cross 844, Aglionby v. Towerson Alexander v. Mawman Alsope V. Sytwell Amory v. Brodrick 324 Andrew v. Whitehead Angle V. Chicago, &c. R. R. Co. Anon. (Kelw. 103 b) (5 Mod. 18) (12 Mod. 537) (2 Salk. 519) 236, 237, (2 Salk. 643) (3 Salk. 353) 263, ( 2 Vent. 196) (2 Wils. 150) Arlington (Lord) v. Merricke Arnfield v. Bate Arundel (Corporation of) v. Bow man Ashby V. White Asliford V. Thornton Aslin V. Parkin Attorney-General v. Meller Attwood V. Davis Auberie v. James Austin V. Jervoise Aylesbury v. Harvey 351, 353, 248 347 370 423 379 402 336 82 278 246 410 380 343 264 295 235 375 332 332 11 66 98 352, 378 400 385 359 427 Baker v. Blackman 297 V. Dewey 271 Baldwin's Case 285 Ball V. Squarry 187 Banfill V. Leigh 427, 428 Ranks v. Pratt 370 Barker v. Braham 356 V. Lade 390 Barnes v. Hunt 287 Bartley v. Godslake 433 Barton v. Webb 370 Bateman v. Allen 350 Bates V. Cort 235 Batt?;. Bradley 287 Bayard v. Malcolm 434 Baylis v. Dinely 245 Beak v. Tyrrell 362 Beal V. Simpson 268 Belasyse i'. Hester 2.35 Belk i: Broadbent 356 Bell V. Alexander 433 Bellamy's Case 427 Benbridge v. Day 402 Bennet v. Filkins 259, 399 Bertie v. Pickering 337 Birch I'. Bellamy 380 I'. Wilson 408, 410, 411 Bird V. Randall 250 Bisse V. Harcourt 395, 399 Blackborough v. Davis 348 Blackmore v. Tidderley 386 Blake v. Foster 256, 3.52 Bleke v. Grove 307, 308 Blizard v. Kelly 391 Blockley v. Slater 347 Bolton V. Carlisle (Bishop of) 233 V. Cannon 322 Bond V. Dustin 212 Bounel v. Fouke 86 Bonner v. Wilkinson 271 Bonzi ;;. Stewart 311 Bowdell V. Parsons 233 Bowditch r. Mawley 340 Bowyer's Case 327 Bowyer v. Cook 392, 393 Boyce v. Whitaker 365 Braban v. Bacon 359, 370 Bradbnrn v. Kennerdale 302 Braddish v. Bishop 324 Bradley v. Fisher 69 Bray w. Freeman 332 Bret (;. Audar 374 Bridgewater v. Bythway 296 Brindley v. Dennett 315, 413 Bristow I'. Wright 412,413 Britton v. Cole 296, 3.56 Broddeck v. Briggs 333 Brooke v. Brooke 237 Brown's Case 347 XXII Brown v. Cornish V. Rands Brudnell v. Roberts Buckingham v. Francis Buckley v. Kenyon V. Rice Thomas Bultivant v. Holnian Burkley v. Wood Burrell v. Dodd Burton v. Webb Butt's Case TABLE OP CASES CITED. The references are to the pages 399 359 256 301 233 340,377,378,391 389 Cain v. C. & P. Telephone Co. Calfe V. Nevil Calvin's Case Cameron v. Reynolds CHmpbell V. Lewis V. St. John Careswell i: Vaughan Carlisle r. Trears Carmack v. Gundry Carr r. Uincliliff Carstairs v. Stein Carver r. Pinckney Carvick v. Blagrave Case V. Barber Casseres v. Bell Chamberlain r. Greenfield, 337, 338, 379 380 Chandler v. Roberts Chapman v. Barney V. Pickersgill Chasemore v. Richards Chatland v. Thornly Cheasley v. Barnes Childes v. Westcot Church V 82 108 324, 333 240 237 293, 294 351 335 413 411 210 428 267, 297, 299 381 369 Cowper V. Garbett Craft V. Boite Crispin v. Williamson Crogate's Case Cromwell's (Lord) Case Crosse v. Hunt Crosskeys Co. v. Rawlings 300 Croucher v. Oldfield 347 Cryps v. Bay n ton 372 Cudlip V. Rundle 382 Cuppledick v. Terwhit Curwen v. Salkeld Cutforthay v. Taylor Cutter V. Powell V. Southern 387 101 369, 370 12 398 287, 357 350 Brownwick, 370, 371, 372, 378 Clarke v. Hougham 204 Clinton (Lord) v. Morton 319 Clue V. Baily 234 Cocker v. Crompton 285 Codner v. Dalby 359 Colborne v. Stockdale 298 Cole V. Hawkins 407 Collet V. Keith (Lord) 355, 357 - — V. Shrewsbury [Bailiffs of] 362 Collins V. Blantern 244 245 Colt r. Coventry (Bishop of) '232 Colthirst V. Bejushin Colton V. Goodridge Cook V. Cox V. Gerrard Cooke V. Birt Cooper -r. Cliitty V. Monke Cornwallis v. Savery, Cotes V. Michill Couling V. Coxe Courtney v. Phelps 383 187, 245 388, 391 207 334 91 384 290, 292, 304. 370, 371 356 213 260, 387 Dale v. Phillipson Dally V. King Darby v. Boucher Davies v. Aston Davis V. Noake Decker v. Pope Denham v. Stephenson 348, Denison v. Richardson Derisley v. Custance 351, De Wolf V. Bevan Deybel's Case Digby V. Fitzharbert Dike V. Ricks Dobbs V. Edmunds Dodd V. Kyffin Doe r. Ploughman Doulson V. Matthews Dovaston v. Payne 344, 368, Dow dale's Case Dowland v. Slade Dowman's Case Draper v. Garratt V. Glassop Dudlow v. Watchorn Duffield r. Scott Dumsday v. Hughes Dundass v. Weymouth (Lord) Dunstall v. Dunstall Dyster v. Battye 252 326, 327 332, 339 252, 254 240 265, 269 259 347 370 354 307 324 402 88,89 405 337 391 245 301 391 85 353, 378 334 353, 378 311 364. 366 264, 292 263 389 247 336 330 383, 384 333 391 362 332 246 403, 407 401, 402 348 412 389 391, 392 Eaton v. Southby 362, 363 Eden's Case 327 Edward v. Watkln 417 Ellison V. Isles 287 Elwis r. Lombe 285 Emerton v. Selby 267 Essington v. Boucher 307 Evans v. Prosser 897 V. Stevens 424 Evers (Lord) v. Buckton 359 Executors of Grenelefe, Case of the Fairclaim v. Shamtitle Finlay ik Chirney 308 98 118 TABLE OF CASES CITED. The references are to the pages. XX 111 Fisher v. Pimbley 403, 407 Fits V. Freestone 248 Fitzpatrick v. Robinson 359 Fletcher v. Pogson 237, 383 Foden v. Haines 266 Foster v. Jackson 235 Fowle V. Welsh 237 Francis Leke's (Sir) Case 299 Freeman i\ Blewett 357 Fulmerston v. Steward 384, 406 29], 378, 274, Gabell v. Shaw Gainsford v. Griffith Gale V. Read Gayle v. Betts Georgia v. Brailsford Gibbs V. Merrell Giffard v. Perkins Gilbert v. Parker Gladhill, ex parte Gledstane v. Hewitt Godfrey v. Saunders Godson V. Good Goodday v. Michell Goodtitle u. Otway Goram v. Sweeting Gordon v. Ellis Gourney v. Fletcher Govett V. Radnidge Granger v. George Green v. Cole Greene v. Jones (xreenhow v. Ilsley Griffitli V. Crockford Griffitiis V. Eyles Grimstead i'. Marlowe Grimwood v. Barritt Grocers' Co. v. Canterbury (Arch- bishop of) ' 268, Groenvelt v. Burnell 362, Guilford (Mayor of) v. Clarke Gundry v. Feltham 79, 257, 342, 388, 315 375 379 288 208 245 40!) 270 21 56 60 400 383 336 299 214 389 112 432 258 285 368 293 389 342 335 269 370 366 234 Haiton v. Jeffreys Hallet V. Byrt Hallowes ?\ Lucy Halsey v. Carpenter Hammond v. Colls Hamond v. Dod Hampson v. Bill Handlord v. Palmer Hard's Case Harding v. Holmes Hardy v. Cathcart Harebottle ).'. Placock Harlow v. Wright Harmer v. Rows Harpur's Case Harris v. Ferrand V. Pett 174, 322 273, 274, 408 397 334, 359 301 384 421 369 54 407 335 45 384 245 336 267 874 Hart ?.-. Longfield Hartley v. Herring Hastrop v. Hastings Hatton V. Morse Hawe i\ Planner Hawke v. Bacon Hawkins v. Eckles Haworth v. Spraggs Hayes v. Bryant Hay man v. Gerrard Heard v. Baskerville Hedges v. Chapman Helier v. Whytier Helliot V. Selby Henderson i\ Withy Hendy v. Stephenson Henry v. Earl Henry Pigot's Case Herlakenden's Case Herries v. Jamieson Herring v. Blacklow Hickman v. Walker Higgins V. Highfield Hill V. Montagu V. Saunders Hillier v. Plympton Hinton i\ Roffey Hoe's Case Holding V. Haling Holland v. Shelley Holler V. Bush Holmes v. Rhodes Holt's Lessee v. Smith Hore V. Chapman Home V. Lewin Horse fall v. Testar Hotliam V. East India Co, Howel V. Richards Huddart v. Rigby Hudson V. Jones Huggins V. Wiseman Huglies V. Phillips Humphreys v. Bethily V. Churchman Huntingtower (Lord) v. Hussey v. Jacob V. More Hutchinson v. Jackson V. Piper Ildeeton v. Ilderton Isaac V. Farrer Jackson v. Pesked V. Wickes Jacobs V. Nelson J'Anson v. Stuart Jaques's Case Jenkins v. Edwards 304, 273, 336, 288, 279, 260, 361, 273, 408, 410, 366, 370, 236, 303, Gardiner 237, 317 377 235 274 435 285 344 424 373 292 9 401 264 416 290 346 280 244 280 318 387 404 336 370 352 373 361 357 333 427 411 374 98 389 261 204 368 390 287 281 371 264 304 305 383 411 420 382 340 323 252 237, 361, 238 293 384 370 409 319 XXIV Jeriny v. Jenny Jevoiis V. Harridge Johns V. Whitley Johnson v. Picket V. Warner Johnstone v. Sutton John Trollop's Case^ Jones ;;. Powell Judin V. Samuel TABLE OF CASES CITED. The references are to the pages. 362, 370 187 306, 346 335 358 237 393 295 402 Keane v. Boycott 245 Keating v. Irish 370 Kempe v. Crews 214 Kenicot i'. Bogan 268 Kennedy v. Georgia State Bank 10 Kent V. "Hall 214 Kerry (Earl of) v. Baxter 374, 375, 377 Kettle v. Bromsall 57 Keyworth ?-. Hill 237 King v. Frazer 391 V. Williams 194 King, The, v. Brereton 388, 389 V. Burdett 324, 333 V. Chester (Bishop of) 281, 334, 336 V. Holland 324, 334 V. KnoUys 366 V. Lyme Regis 364, 365, 384 V. Shakespeare 400 V. Stevens 382 V. Worcester (Bishop of) 264 King qui tam v. Bolton 265 Kingdon v. Nottle 123 Kinlyside v. Thornton 78, 142 Kinnersley c. Cooper 297 Kirwan v. Raborg 101 Knight V. Farnaby 330 v. Synims 336, 337 Kniglits V. Quarles 123 Knox V. Summers 159 342, Lake v. Raw Lamb ' , IMills Lambert v. Cook V. Prince Lane ?.'. Alexander Langford v. Webber Latham v. Rutley Lathbury v. Arnold Lawley v. Gattacre Lay ton i'. Grindall Lea V. Luthell 386 Le Bret v. Papillon 235, 397, 399, 400 Ledesham v. Lubram 386 Lee V. .Clarke 246 I'. Rogers 407 Leech v. Widsley 296 Leneret v. Rivet 359, 374 Lethbridge v. Winter 285 Lewis V. Preston 362 367 355, 356 264 287 298 343 204 349 337 338 Leyfield's Case 275, 426, 428 Lightfoot v. Brightman 237 Littleton v. Richardson 184 Lodge V. Frye 347 London (City of) v. Gorry 85 Long's Case 383 Longueville v. Thistleworth 420 Lumly V. Gye 82 Lynnet v. Wood 408, 409, 410 Magetjder v. Belt 101 Mainwaring v. Newman 427 Manser's Case 304, 373, 383 March v. Freeman 54 Market v. Johnson 280 Marsh v. Bulteel 235, 369 V. Newman 427 Marshall i-. Riggs 389 Martin v. Kesterton 285 V. Smith 388 Matthew v. Hassell 45 Matthews v. Carey 355, 358 McFaul V. Ramsey 8 Medina v. Stoughton 395, 400 INIeeke v. Oxlade 315 Mellor V. Spateman 440 r. Walker 258 Merceron v. Dowson 232 Meredith v. Alleyn 288, 289 Merington v. Becket 433 Meriton v. Briggs 270 Middleton v. Price 357 Millner v. Crowdall 426 IVIints V. Bethil 370, 371, 372, 373, 374 Mole V. Wallis 405 Money r. Leach 206 Moor V. Pudsey 297 Moore v. Plymouth (Earl of) 390 V. Taylor ?i7 Morant v. Sign 278 Moravia v. Sloper 357 Morewood v. Wood 302 Morgan v. Man 407 Morlcy v. 280 INIorrow v. Belcher 307 Mors I'. Thacker 389 Morse v. James 356, 358 Moses V. Macferlan 86 r. United States 205 Mostyn v. Fabrigas 323 Mure V. Kaye 361 Murray v. East India Co. 386 V. Stair (Earl of) 244 Myn V. Cole 384 Nash v. Towne 205 Nelson v. Griffiths 315 Nerot V. Wallace 237, 238 Nevil and Cook's Case 267 Nevill V. Soper 382 TABLE OF CASES CITED. The references are to the pages. Newcastle (Duke of) v. Wright 348, 353 Newhall v. Barnard 298 Newton v. Stubbs 391 Nichol V. Wilton 413 Nichols V. Pawlett 333 Nicholson v. Simpson 281, 288 Northumberland's (Countess of) Case 308 Nowlan v. Geddes 234, 399, 400 O'Brien v. Saxon 252, 253 Oglethorp v. Hyde 375, 376 Onslow V. Smith 393 Osborne v. Rogers 301 Osway V. Bristow 343 Outram r. Morewood 271 Owen V. Reynolds 406 Palmer v. Ekins V. Lawson Paramore i\ Johnson 246, Parkes v. Middleton Parks V. Ross Partridge v. Strange 365, 377, Pasley v. Freeman Peacock v. Bell and Kendal Penn v. Ward Phillips V. Fielding V. Homfray V. Howgate 287, Piggot's Case Pigot's (Henry) Case Pillans V. Van Mierop Pippet V. Hearn 237, Pitt r. Knight V. Russell Plasket V. Beeby Piatt V. Hill Playter's Case Plomer v. Ross Pope V. Skinner V. Tillman Porter v. Gray Powdick V. Lyon Powell V. Fullerton Powers V. Cook 269, 270, Poynter v. Poynter Praed v. Cumberland (Duchess of) Price V. Brown V. Fletcher V. Seaman Priddie and Napper's Case Pullin V. Nicholas Purcell V. Bradley Pyster v. Hemling QoEEN (The) V. Dale 412, 268, 299 367 249 370 207 378 12 446 385 412 118 314 235 244 84 391 293 353 393 365 337 360 267 337 349 402 399 393 384 407 205 413 237 302 386 383 347 339 Raborg v. Peyton Radford v. Harbyn Ralph Bovy's (Sir) Case Rama Chitty v. Hume Rann v. Hughes Read's Case Read v. Brookman Renno v. Bennett Rich V. Pilkington Richards r. Hodges 291, Richardson v. Oxford (Mayor Richley v. Proone Ricketts v. Loftus Rider v. Smith Riggs V. Bullingham Rivers v. Griffith Robb V. Vos Robert Bradshaw's Case Robert Pilford's Case Roberts v. Mariett Robinson v. Corbett V. Rayley 8, 253, 261, V. Smith Roe V. Lord V. Vernon Rose V. Standen Routh V. Weddell Rowe V. Roach V. Tutte Rowland v. Veale XXV 54 279 296, 367 320 84 297 428 254 235 373, 403 of) 265, 268 433 296 351, 378 379 339 115 378, 379 418 404 271, 272 310, 311 347 348 347 383 235 340 401 356, 357 Sabine v. Johnstone St. Germains (Earl of) v. Willan St. John V. St. John 366^ St. Louis &c. Ry. v. McBride Salisbury's (Bishop of) Case Salter v. Purchell Saunders's Case Saunders v. Hussey Sayre r. Minns Scavage r. Hawkins Scilley v. Dally Scott V. Brest Searl ;;. Bunnion Selby V. Bardons Shad well v. Berthoud Shaw ?'. Alvanley (Lord) Sheers ?'. Brooks Shepheard's Case Sherland r. Heaton Shum V. Farrington Sicard ;;. Davis Skevill V. Avery Slade's Case Slade V. Dowland IK Drake Smith V. Bellows V. Dovers V. Feverell 408, 409, 344: 290, 292; 346 343, 346 370 343 3. 385 395 280, 401 367 159 379 254 410 345 360 345 .347 324 ,347 252 433 320 369 347 389 372 101 347 85 391 432 101 262 368 XXTl TABLE OF CASES CITED. The references are to the pages. Smitli V. Yeomans 432 Spieres v. Parker 237 Stebbins v. Insurance Co. 101 Stephens i». Arthur 422 Stibbs V. Clough 187 Stone V. Bliss 359 Stowell V. Zouch (Lord) 366, 367 Street v. Hopkinson 399, 400 V. Rigby 18 Stroud V. Gerard (Lady) 390, 391 Svvinnerton v. Stafford (Marquis of) 210 Symmons v. Knox 332 Talbot v. Hopewood 400 Tampian v. Newsam 421 Tatem v, Perient 299 Taylor v. Cole 287 V. Eastwood 278 342 V. Needham 271 272 V. Smith 287 Thomas r. Hanscombe 315 V. Heathorn 285 280 V. Vandermoolen 433 Thornton v. Adams 383 Thrale v. London (Bishop of) 265 Tippet V. May 280 Tipping V. Johnson 293 Titley v. Foxall 358 Tolputt V. Wells 403 Tomlin v. Burlace 388 Took V. Glascock 398 Topping V. Fuge 431 Trevilian v. Seccomb 304 Trueman v. Hurst 401 Turner v. Felgate 356 Union Pacific R. R. Co. v. Wyler 405 Veale v. Warner Vere v. Smith Vincent v. Beston Vooght V. Winch Vynior's Case Wade v. Baker Wallis V. Savil Walsingham's Case Walters v. Mace Warbrook v. Griffin Ward & Blunt's Case Ware v. Boydell 897, 398 290, 291, 406 280 271 848, 369 847 400 366, 367 340 85 411 824 Waring v. Griffiths 342 Warner I'. Wainsford 408, 411 Washbourne v. Barrows 252 Washington, &c., S. P. Co. v. Sickles 229 Washington Gas Co. v. District of Columbia 184 Wats V. King 280 Webb V. Martin 401 Webber v. Tivill 401 Weeks v. Peach 398, 399 Weltale v. Glover 289 West V. Troles 317 Weston V. Charleston 20 V. Mason 237, 238 Wetherell i'. Clerkson 379 V. Howard 267 Wettenhall v. Sherwin 389 Whelpdale's Case 245 White V. Cleaver 373, 374 Whitehead v. Buckland 290, 293 Whitwell V. Bennett 340 Wiat V. Essington 337 Wiggin's Ferry Co. v. 0. & M. Ry. 9 Wilcox V. Skipwith (servant of) 281 Wilder v. Handy 389 Wilkes V. Williams 423 Williams v. Fowler 367 Wilson i: Kemp 292, 399 V. Hobday 369, 370 Wimbish v. Tailbois 377, 378 Wimbleton v. Holdrip 359 Winstone v. Linn 403 Wiscot's Case 350 Witham v. Lewis 215 Witherley v. Sarsfield 388 Witts V. Polehampton 214 Wood V. Budden 299, 300 V. Butts 386, 387 r. Hawkshead 407 Woodcock V. Cole 359 Woolaston v. Webb 379 Wright V. Clements 391 V. Ramscot 331 Wyat V. Aland 382 Yates v. Been V. Carlisle Young V. Gadderer ■;;. Rudd V. Ruddle V. Watson Zouch v. Parsons Zouch & Bamfield's Case 244 412, 413 433 297 297 417 245 387 COMMON-LAW PLEADING, INTRODUCTION. In an address delivered in 1889, by Lord Chief Justice Coleridge, before the law students of Birmingham, he con- trasted the law as it existed in England in 1847 with its con- dition at the time he spoke ; incidentally, he referred to the late Baron Parke, of whom he said : " The ruling power in the courts in 184T was Baron Parke, a man of great and wide legal learning, an admirable scholar, a kind hearted and amiable man, and of remarkable force of mind. These great qualities he devoted to heightening all the absurdities and con- tracting to the very utmost the narrowness of the system of special pleading. The _client was unthought of. . . ._ The right was nothing, the mode of^statiiigj^veryth^ng." ^ After speaking further of Baron Parke's devotion to the technical- ities of special pleading, Lord Coleridge resumed : " Peace be with him. He was a great lawyer, a man of high character and powerful intellect. No smaller man could have produced such results. If he ever were to revisit the glimpses of the moon, one shudders to think of his disquiet. No absque-hoc, no et non, no color, express or implied, given to trespass; no new assignment. Belief in the great doctrine of a negative pregnant no longer necessary to legal salvation, and the very nice question, as Baron Parke is reported to have thought, whether you could reply de injuria to a plea of deviation in an action on a marine policy not only still unsolved, but actually considered not worth solution." ^ Of other judges and advo- cates eminent in 1847, but since dead, Lord Coleridge said: 1 The Contemporary Review, June, * Ibid. 801. 1890, 799. 1 2 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. "And with these men the system under which they flour- ished has gone to rest too; parties are examined, husband and wife are heard. Special pleading finds no refuge upon the habitable globe except, as I believe, in the State of New Jersey in America." ^ In confirmation of Lord Coleridge's statement, we find that the Common-Law Procedure Act of 1852, and the rules of court made pursuant thereto, abolished all common-law forms of actions, and substituted therefor the simplest possible statements of causes of demand. It may be accurately said that the t endency of Englis h legislation is to the destruction of the science of special pleading at t he hands of its creators. Ifc^js .threa^ejie^d wit^^^^^ like fate, in this country . "When, therefore, it is proposed to the student that he shall study special pleading as it was known at com- mon-law, he may well ask wliy he should fit himself with an outworn and a cast-off garment. He may apparently well think that time and energy devoted to such a subject are wasted. It is said by the most famous law-writer of this century, Savigny, that " The study of the law is of its very nature exposed to a double danger ; that of soaring through theory into the empty abstractions of a fancied law of nature, and that of sinking through practice into a soulless, unsatisfying handicraft." ^ Only those students who have no higher ambi- tion than to be mere craftsmen, and an inferior order even of these, can aiJord to refuse the study of special pleading be- cause, in their opinion, it may not be of practical use to them to-day. I purpose to show briefly in this introduction how vitally this study is connected with the development of Eng- lish law, and how indispensable a part of legal education it still is, and must ever be, wherever the common law of Eng- land is in force. I. The remedial law of England developed with, and was stimulated and enlarged by, the development of special plead- ing. Littleton, writing in the reign of Edward IV., said : " And know ye this, my son, that it is one of the most honor- able, laudable, and profitable things in our law to have the 1 The Contemporary Review, June, ^ Howe's Studies in the Civil Law, 6. 1890, 802. INTEODUCTION. 3 science of well pleading in actions real and personal ; and therefore I counsel thee especially to set all thy courage and care to learn that, &c."^ That special pleading did not de- cline in importance between his time and that of Lord Coke is evident from what the latter has said of it in his judicial decisions and in his great Commentary. " Good pleading," says he, " is Lapis Lyclius, the touchstone of the true sense and knowledge of the common law." ^ Again, in the Preface to his Commentary upon Littleton, he speaks of " The rules of good pleading (the heart string of the common law)." At page 115 b of the same Commentary, he has these words : " Note, one of the best arguments or proofes in law is drawn from the right entries or course of pleading ; for the law itselfe speaketh by good pleading; and therefore Littleton here saith, ' it is proved by the pleading,' &c., as if pleading were ipsius legis viva voxT It is said in Hobart's Reports that truth is the goodness and virtue of pleading, as certainty is the grace and beauty of it.^ It may be thought that these are extravagant expressions of men who were educated to see excellence in anything that was technical and abstruse. When Littleton says that the law is proved by the pleading, and when Coke adds, approv- ingly, " as if pleading were the living voice of the law itself," they are not using mere figures of rhetoric. Accordingly, we find in the recent work upon English law, by two men who have done more than all others to make its origin and growth plain (I refer to Pollock and Maitland's History of English Law), that the development of rights has de- pended upon the development of actions. In that work its authors show in great detail how closely advances in the conception of right have been associated with, and enforced by, corresponding advances in pleading. " Our forms of action are not mere rubrics nor dead categories ; they are not the outcome of a classificatory process that has been applied to pre-existing materials ; they are institutes of the law ; they are, we say it without scruple, living things." * 1 Tenures, sec. 534 (Tomlins). ^ Slade v. Drake, Hob. 295. 2 10 Co. Rep. 29 b. « P. & M. Hist. II. 559. 4 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. " "We shall do well to remember that the rule of law was the rule of writs." ^ Bracton, writing in the reign of Henry III., can still say, " There will be as many formulce of writs as there are kinds of actions." A little later we shall have to take the tale of wi-its as the fixed quantity, and our maxim will be, " There will be as many kinds of actions as there are formulce of writs." ^ Finally, at the conclusion of their work, speaking of English law prior to the time of Edward I., and resuming its influence upon the subsequent development of that law, these high authorities thus record their judgment : " Nor can we part with this age without thinking once more of the permanence of its work. Those few men who were gathered at Westminster, around Pateshull and Raleigh and Bracton, were penning writs that would run in the name of kingless commonwealths on the other shore of the Atlantic Ocean ; theT/ were making right and wrong for us and for our children.''^ ^ Consonant with these opinions is what an eminent Ameri- can jurist has written : " However much we may codify the law into a series of seemingly self-sufficient propositions, those propositions will be but a phase in a continuous growth. To understand their scope fully, to know how they will be dealt with by judges trained in the past which the law embodies, we must ourselves know something of that past. The history of what the law has been is necessary to the knowledge of what the law is " * IT. The study of special pleading is not only essential to a correct understanding of the historical development of the common law ; it is most admirable and essential as an intel- lectual training. No man can be a strong reasoner who does not possess natural or acquired logic. No man can be a strong lawyer who has not, in addition to this logic, a clear knowledge of the logic of the law ; and special pleading is the logic of the law. The real function of education is not to charge the mind with facts ; its object is, as the etymology of the word 1 p. & M. Hist. II. 56 L 3 Ihid. 670. 2 Ibid. 562. * Holmes, C. L. 37. INTRODUCTION. 5 expresses, to draw forth and develop all of the mental powers which the student has. This result cannot be accomplished by mere study. The mind may be a magazine charged with all sorts of knowledge, and yet not able to form a clear idea, or to express lucidly an idea when formed ; still less able to reason upon, to develop and to defend it. For this purpose something more than study is necessary. It is related of John C. Calhoun, that, when a young man, he devoted an hour every morning to a solitary walk, during which he dis- cussed, in every conceivable phase, some one proposition. He argued it on the one side and on the other. He held it up, as it were, to the sun, and endeavored to see through what thin places the light would pierce and betray weakness of struc- ture. He pressed his mind against it as a farmer's boy holds the edge of an axe against a grindstone. Fatiguing as the process was, he persevered in it day after day and year after year until, as a result, he developed mental powers which, for clearness of conception, for lucidity and conciseness of expres- sion, for rigid sequence of argument, and for strength of con- struction, were absolutely unrivalled. Such a process the student should aim to follow ; it is the study of the science of special pleading, above all others, which will aid him in this pursuit. He should ever bear in mind the following advice of Lord Coke : " Mine advice to the student is, that before he read any part of our Commentaries upon any section, that first he read again and again our author himself in that section, and do his best endeavors, first of himself, and then by conference with others (which is the life of study^, to under- stand it, and then to read our Commentary thereupon, and no more at any one time than he is able with a delight to bear away, and after to meditate thereon, which is the life of read- ing." ^ Clearly, Lord Coke knew the proper process for the development of the mind. The same thought is most admir- ably expressed by Sir William Hamilton in the introductory chapter to his Lectures upon Metaphysics, which chapter should be carefully read and pondered on by every teacher and student of law. " I must regard the main duty of a 1 Co. Litt. Preface, xlii. 6 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. professor to consist not simply in communicating informa- tion, but in doing this in such a manner, and with such an accompaniment of subsidiary means, that the information he conveys may be the occasion of awakening his pupils to a vigorous and varied exertion of their faculties. Self-activity is the indispensable condition of improvement ; and education is only education, that is, accomplishes its purpose only, by affording objects and supplying incitements to this spontaneous exertion. Strictly speaking, every one must educate himself. All profitable study is a silent disputation — an intellectual gymnastic ; and the most improving books are precisely those which most excite the reader to understand the author, to supply what he has omitted, and to canvass his facts and reasonings. To read passively to learn is, in reality, not to learn at all. In study, implicit faith, belief upon authority, is worse even- than, for a time, erroneous speculation. To read profitably we should read the authors not most in unison with, but most adverse to, our opinions ; for whatever may be the case in tlie cure of bodies, enantiopathy, and not homoeopathy, is the true medicine of minds. Accordingly, such sciences and such authors as present only unquestionable truths, determining a minimum of self-activity in the student, are, in a rational education, subjectively naught. Those sciences and authors, on the contrary, who constrain the student to independent thought, are, whatever may be their objective certainty, sub- jectively, educationally best." ^ The science of special plead- ing cannot be mastered by one who merely studies. It must, as Lord Coke says, be learned by conference with others, and after meditation. How the truth of this was appreciated by even a man of genius, who would popularly be supposed above such aids as Lord Coke has indicated, is evident from what was said before the Court of Common Pleas of Hampton, Massa- chusetts, on the occasion of Daniel Webster's death. " It was a year or two since that he [Webster] spoke of having found the Reports of Saunders when he was a student, accessible only in their original Latin, and without the notes with which Sergeant Williams has since enriched them, and he remarked : 1 Hamilton's Metaphysics (Bowen), 11. INTRODUCTION. 7 ' I sat down and made a translation of them into English, and I have it now, and it was in that way that I made myself familiarly and greatly acquainted with the language of plead- ing.' " ^ On this fact Wallace, in his article upon Saunders' Reports, comments as follows : " Daniel Webster, it is said, once translated the Reports of Saunders into English. The book which trained Webster's mind to its ' prodigious powers of legal logic^ or in which Ms intellect found a dialectic har- mony, may well receive the homage of the world." ^ As is well known, these volumes of Reports are the great repository of cases involving points of special pleading. It is related of one of the greatest lawyers whom this country has produced, the late Walter Jones of the Bar of the District of Columbia, that he wrote out, in all their detail, the pleadings of every case reported by Sir James Burrow. Surely the doing of such work by two such men is conclusive proof of its excel- lence as a discipline. III. In addition to the general mental training given by this study, there is a particular advantage to be derived from it, notwithstanding the prevalent abolition of special pleading and the substitution therefor of what is called code pleading. No code can mar the beauty of pleading based upon the prin- ciples of the common-law science. Just as natural logic lies at the basis of all clear and effective discussion upon general topics, so special pleading is the foundation of all legal dis- cussion. It is impossible that issues can be properly pre- sented for decision, either by court or jury, unless, in the first place, the litigants, through their counsel, are capable of clearly conceiving the propositions of fact or of law upon which their claims rest. In the second place, there must be a lucid and concise expression of those propositions. Such expressions must, moreover, be relevant, and, as far as pos- sible, single. After the propositions have been once stated, there must be no departure from them. A litigant must be compelled to pursue a definite and consistent course from the 1 Remarks of Reuben A. Chapman New York Daily Times, October 27, upon the death of Daniel Webster. 1852. 2 The Reporters, 338. 8 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. time he comes into court, until he obtains its judgment. He cannot do this unless he is thoroughly acquainted with the principles of special pleading. In the sharp and hard competition of these modern days at the bar, the lawyer who is able to present his case in such manner as to enable the court or jury to at once possess itself of the salient points of the position which he occupies, is the lawyer who will, from the outset, secure the attention of court and bar, and who will speedily command success. Sir William Jones had such qualities in view when he wrote as follows : " The science of special pleading is an excellent logic ; it is admirably calculated for the purposes of analyzing a cause, of extracting, like the roots of an equation, the true points in dispute, and referring them with all imaginable distinctness to the court or jury. It is reducible to the strictest rules of pure dialectics, and tends to fix the attention, give a habit of reasoning clearly, quicken the apprehension and invigorate the understanding." ^ To the same effect are the following observations of Lord Mansfield : " The sub- stantial rules of pleading are founded in strong sense, and in the soundest and closest logic, and so appear when well under- stood and explained ; though, by being misunderstood and misapplied, they are often made use of as instruments of chicane." '^ More than one hundred years later, Mr. Justice Grier, speaking for the Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of McFaul v. Ramsey, thus said : " This system [of pleading], matured by the wisdom of ages, founded on princi- ples of truth and sound reason, has been ruthlessly abolished in many of our States, who have rashly substituted in its place the suggestions of sciolists, who invent new codes and systems of pleading to order. But this attempt to abolish all species, and establish a single genus, is found to be beyond the power of legislative omnipotence. They cannot compel the human mind not to distinguish between things that differ. The distinction between the different forms of actions 1 Sir William Jones' Works. Pre- ^ Robinson v. Rayley, 1 Burr. 319. fatory Discourse to the Speeches of Isaeus, IV. 34. (f.) IX. 50, 51 (8 vo.). INTRODUCTION. 9 for different wrongs, requiring different remedies, lies in the nature of things ; it is absolutely inseparable from, the correct administration of justice in common-laiv courts. The result of these experiments, so far as they have come to our knowl- edge, has been to destroy the certainty and simplicity of all pleadings, and introduce on the record an endless wrangle in writing, perplexing to the court, delaying and impeding the administration of justice." ^ Undoubtedly, at the present moment, the swing of the pendulum is in the direction furthest from special pleading. Just as undoubtedly, if trial by jury be retained, it must again swing in the other direction .^ It is essential for the proper administration of justice that the princrj^les of special pleading should be observed in the statement of cases for decision by courts. There is an ele- ment of truth in the declaration of Baron Parke that, " Those who drew loose declarations brought scandal on the law." ^ Equally does the language of the court in the old case of Heard v. Baskerville express a truth. The court, in constru- ing the statute of demurrers, 27 Eliz. c. 5, said : " Now the moderation of this statute is such that it doth not utterly reject form ; for that were a dishonor to the law, and to make it in effect no art; but requires only that it be dis- covered, and not used as a secret snare to entrap." * Perhaps the truth with respect to the proper use to-day of the rules of special pleading is nowhere better stated than by Mr. Justice Brown, delivering the opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Wiggin's Ferry Co. v. 0. & M. Railway : " Rules of pleading are made for the attainment of substantial justice, and are to be construed so as to harmonize with it if possible. A mistaken view of one's rights or remedies should not be permitted wholly to defeat a claim founded upon principles of equity and justice. And if the pleadings can be so amended as to admit proof of such claim, and such amend- ment does not introduce a new cause of action, though it 1 20 How. 525. 8 Lord Coleridge. The Contem- ^ Preface to Seventh Edition of porary Review, June, 1890, 800. Taylor on Evidence. * Hob. 232. 10 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. may set up a new measure of damages, or work a real hard- ship to the party defendant, it is within the discretion, even of the appellate court, to permit such amendment to be made." ^ While this decision was made in an equity case, it nevertheless correctly indicates the trend of the law.^ Here, however, it must be again recollected that the lawyer who is so ignorant of these rules of pleading as to be compelled to apply frequently, and even in the appellate court, for leave to amend, in order that his clients may not suffer through his ignorance, is one who probably will do neither justice to these clients, nor credit to his profession. 1 142 U. S. 415. Practice, I. 607. Kennedy et al. v. 2 Encyclopaedia of Pleading and Georgia State Bank et al., 8 How. 610. CHAPTER I. OF REMEDIES. XHEvital principle of all systems of law is that a remedy m ust be^ giyen for tlie_,yii3latiQii-o£-fiLEerY,riglit. Our English law expresses this truth in the Latin words ubi jus, ihi re- medium (wherever a right exists, there exists a corresponding remedy). This maxim has been freely translated by Lord Coke thus : " The law will, that in every case where a man is wronged and endammaged, that he shall have remedie." ^ Chief Justice Holt uses even terser and stronger language : " It is a vain thing to imagine there should be right with- out a remedy, for want of right and want of remedy are convertibles." ^ So radical is this principle that the law expands by force of its inherent elasticity to admit new remedies. " It is not the novelty of the action that can be argued against it, if it can be supported by the old grounds and principles of the law. The ground of law is plain, certain, and indeed univer- sal, that where any man is injured in his right by being either hindered in or defrauded of the enjoyment thereof, the law gives him an action to repair himself. . . . The_la w of Enj g:- land is not confined to precedents^ut consists in the reason of tliem/wHcE^is much more extensive^ than the circum- stances of this or that case. ' Ratio legis est anima legis,' £t ' ubi eadem ratio ibi idem jus ' (' the reason of the law is the soul^f tlie^ lawj* and ' where the same reason exists there__is the same right'), are known maxims." ^ 1 Co. Litt. igf b. 8 Per Holt, C. J., Ashby v. White, 2 Ashhy I'. White, Ld. Raym. 938 ; English Ruling Cases, 525 ; s. c. (House s. c. 1 Smith's Leading Cases, 342 ; B.C. of Lords) 1 Bro. P. C. 47. 1 English Ruling Cases, 521. 12 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. But if an entirely new principle is attempted to be intro- duced, resort must be had to legislation, for in such case it is sought to create not only the remedy, but the right also.^ For example, the Act of Parliament known as the Employer's Liability Act (43 & 44 Vict. c. 42) was required to create a right of action in favor of a servant, injured by the negligent act of a fellow-servant, against their common employer. Again, the student must note that it is only the violation of a right for which a remedy is given. A man may suffer great loss and yet have no right violated. The law denomi- nates such loss Jj amnutn j ih.&qii£_J^iiLi4^h-4l'0SS without legal injury). For example : a proprietor digs a well on his own land and pumps up water to an extent exceeding what is re- quired for his private use, with the result of absorbing water from the substrata and diminishing the supply enjoyed by neighboring proprietors, but without diverting water already collected in any definite channel ; the loss thus suffered by those proprietors is damnum absque injuria, and affords no ground of action against the first proprietor.^ The establish- ment of a rival school which draws away the pupils from a school previously established is another instance of such loss.^ Before considering the remedies given to injured persons through the instrumentality of the law, it is proper to advert to very ancient methods of redress by their own mere act, which were allowed to parties. Such redress could be effected in two manners : First, by the sole act of the party injured ; and second, by the joint act of all parties concerned. Self-Help. Such methods of redress were called self-help as dis- tinguished from the help that the law gives. In early societies the functions of the ruler, while large in power, were limited in application. The protection of private rights and the redress of private wrongs were relegated to 1 Ashhurst, J., in Pasley v. Freeman, 2 Chasemore v. Richards, 7 H. L. C. 3 T. R. 63. 349, 8 Bacon, Abr., Actions in General, B. OF REMEDIES. 13 the parties concerned. This was true among ancient peoples generally. We learn from Hunter's work on Roman Law that "at the time of the XII. Tables (b. c. 451, 450) the state did not as yet claim to decide civil disputes, although it sanc- tioned the use of force to bring an alleged wrong-doer before the tribunals. At an earlier period, as we may infer from the peculiarity of the oldest form of legal procedure, even this limited authority was denied. The earliest type of judicial proceedings is a mock combat followed by a reference to arbitration. The first judges were simply arbitrators. Civil jurisdiction sprang out of arbitration. The coercive authority of the state grew out of the voluntary submission of the sub- ject." 1 If we turn to what we to-day call crimes, we are con- fronted with the same private aspect. " The fact," says Mr. Justice Stephen, " that the private vengeance of the person wronged by a crime was the principal source to which men trusted for the administration of criminal justice in early times, is one of the most characteristic circumstances con- nected with English Criminal Law, and has had much to do with the development of what may, perhaps, be regarded as its principal distinctive peculiarity, namely, the degree to which a criminal trial resembles a private litigation." ^ This most interesting and instructive subject, so closely connected with the origin of all systems of positive law, cannot be dwelt on here, but the student is urged to pursue it in the works cited below.^ So complete was the revolution against this unrestrained self-help that we find in the Roman law the following radical provision existing in the fifth century of our era. " When a man shall have gone such lengths of frenzied arrogance as to have taken violent possession of things, . , . if he he the owner, he shall restore the possession abstracted by 1 Roman Law, 967. tory of Criminal Law, Vol. I. ; Cherry's 2 Hist, of Criminal Law, I. 245. Growth of Criminal Law ; Hunter's 8 The Aryan Household (Hearn), c. Roman Law, Book IV. ; Muirhead's xix. ; Maine's Early Law and Custom, Roman Law, 51, 71, 105; Sohm's Insti- 170; Maine's Early History of Institu- tutes of Roman Law, 147, 148; Jus* tions. Lectures IX., X. ; Stephen's His- tinian's Institutes (ed. Moyle), I. 614. 14 COMMON-LAW PLEADING, him from the possessor and forfeit his ownership of such property," ^ In England the change was no less fundamental. The law began early to stringently prohibit self-help, and to discour- age a resort to force. In Bracton's time (Henry HI.), "the man who has slain another in self-defence deserves, it is true, but he also needs, a royal pardon." ^ Without this pardon he was not guiltless. Probably in the reign of no other king was violence so universal and continuous in England as when Stephen sat in his usurped seat, " The earth bore no corn ; you might as well have tilled the sea, for the land was all ruined by such deeds, and it was said openly that Christ and his saints slept." ^ Yet under the very next king (Henry II.) was invented that writ of novel disseisin (of which we shall say more hereafter) which protected a pos- session of real estate, acquired by violence and without a shadow of right. The owner of a stolen beast could only re- possess himself of his property in a formal and prescribed way. Britton, writing in the reign of Edward I., supposes the following case : Peter has had his horse stolen and finds it in the possession of John, from whom he takes it by violence. Whereupon John appeals Peter of stealing the horse, and Peter says : " The horse was mine and as mine I took it." If Peter succeeds in proving this assertion he escapes the gallows, but as a punishment for his act of violence he loses the horse, " for," King Edward is supposed to say, " we will that every one shall have recourse to judgment rather than to force." * It was inevitable that the law should recede from this extreme position, which it had been forced by the violence of half-civilized times to take against self-help. During the later middle ages a natural reaction in this respect took place. "In our own day our law allows an amount of quiet self-help that would have shocked Bracton. It can safely allow this, for it lias mastered the sort of self-help that is lawless." ^ 1 Imp. Valent. Cod. 8, 4, 7. Roman ^ The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, anno Private Law, Salkowski, 413. 1137. 2 P. & M. Hist, IL 477, 572. * P. & M. Hist. n. 167. 6 Ibid. U, 572, of eemedies, 15 Self-Help by the Mere Act of the Parties. There were five methods of self-help by his own mere act which the common law allowed to an injured person : — (1) By Self-Depence. (2) By Recaption of Persons or of Goods. (3) By Entry upon Lands. (4) By Abatement of Nuisances. (5) By Distress. These methods should be familiar to the student and require only brief mention here. (1) 8el£-d^fence. : In English law self-defence is recognized as the primary rule of nature ; it is a right which society cannot take away. It includes not only the defence of one's self, but also the mutual and reciprocal defence of such as stand in the relation of husband and wife, parent and child, and master and servant. In these cases if the party himself, or any of these his relations, be forcibly attacked in person or property, it is lawful for him to repel force by force. Care must be taken, however, that the resistance does not exceed the bounds of mere defence and prevention, for then the defender would himself become an aggressor. Accordingly, it has been said that self-defence is only preventive and that therefore it should not be included among methods of redress.^ But the law allows a blow to be repelled by a blow, and in this very act of prevention an element of redress seems to be present. (2) Recajjtion or reprisal : This right exists when any one has deprived another unlawfully of his goods, or wrongfully detains his wife, child, or servant. In such case the injured party may lawfully claim and retake the property or person so detained wherever he happens to find the one or the other. But such recaption must not be in a riotous manner, nor attended with a breach of the peace. (3) Entry upon lands : As recaption is a remedy given to the party himself, against one who unlawfully detains from him his personal property, so entry on lands and tenements, when another person without any right has taken possession 1 Min. Inst. IV. 95. 16 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. thereof, is a remedy of the same kiud for illegal deprivation of the possession of real estate. (4) Abatement of nuisances : Whatever unlawfully an- noys or does damage to another is a nuisance ; and such nuisance may be abated, that is, taken away or removed, by the party aggrieved thereby, provided he commit no riot nor breach of the peace in doing it. (5) Distress : A distress is the summary taking of a per- sonal chattel out of the possession of the wrong-doer into the custody of the party injured, to procure a satisfaction of the wrong committed. It would seem originally to have been lawful only when authorized by a court. Its subsequent legalization as a mere private act is therefore an instance of modified feeling against all self-help as such. The student is referred to Bigelow's History of Procedure (Chapter V. Distraint) and to Pollock and Maitland's History (Yol. II. pp. 573-576) for a detailed account of its origin and incidents.^ We have only space here to say that it was originally a means which the feudal lord could employ to compel his men to answer for default of services. Blackstone gives the fol- lowing as its regular uses : a distress might be taken (1) for non-payment of rent in arrear ; (2) for neglect to do suit to the lord's court or to perform other certain personal ser- vices ; (3) for amercements in a court leet ; (4) where a man finds beasts of a stranger wandering on his grounds, damage feasant, that is, doing him hurt or damage by tread- ing down his grass or the like ; (5) for several duties and penalties prescribed and inflicted by special acts of Parliament. All chattels upon the leased premises were liable for distress for rent. To this general rule there were, however, the follow- ing exceptions : things wherein no man can have an absolute and valuable property ; whatever is at the time of distraint in the personal use or occupation of any man ; valuable things in the way of trade, as a horse standing in a smith's shop to be shod ; a man's tools and utensils of his trade, as the axe of a carpenter, the books of a scholar, beasts of the plough ; things of a nature to be injured by keeping, and which can 1 See also Maine's Early History of Institutions, Lectures IX., X. OP REMEDIES. 17 not be rendered again in as good plight as when they were distrained, and things fixed to the freehold. It must be noted that the right of distraint was not origi- nally a right of self-satisfaction. The beast distrained could neither be sold nor used. It was in a sense in the custody of the law. The distrainer must always be ready to show it and to give it up if the tenant tenders payment of the amount due or resorts to his remedy of replevin. Subsequently, a sale of the thing distrained was allowed in certain cases by Act of Parliament. In making distraint it was a matter of the utmost importance to the distrainer to observe all of the formalities of the law. " He not only lost the goods seized in case he had made a false step, but he was also subjected to a fine in favor of the debtor." ^ For an illegal distress the remedies allowed by common law to the tenant or owner of the thing distrained were the actions of replevin, of trespass and of trespass on the case, of all of which we shall speak hereafter. Trespass lay in all cases in which any irregularity of procedure rendered the distrainer a trespasser from the outset ; trespass on the case lay for excessive levy, for a wrongful seizure of property not liable to distress, and for irregularities which did not render the distrainer a trespasser from the outset.^ Blackstone mentions tlie seizing of heriots, when due on the death of a tenant, as another species of self-remedy. It is, however, not of sufficient historical importance to require more than mere mention in this connection. Self-Help by the Joint Act op all Parties concerned. We must next consider those remedies which arise from the joint act of all parties concerned. These are only two : (1) Accord. (2) Arbitration. (1) Accord, or, as the term more commonly is. Accord and Satisfaction, occurs whenever parties who have a 1 Hist. Pr. 211. 2 In the United States the right of distraint has been generally abolished. 2 18 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. controversy mutually agree, the one to make or give, and the other to receive something (whether money, property, or a specific act performed), in satisfaction of the injury. The effect of this, when the satisfaction is actually given and accepted, is to entirely atone for the wrong. No right of action, by reason of the wrong, remains. (2) Arbitration is where the parties, injuring and injured, submit all matters in dispute, concerning any personal chattel or personal wrong, to the judgment of two or more arbitrators, who are to decide the controversy ; if they do not agree, it is usual to provide that another person be called in as umpire, to whose sole judgment the matter in dispute is then referred. The decision of the arbitrators or of the umpire is called an award. Thereby the question at issue is as fully determined, and the right transferred or settled, as it could have been by the agreement of the parties or the judgment of a competent court. The title to real estate cannot, however, pass by a mere award, although the award may require a conveyance, and it will be a breach of the arbitration bond to refuse com- pliance. This method of settling disputes is regarded by the law with much favor. Whatever its merits in theory, its practical benefit is open to serious doubts, which have been strongly stated by Lord Eldon (Street v. Rigby, 6 Yes. 818) and by Pi:ofessor Minor (Institutes, Vol. IV. Pt. I. p. 138). Remedies by Sole Operation op Law. There are likewise only two instances of remedies given by the sole operation of the law. (1) Retainer. (2) Remitter. (1) Retainer : If a person indebted to another make that creditor his executor, or if such creditor obtain letters of administration upon his debtor's estate, the law in each case gives the creditor a remedy for his debt, by allowing him to retain so much as will pay himself before any other creditors whose debts are of equal degree. The law gives him this remedy because he cannot, in his private, sue himself in OP REMEDIES. 19 his representative capacity, and there is no one else whom he can sue. Hence, the law by its own act puts him in as good a position as if he had sued.^ (2) Remitter'^ applies only to real estate, and is where he wlio has the true property in lands, but is out of possession thereof, and has no right of entry thereon without recovering possession in an action, has the freehold cast upon him by some subsequent, and, of course, defective, title ; in this case he is remitted, or sent back, by operation of law, to his ancient and more certain title. Again, where one is in wrong- ful possession of real estate as a disseisor, and then acquires by act of the law, as by a descent cast, the true property in the freehold of that real estate, there he is remitted to his true and better title. But the better title must always come to the party by act of the law, or at least without his partici- pation. The same reason underlies this rule as in the case of retainer. Being himself in possession as disseisor, he can- not sue himself to establish his new and lawful title.^ We come now in due order to consider the redress of injuries effected by the concurring act of the parties and of the law ; that is, by suit in court. I ^ In the United States this matter is ' The student who may wish to study ^nerally regulated by statute. these methods of redress in greater de- ^^ A case for the application of this tail is referred to Blackstone's Com- doctrine could hardly arise to-day, for mentaries, Book III. chaps. 1 and 2, we have no proprietary as distinct from and Minor's Institutes, Book IV. Pt. possessory actions for the recovery of I. 94-156. real property. CHAPTER 11. OF COURTS. The redress of injuries by suit in court requires the co- operation of the act of the parties and the act of the law. The term fiuit has been defined by Blackstone as "a la^^ul demand of one's ri^ht^" ^ A better definition has been given by Chief Justice Marshall in these words : " The term [suit] is certainly a very comprehensive one, and is understood to apply to any proceeding in a court of justice, by which an individual pursues that remedy in a court of justice which the law affords him. The modes of proceeding may be various, but if a right is litigated between parties in a court of justice, the proceeding by which a decision of the court is sought is a suit." ^ The act of at least one of the parties is required to set the law in motion, and the process of the law is as a general thing the only instrument by which the parties are enabled to procure a certain and adequate redress. And it is to be noted that even where, as we have seen, the law allows an extra-judicial remedy, yet that does not exclude the ordinary course of justice. For example, I may defend myself, yet I am also entitled to an action of assault and battery against my assailant. Lord Coke says that, " Curia, court, is a place where justice is judicially ministered." ^ The definition is sounder than the etymology of the learned author, who derives the word from cura, quia in curiis publicis curas gerehant (care, because in public courts they transact business).* While this definition has 1 Bl. Com. m. 116*. 3 Co. Litt. 58 a. 2 "Weston i". Charleston, 2 Peters, * The verbal play is lost in trans- 464. lation. OP COURTS. 21 been criticised in certain American cases,^ it is sufficiently accurate. According to English law, the king was the foun- tain of all justice, and hence all courts of justice derived their jurisdiction and power from the crown. Courts of Record. Of courts, some are of record, others not of record. ^ court of record is a judicial, jorganized tnbu n al^^ha vi n g attributes and exercising fun«tiens_Jndependently^f tbe person of the magistrate ^design^ated^generally to hol4- rt^j an4_^rapeeding according- to the course qf^the_^common-laWi2| The acts and judicial proceedings "of these courts are re- corded (originally they were enrolled in parchment) for a perpetual memorial and testimony. These records (or rolls) are called the records of the court, and they import absolute verity. Nothing can be averred against them, nor shall any plea or even proof be admitted to the contrary. If the-exist- ence of a record be denied, it shall be tried by itself, that is, by an inspection thereof by the court to ascertain whether or not it is a properly authenticated record. All English courts of record are the king's courts. Courts not of Record. A cour tjiot_-oLr£gflrd-i»-ar^60urt--o£— whose proceedings no solemnlcontempqraneous minute is- made by a sworn officer. Such were the courts-baron incident to every manor. The proceedings of such courts are not enrolled or recorded, and are matters of fact to be tried and determined, if disputed, by a jury. Of Courts in General. Every court must be composed of at least three constituent elements : the ac tor^ or plaintiff, who complains of an injury done ; the jr&us^ or defendant, who is called upon to make satisfaction for it ; and ihajujt&x, or judicial power, who is to 1 45 Iowa, 503 ; 79 Ind. 375 ; 1 Gall. ^ Bonvier'sLaw Diet, sub voc. " Court 499; 4 McCrary, 536; 5 Col. 381. of Record." Ex parte Gladhill, 8 Met. 170. 22 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. examine the accusation, to determine the law apphcable in the premises, and, if any injury has been done, to ascertain and by proper officers to apply the remedy. We cannot here speak of attorneys-at-law or of counsel (who are officers of court) further than to say that originally every suitor was obliged to appear in person. In England, there was no definite legal profession till more than a century after the Norman Conquest.^ Students who wish to follow the growth of this profession are referred to Minor's Institutes, Yol. IV. Pt. I. pp. 161-177. The third and fourth chapters of Book III. of Blackstone's Commentaries are devoted to the consideration of courts in general and of the English public courts of common law and equity. This great system of courts existed continuously for about six hundred years, but has been recently entirely re- modelled- by a series of statutes known as the Judicature Acts, beginning in 1873. Of these chapters of Blackstone his recent editor, Hammond, well says : " To the American student these chapters are now perhaps even more interesting and instructive than they are in England. They portray a system with which every American judge and lawyer of the first century was familiar, and which they regarded with a veneration hardly less than that paid the law itself. More remains of it may now be found in America than in the mother country ; for no such sweeping change as that of the Judicature Acts is possible under our state and national organization. Moreover the English reports from the Year Books down are unintelligible to the student unless he under- stands the former organization of the courts." ^ Ancient Prominence of Law of Procedure. But the study of the origin and organization of the great common-law courts has a more profound interest than a merely historical one. Upon an examination of ancient codes of law, we are surprised by the conspicuous and predominant place occupied by Courts of Justice and Rules of Procedure.^ Sir 1 P. & M. Hist. L Introduction, 2 bj Com. III. 84. xxvii. ^ Hunter's Roman Law, 122. OP COURTS. 23 Henry Sumner Maine, speaking of the ancient Indian code of laws, and especially of the compilation known as the Book of Narada, says : " The mechanism of a Court of Justice and its procedure are first elaborately described. . . . The principle and meaning of this ancient classification strike me as obvious. The compiler of Narada or his original makes the assumption that men do quarrel, and he sets forth the mode in which their quarrels may be adjudicated upon and settled without bloodshed or violence. The dominant notion present to his mind is not a Law, or a Right, or a Sanction, or the distinction between Positive and Natural Law, or between Persons and Things, hut a Court of Justice. The great fact is that there now exists an alternative to private reprisals, a mode of stanching personal or hereditary blood-feuds other than slaughter or plunder. Hence, in front of everything he places the description of a Court, of its mechanism, of its procedure, of its tests of alleged facts. Having thus begun with an account of the great institution which settles quarrels, he is led to distribute law according to the subject-matter of quarrels, according to the relations between human beings which do, as a fact, give rise to civil disputes. Thus Debt, Partnership, the Marital Relation, Inheritance and Donation, are considered as matters about which men at a certain point of civilization do, as a fact, have differences, and the various rights and liabilities [as we should call them] to which they give rise, are set forth simply as guides towards determiyiing the judgment which a Court of Justice should give when called upon to adjudicate on quarrels." ^ The same author says in another treatise : " It would not be untrue to assert that, in one stage of human affairs, rights and duties are rather the adjective of procedure than procedure a mere appendage to rights and duties. There have been times when the real difficulty lay, not in conceiving what a man was entitled to, but in obtaining it ; so that the method, violent or legal, by which an end was obtained was of more consequence than the nature of the end itself. As a fact, it is only in the most recent times or in the most highly developed legal systems 1 Early Law and Custom, 380, 381, 382. 24 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. that remedies have lost importance in comparison with rights, and have ceased to affect them deeply and variously." ^ That this is true of the development of our English law is clearly stated by Pollock and Maitland. " That characteristic mark of ancient bodies of law, the prominent place given to what we sometimes speak of as ' adjective law,' the apparent subordination of rights to remedies, is particularly noticeable in our own case, and endures until modern times ; and natu- rally, for our common law is the law of courts which gradually acquired their jurisdiction by the development and interpreta- tion of procedural formulas." ^ This is confirmed by our American jurist, Holmes, who says, speaking of the origin of the action of debt : " It seems strange that this crude product of the infancy of law should have any importance for us at the present time. Yet whenever we trace a leading doctrine of substantive law far enough back, we are very likely to find some forgotten circumstance of procedure at its source." ^ To the same effect is what Hammond writes : " The old pro- cedure had stood in all its substantial features at least since the reign of Edward I., and in that time had almost created the English law of personal proj)erty, of contracts, and for the most •part of torts. In all these fields, if we try to trace the sub- stantive law to its sources, we find most of its rules beginning as rules of practice in the appropriate action." * These authorities should satisfy the student that he must understand the Law of Procedure, or, as Bentham and his school prefer to say, adjective law, before he can hope to master the substan- tive law of past centuries and of to-day. Anglo-Saxon Courts. Of the system of procedure and of the courts existing in England prior to the Norman Conquest, but little can be said here. The student who has leisure to pursue that sub- ject can profitably read Bigelow's History of Procedure in England, and the first chapter of Pollock and Maitland's History of English Law. He is especially referred in 1 Early History of Institutions, 252. ' Holmes, C. L. 253. a P. & M. Hist. L 208. * Bl. Com. III. 187. OF COURTS. 25 connection with the subject-matter of this entire chapter to "The King's Peace," a recent (1895) very instructive and accurate historical essay upon the English Law Courts by F. A. Inderwick, Q. C. The natural tendency of a system whose main object was to repress self-help, was to localize the administration of justice. Self-help was prompt and ready to supply redress when and where the wrong was committed. The substitute for self-help must aim to be equally efficient. " To bring the view of justice to every man's door, to emulate the Cadi under the palm-tree, the justice-seat in the king's gate, the shout of the Wapentake, has ever been the ideal of law-reformers." ^ Accordingly, under the Anglo-Saxons the administration of justice was local. The several counties of England each did separately and completely its own judicial work. Appeals were discouraged and de-centralization was supreme. It is important to note this, for after the Norman Conquest the opposite course was pursued, and all the judicial work of the whole country was collected together and disposed of in one central court and by one supreme authority .^ The plan adopted by Alfred the Great and his successors was to divide the entire kingdom into sections, and to place each of these under the control of a chief officer* Each section was subdivided into smaller ones and these into still smaller, until finally a subdivision was reached at the head of which was a recognized officer, accountable directly to his superior officer, and through him and his superiors indirectly to the king. This ultimate subdivision was small enough to include a community of which each member was known to the other and to the common head, and was easily reached for purposes of legal process, of military service, and of taxation. The chief sections were called counties or shires, at the head of each of whicli was a judicial officer called the Shire-reeve, afterwards the Sheriff. Each county was then subdivided into hundreds, which were composed of either one hundred tithings or (it is uncertain which) one hundred hides of land, which would equal in extent about ten thousand acres, or a 1 The King's Peace. Introduction, xvii. ^ Tbld. Introduction, xiii. 26 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. little less than sixteen square miles. The tithing meant different things in different parts of the country. It is suffi- cient for our purpose to say that it meant a group of ten (or in some cases more) freemen subject to the law of frank- pledge, i. e., the law which made each freeman of the group a pledge or surety for the good conduct or production, if need be, of any one or more of the same group. Each such group was presided over by one of the freemen thus associated, who was known as the chief-pledge, tithing-man, head-borough, or ^ors-holder (i. e. head or elder of the borh or pledge).^ There were other subdivisions for various purposes, with which we are not here concerned. The Manor Court or Court Baron was presided over by a Thane, a Baron, or the head of a tithing, as the case might be^. One was ordinarily attached to each manor, and was held for the trial jof cases arising within the manor, although, by con- sent of parties, its jurisdiction might extend to persons or things connected with the manor but not within it. But if the cause of action was between persons one of whom was not subject to the jurisdiction of the Manor Court, the suit, upon objection taken, could not proceed, but was removed to the Hundred or other proper court. Its most important busi- ness later was to determine, by writ of right, all controver- sies relating to the right of lands within the manor. The Court sat by custom once a fortnight, and was held in the Manor-House, whicli became the " local Temple of Justice." The Hundred Gemote, otherwise called the Court of the Hundred or Wapentake, ^ was a court of higher and more extended jurisdiction than the Court Baron. King Edgar (a. d. 954-975) declared that it should meet always once in every four weeks, and that every man should do justice to another.^ It tried civil, criminal, and ecclesiastical causes. It was presided over by a Sheriff or an Alderman who, with the freeholders acting also as judges, tried the cause. When the interests of the Church were concerned, a Bishop 1 p. & M. Hist. Passim sub voc. authority of their chief. Ancient Laws Frank-Pledge. and Institutes, I. 455. 2 The court of assembled warriors ^ Ibid. 259. bound to uphold by their arms the OF COURTS. 27 was usually associated with tlie presiding officer. The Court had jurisdiction only over persons or lands within its terri- torial limits. An appeal lay from this to the County Court, but not until the party seeking it had applied repeatedly and fruitlessly to the Hundred Court.^ The Trithing, the Lathe Court, and the Court Leet were courts similar in character to the Hundred, but they tried cases over which the latter had no jurisdiction. They do not require any more extended notice in connection with our general purpose. The Hundred Court was " the judicial unit . . . for ordinary affairs." The County Court and the Hundred Court were the ordinary Anglo-Saxon Courts of Public Justice.^ The County Court was the most ancient, the most active, and the most important in the kingdom. The student is especially referred to a just appreciation of its functions by the late John Richard Green, which will be found in Volume I. of his History of the English People, p. 353. This Court was held under the Presidency of the Sheriff once in each month. It was tlie Sheriff's Court. It had jurisdiction in civil, criminal, and ecclesiastical causes, the Sheriff generally associating with himself a Bishop and other ecclesiastical or learned persons to aid him in administering justice. The jurisdiction extended to the trial of title to land in the county, of the right to tithes, of bargains and sales of land, of ser- vices and customs, and of other causes of great moment. Appeals from the Hundred, Lathe, and Trithing Courts were also heard and determined here.^ The Shireeve's Turn was a session of the County Court, and was held twice in the year in each Hundred by the Sheriff and Bishop. It inquired into frank-pledge, and had power to proceed both against those who broke the peace of the Church, and those who broke the peace of the king.* The Witenagemote, or " assembly of the wise men," was both a legislative and a judicial body. But its legislative was 1 P. & M. Hist. Passim sub voc. « The King's Peace, 12, 13,14; P. c5 Uundred Court. M. Hist. Passim snh voc. County Court. •■^ F.&M. Hist. I. 18. * The King's Peace, 15, 16, 17. 28 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. its main function. It adjudged incidentally upon the disputes of the king's thanes and great men, cleric and lay. It re- sembled, however, rather a great council than a court of jus- tice, and can hardly be included among the judicial tribunals of the country.! Such were the Anglo-Saxon courts. They were not " sur- rounded with such visible majesty of the law as in our times, nor were they furnished with any obvious means of compel- ling obedience." ^ They were frequently held in the open air. And yet archaic in form and weak in power as these courts were, they were nevertheless the source of our legal insti- tutions. "From the Briton and the Roman of the fifth cen- tury we have received nothing. Our whole internal history testifies unmistakably to our inheritance of Teutonic institu- tions from the first immigrants after the cessation of Roman administration." 3 The Anglo-Norman Courts. When William the Conqueror had subdued armed opposi- tion, he had to consider by what system of laws England should be governed. The system which he found was one of self-government, — one under which each local community tried its own cases with no right of appeal beyond the County Court, except to the clemency of the Crown. The system which he brought with him was a highly centralized one, in which the Grand Justiciar, or Chief of the Law, controlled absolutely the administration of justice. William chose a conservative course. He did not interfere with the existing Anglo-Saxon tribunals, save that he deprived them of any criminal jurisdiction over the offences of the clergy. On the other hand, he superseded the Witenagemote by one Supreme Court and one supreme officer of justice. The Curia Regis. The Court thus constituted was termed Curia Regis, or the King's Court ; it was also called Aula Regia, or the Royal iHist. Pr. 20. The King's Peace, 18. ^ Abdy's Feudalism (quoting Stubbs), 2 P. & M. Hist. L 14. 134. OF COURTS. 29 Court. It was attached to the king's person, was held in his palace, followed him wherever he went, and was the embodi- ment of royal justice administered by the king himself. It was the only Royal Court, as distinguished from the English or Anglo-Saxon courts which continued in their old form. It had unlimited jurisdiction, and entertained appeals from inferior courts. Where the king had granted to certain of his subjects the privilege of suing and of being sued only in the Royal Court, it had exclusive jurisdiction. It was presided over by the Chief Justiciar, who was also a great officer of state, being the King's Lieutenant and, when necessary, the viceroy. It was composed of the Chief Justiciar, the Chan- cellor, and such of the Barons, ecclesiastics, and other learned persons as were from time to time summoned to assist in its deliberations. It took its inspiration from the king, and pro- nounced his judgments, which were binding upon the wiiole people. William's son built Westminster Hall for the more appropriate and frequent sittings of the Curia Regis, and at Whitsuntide, a. d. 1099, William Rufus wore his crown and sat for the first time in the royal justice seat in West- minster Hall. Rise of the Court of Exchequer. From this time we find the court and officers of the Ex- chequer existing as a part of the Curia Regis. Their duties were to receive the accounts of the Sheriffs and of all other accountants and collectors of the Crown, to give acquittance to those who paid, and to issue writs and orders to enforce payments by those in default. We must pause here to observe the wisdom of the Con- queror's scheme. While he did not at the outset disturb the Anglo-Saxon local courts, he yet instituted a supreme royal court which contained within itself the possibility and the certainty of their ultimate overthrow. Bigelow says : " It was reserved for the Norman kings to make direct way for the great jurisdiction of the royal tribunals, by systematic en- croachment upon the jurisdictions of the popular and fran- chise courts, a fact, however, not fully manifested before the 30 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. twelfth century." ^ Again, he insists : " The ordinary King's Court, however, the full court sitting with the king, exercised a jurisdiction limited in fact only by the king's will. That is, there was nothing to prevent the king from drawing into his court all the causes of the people ; and on one pretext or an- other he did seriously invade the jurisdictions of other courts, especially of the Manorial Courts." ^ Of the consequences of these changes from the old order, the same author says : " The most salutary result accomplished in the history of English jurisprudence was the establishment of the [nearly] universal jurisdiction of the King's Court, in- cluding both of its branches, the central court about the king's person [with the exchequer and the council], and the eyre."^ The Curia Regis continued in this manner until the time of Henry II. (a. d. 1154-1189). Justice was dispensed in one department by the Justiciars, the Chancellors, and their as- sistants ; questions of revenue were dealt with by the Barons in the other. In Henry's time, the King's Court had become overcrowded with suitors. The Conqueror's forethought was manifesting itself in results.* Men deserted, for many rea- sons, the local courts and flocked to the King's Court when life or property was in danger. Justices in Eyre.^ To meet this difficulty, Henry, who had himself been Grand Justiciar, appointed (a. d. 1170) justices to go about the king- dom regularly and hear on the spot the complaints of his subjects. This was the origin of the judicial circuits which continued from that time on. Under this same king the As- sizes (of which we shall speak hereafter) were instituted ; their object was to enable litigants to escape the jurisdiction of the local court, with its ordeal of battle, and to refer them- selves and their causes to the judgment of the king's justices. As litigation increased, and the suitors of the King's Court became more numerous, great dissatisfaction was caused by 1 Hist. Pr. 75. 4 P. & M. Hist. L 181. 2 Ibid. 76. ' Itinerant justices. 8 Ibid. 199. OP COURTS. 31 the fact that this Court followed the person of the king from place to place, and with it were forced to go its officers and its suitors. Birth of the Court of Common Pleas. In the reign of King John a reform was effected, and in consequence the Court of Common Pleas was born. The lan- guage of the seventeenth clause of Magna Carta (a. d. 1215) was '^Commu7iia placita non sequantur curiam nostram, sed teneantur in aliquo certo loco " ^ (common pleas shall not follow our court, but shall be held in some certain place). From that time common pleas, or causes between party and party, as distinguished from Crown and revenue causes, were heard at Westminster, and this Court of Common Pleas retained its name and local habitation until 1875. In a. d. 1235, Thomas de Muleton was appointed Chief Justice of the Common Bench, being the first Chief Justice of either of the common- law courts. From this period personal actions gradually ceased to be heard in either the Curia Regis or the Exchequer, and under Edward I. such hearing was prohibited. Dissatisfaction had been felt not only with the wandering character of the Curia Regis, but also with the composite functions of the Chief Justiciar, who was soldier and politi- cian as well as administrator of law. This dissatisfaction culminated when two rival Chief Justiciars fought against each other, and one (Hugh le Despenser) fell on the field of Evesham (a. d. 1265). The other (Phillip Bassett) resigned. On March 8, 1268, Robert De Brus was appointed '■'■Capitalis Justiciarius ad placita coram Rege tenenda^^ (Chief Justice for holding pleas before the king).^ Without the passage of any formal statute the Curia Regis ceased to exist, and there was no longer a Grand Justiciar of England. Court of King's Bench. The remnant of the great Royal Court became the Court of King's Bench, and at its head was the Lord Chief Justice newly created. 1 2 Inst. 21. 3 Campbell's Lives of the Chief Justices, I. 59-65. 32 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. Thus we have seen the Curia Regis existing as the one great Royal Court of England for about two hundred years. Slowly it has broken up into three distinct tribunals : The Exchequer, Common Pleas, and, finally, the King's Bench. For six hundred years these three courts will continue to be the great common-law courts of England, and it is under their administration that the law will develop from its rudimentary beginnings into the system which to-day is so adequate to our needs, because the principles of growth and of adaptability which have made it what it is are still alive in it. At the accession of Edward I. (a. d. 1272), we find the Courts of King's Bench, Common Bench (so Common Pleas was called), and Exchequer sitting in Westminster Hall. The King's Bench was presided over by the Lord Chief Justice with certain puisnd or assistant judges, and had exclusive jurisdiction in all pleas of the Crown, and in all appeals from inferior courts. The Common Bench was presided over by its Chief Justice and other assistant judges, and had exclu- sive jurisdiction in all real actions and in actions between private persons to try private rights. The Exchequer was presided over by the Lord Treasurer, with the Chancellor of the Exchequer and other Barons, and its jurisdiction was limited to cases touching the king's revenue, with which it had exclusive power to deal. It however continued to some- times hear cases between party and party, as it had done ; but in A. D. 1300, it was directed by statute to cease such hearings.^ The Judicial Circuits. We must pause here to inquire what provision was made for the trial of the numerous causes which were brought in or transferred to the King's Courts, now that suitors were forsaking the old tribunals for the stronger and com- pleter Royal Justice. We have seen that Henry II. in A. D. 1170, appointed justices to regularly go around the kingdom and hear the complaints of his subjects, and that this was the origin of the judicial circuits. In 1176, the i 28 Edw. L OF COURTS. 33 number of these Itinerant Justices was increased to eighteen, and they were sent into all the counties of England. In 1179, England was divided into four parts, and five justices were allotted to each part. These included in their number six justices of the Curia Regis. At about this time trial by inquest (the origin of our jury-trial) and also the Great Assize were introduced, and by these means, as we shall see more clearly when we come to consider the subject, " Modes of Trial," all issues of fact involved in causes pending in the Royal Courts at Westminster could be determined in the respective counties where these causes arose. The ver- dicts rendered in the several counties were certified back to the appropriate Westminster Courts. The Assizes and the Inquests also were held in the County Courts, which for many years were constituted as before. The Anglo-Saxon method of local trials was undisturbed. The county remained the unit for judicial administration. As the Shire-gemote (county- court) had been held twice each year for the trial of causes and criminals, so under the new system the Sheriff summoned the jurors and witnesses, and arranged the business, and twice in the year the king's justices came to each county and tried all causes and offences arising within its limits. After a. d. 1885, no more Itinerant Justices, or Justices in Eyre as they were also called, were appointed ; circuits were thereafter perambulated by the Judges of Assize and JVisi Prius} By virtue of the Statute Westminster 2 (13 Edw. I. c. 30) these judges were made up of the " king's sworn justices, associating to themselves one or two discreet knights of each county." Subsequent changes were made in the composition of the " commission" of assize ; but enough has been said to show the student the provision made for the ordinary trial of issues of fact. It is not material to our purpose to trace the decadence of the old Anglo-Saxon courts, and the successive steps that were taken to relieve the Westminster courts by the creation of inferior jurisdictions. Nor will it aid us to dwell upon the ^ This term will be explained in connection with the subject, "Modes of Trial." 3 34 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. equity side of the Exchequer Court or the law side of the Court of Chancery. The study of the organization and juris- diction of Ecclesiastical, Military, and Maritime Courts, and of the great Court of Chancery itself exercising its extraor- dinary or equity jurisdiction, would be out of place here. Nor can we stop to speak of courts of special jurisdiction, interesting as some of them are, or of such petty courts as the piepoudre and others. The student desirous of fuller in- formation upon these points can find it in the authorities cited at the end of this chapter. JUEISDICTION OF CoURT OF KiNG'S BeNCH. It remains to consider somewhat more in detail the juris- diction of the three great common-law courts as tliey existed prior to the creation of the Supreme Court of Judicature. The Court of King's Bench is the remnant of the Curia Regis. Like that court, it purports to be presided over by the sovereign in person, although for centuries he has had no voice in its deliberations. It possesses the residuum of the ancient juris- diction of the Curia Regis, which has not been parcelled out to the other courts. Its judges are by their office the sover- eign conservators of the peace. Its jurisdiction is very high and transcendent. It controls all inferior jurisdictions. It superintends all civil corporations, and commands magistrates and others to do what their duty requires, in every case where there is no other specific remedy. It protects the liberty of the subject by speedy and summary interposition. It takes cognizance both of criminal and of civil causes. On the plea side, or civil branch, it has original jurisdiction of all actions of trespass, or other injury alleged to be committed vi et armis (by force and arms) ; of actions for forgery of deeds, for main- tenance, conspiracy, and deceit, and of actions on the case which allege any falsity or fraud, — all of which savor of a criminal nature, although the action is brought for a civil remfidy, and make the defendant liable in strictness to pay a fine to the king, as well as damages to the injured party. The same doctrine is now extended to all actions on the case what- soever ; but no action of debt, or of detinue, or any other mere OF COURTS. 35 civil action can, by the common law, be prosecuted by any subject in this court by original writ issuing out of chancery. And yet this court might always have held plea of any civil action (other than actions real), provided the defendant were an ofhcer of the court, or in the custody of its marshal for a breach of the peace, or for any other offence. When we come to consider the subject, " process," we shall see how by a fiction this fact was so made use of as to give this court con- current jurisdiction with the Court of Common Pleas in all personal actions whatsoever. The Court of King's Bench is likewise a court of appeal, into which may be removed by writ of error all judgments of the Court of Common Pleas, and of all inferior courts of record in England. Jurisdiction of Court of Common Pleas. The Court of Common Pleas was originally the great com- mon-law tribunal which acquired exclusive jurisdiction of pleas or causes between private or common persons. It retained always its exclusive jurisdiction of real actions. Sir Edward Coke named it, " the lock and key of the Common Law." ^ Another celebrated judge called it the " Common Shop for justice." 2 The early establisliraent and localization of this court at Westminster gave rise to the Inns of Court in its neighborhood, and collected there the whole body of the com- mon-law lawyers, thus strengthening the law itself, promot- ing its development, and enabling it to resist the attacks of the canonists and the civilians who labored to substitute for it the system of the civil law. Jurisdiction of Court of Exchequer. The Court of Exchequer is inferior in rank to both of the others, although, as has been seen, it antedates them. Orig- inally, it was charged only with those causes that concerned the king's revenue. It did, however, as we have said, hear other causes until forbidden by statute to do so, as was also 1 4 Inst. 79, 99. 2 Sir Orlando Bridgman, State Trials, V. 993. 36 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. the case with the Curia Regis after the establishment of the Common Pleas. And when, after some hundreds of years had passed, increasing pressure upon the Common Pleas, or, possibly, emulation, induced the King's Bench to resort to a fictitious source of jurisdiction, and to resume its hearing of private suits generally, so, by a similar fiction which will be hereafter explained, the Exchequer usurped a like jurisdic- tion. The judges of the Court of Exchequer were for many centuries one Chief Baron and three puisn^ or junior Barons^ although when it sat as a court of equity it was comprised, as at the outset, of the Lord Treasurer, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, the Chief Baron, and the junior Barons. Court of Exchequer Chamber. The Court of Exchequer Chamber is exclusively an ap- pellate court. It is composed of the judges of any two of the great Westminster courts to revise the judgments of the third. For example, the judgments of the King's Bench would be revised by the judges of the Common Pleas and the Barons of the Exchequer. House op Peers. The House of Peers or Lords is the supreme judicial tri- bunal of the kingdom in civil cases, succeeding in that respect the Curia Regis as originally constituted. It is the court of last resort in all causes, from whose judgment no further appeal is permitted. Theoretically, all peers sit as ultimate judges of the law. In fact, however, only those sit who are known as the " Law Lords ; " these are men who have filled high judicial stations, and most of whom have been ad- vanced to the peerage (as chancellors or chief justices) by reason of their eminence in the profession. The peers can also, when they desire, call upon all the judges of England to advise them as to the law. For centuries the decisions of this august tribunal commanded, as it still commands, the respect of the profession both in England and in our own land. OF COURTS. 37 We have briefly reviewed the organization, jurisdiction, and growth of that system of courts which has made English juris- prudence. This growth has been slow but healthy and strong. English law has not been a science, not " an ideal result of ethical or political analysis ; it is the actual result of facts of human nature and history." ^ In our own new country we have accepted thankfully this result, and to-day the common law is at once the body of our own jurisprudence and the heart which nourishes that body and stimulates it to further development. (Note. — In describing the origin and history of the common-law courts, we have condensed the account, and, wherever possible, used the words of Blackstone. For details, the student is referred to Book III. chap. 4, of his Commentaries. Also to Professor Minor's Commentaries, Vol. IV. Pt. I. pp. 177-190 ; Professor Bigelow's History of Procedure, chap. iii. ; The King's Peace (Inderwick), chaps, ii. and iii., and finally to Pollock and Maitland's History, ^assm, iinder appropriate index references.) 1 P. & M. Hist. I. Introduction, xxiii. CHAPTER III. OF FORMS OF ACTIONS. " So great is the ascendency of the Law of Actions in the infancy of Courts of Justice, that substantive law has at first the look of being gradually secreted in the interstices of pro- cedure ; and the early lawyer can only see the law through the envelope of its technical forms." ^ What are these tech- nical forms of actions ? In all courts the party who seeks to set the court in motion has to make a statement which, by whatever name it may be called, is in fact an assertion that a wrong has been committed, including also generally in the civil courts a claim for redress.^ Among our Anglo-Saxon ancestors these formal assertions grouped themselves into the following divisions : Actions for a Debt ; Actions for Mova- bles ; Actions for Real Property, and Criminal Procedure.^ These forms, sometimes complicated, were always stiff and unbending. With respect to all matters of procedure, there was an iron rigorism of form and a minute attention to exter- nal observances. As had happened among the Romans many centuries earlier, excessive subtlety brought things to such a pass, that a man who made even the most trifling mistake lost his suit.^ And just as the Romans as they advanced in civilization replaced the solemn and unyielding legis actiones (actions of the law) by a more flexible formulary system, so English law passed under the dominion of a system of writs which issued from the royal chancery. This system grew up little by little. Its period of most rapid growth was from the ^ Maine's Early Law and Custom, ^ Anglo-Saxon Law, 189. 389. * Hunter's Roman Law, 975. ^ Markby's Elements of La,w, 251. OP FORMS OP ACTIONS. 39 accession to the throne of Henry II., in 1154, to the death of his grandson, Henry III., in 1272. It came into existence not in response to any theory, but to meet every-day needs. It was through this system of royal writs that the jurisdic- tion of the old local courts was superseded. The King's Court had originally been established by the king's authority, and its jurisdiction in cases between subject and subject was in every case based upon the King's Writ. A suitor who wanted either to remove his case from a local into the royal court, or to sue at the outset in the latter, bought the King's Writ for that purpose. Thus the use of these writs was stim- ulated- by motives both of royal policy and of royal finance. A limit was put to extortion through their sale by the memo- rable provision of Magna Carta : " Nulli vendemus . . . justitiam vel rectum " ^ (to no one will we sell justice or right). It was originally " entirely foreign to any purpose of the writ to set forth the formal language of an action," ^ and it had at the outset no connection whatever with the relief sought. But soon " a particular writ had come to be the only appropriate commencement of an action for a particular redress, and all writs to commence actions were issued from the Chancery, an office over which the Chancellor presided." ^ Of the Chancery in this connection Pollock and Maitland strikingly say : " The metaphor which likens the Chancery to a shop is trite ; we will liken it to an armory. It contains every weapon of medieval warfare from the two-handed sword to the poniard. The man who has a quarrel with his neighbor comes thither to choose his weapon. The choice is large ; but he must remember that he will not be able to change weapons in the middle of the combat and also that every weapon has its proper use and may be put to none other. If he selects a sword, he must observe the rules of sword play ; lie must not try to use his cross-bow as a mace. To drop metaphor, our plaintiff is not merely choosing a writ ; he is choosing an action, and every action has its own rules." * 1 2 Tnst. 45. ' Ker. Eq. Ju. 9. 2 Hist. Pr. U7. 4 P. & M. Hist. II. 559. ^ 40 common-law pleading. Divisions of Actions. The most ancient division of formed actions is into Real, Personal, and Mixed. By formed actions, (brevia formata J ^ are signified such as were prescribed and provided by the common law, and wliich existed prior to the statute of "West- minster 2d, authorizing actions on the case. Real actions are brought for the specific recovery of lands, tenements, or hereditaments. Mixed actions are brought for both the specific recovery of lands, tenements, or hereditaments, and damages for injury sustained in respect of such property. Personal actions are brought for the specific recovery of goods and chattels, or for damages or other redress for breach of con- tract, or for other injuries of whatever description, the specific recovery of lands, tenements, and hereditaments only excepted. Real Actions. Of these divisions of actions English law was for centuries almost exclusively concerned with the first, and for manifest reasons. After the Norman conquest the warfare and fighting in England " were between the conquerors and the conquered. In spite of war, defections, and some scattered revolts, the Norman barons and their king work together, support one another, and march together with one common object. The cohesion of the feudal confederation and the vigor of the central power were matters of actual necessity for them. . . . The territory was divided into sixty thousand one hundred and fifteen knight's fees, whose owners swore, all of them, fealty to the king." ^ The study of the growth and development of these real actions is even at this day interesting and instructive. At the outset the student must recall the fact that no estate for less than life had the dignity of a freehold estate, or was of a feudal nature.^ Consequently there was no real action which provided a remedy for injury to any estate less than for life. But this is not all. What a real action was originally concerned 1 Chit. PI. 82 ; Bracton, f. 413, b. s Bl. Com. II. 143*. 2 Abdy's Feudalism, 333, 334. OP FORMS OF ACTIONS. 41 with was only the question of right or title to a freehold estate. The mere seisin or possession, as distinct from the right, was something which the law did not take under its protection, and for the deprivation of which it provided no remedy. Just at this point it will be instructive to take an account of the remedies which the law originally offered for injuries to real estate. All real actions were at first included under the following divisions : Writs of Right, strictly so called, and "Writs in the Nature of Writs of Right. Writs of Right ^ dealt not merely with seisina (possession) but with jus (right). They did not apply to any save a fee- simple title. In such case the demandant (plaintiff) will appear and claim the land in dispute as his right and inheri- tance. "He will go on to assert that either he or some ances- tor of his has been seised not merely ' as of fee ' but also ' as of right.' He will offer battle by the body of a champion who theoretically is also a witness, a witness who testifies this seisin either of his own knowledge or in obedience to the in- junction of his dead father." ^ The person attacked in this action, who is called the tenant, always has it in his power to deny the demandant's case, and to put himself upon the battle. As the result of the trial a very solemn and abso- lutely conclusive judgment is pronounced; the land is ad- judged to the successful party and his heirs and ahjudged from the other party and his heirs forever. Because of the conclusiveness of the judgment, the law proceeds with great deliberation. Years may elapse before the termination of the action, and by collateral proceedings (vouchers to warranty )3 the lifetime of the demandant may be consumed in vain.* 1 " Note of writs of right (whereof you will do this, let the sheriff of N. do the praecipe in capite is one), some be it, that we may hear no more clamor close, and some be patent. thereupon for want of right) : which " Writs of right returnable into the clause is not in the other writs, and court of common pleas be patent, and necessary it is that such writs should writs directed into ancient demesne, be patent, that the sheriffe might take are close ; and the reason wherefore in notice thereof." — 2 lust. 40. other courts of the lords, the writs shall But see Encyclopaedia Eritannica, sub be patent, is, because there is a clause voc. " Writs." in those writs, et nisi feceris, vicecomes ^ 1^ & M. Plist. II. 62. N. hoc facial, ne amplius clamorem ^ See post, Voucher to Warranty. audiamus pro defectu recti (and uuless * Booth on Real Actions, 58, 162. 42 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. Of these strict writs of right there were eight ^ forms, extend- ing from the writ of right patent which was " in its nature the highest writ in law," ^ lying only for the assertion of an estate in fee simple of lands or tenements, down to the writ of right close, which lay for lands in ancient demesne. The following is the form of a writ of right patent : — Henry by the grace of God, &c., to Henry Earl of Lancaster, greeting : We command you, that without delay you do full right to A. of B. of one messuage and twenty acres of land with the ap- purtenances in J. which he claims to hold of you by the free ser- vice of one penny ^er annum for all services; of which W. of T. deforceth him; and unless you will do this, let the sheriff of Nottingham do it, that we may hear no more clamour thereupon for want of right. Witness, &c.^ Writs in the Nature of a Writ of Right included fourteen * different, forms, and they were so called because some of them might be brought by tenant for life or in tail, and in others of them battle did not lie, while in most of them relief was sought for other things than injuries to the mere right to lands and tenements.^ These forms covered a large remedial field, and, until the time of Henry II., they were thought adequate for the needs of the age with respect to injuries to real estate. Development of Real Actions. It appears that a distinctly possessory action is not native in the law of the Anglo-Saxon race.^ It required such a king as Henry H. to transplant upon English soil the idea, underlying the Roman interdict iinde vi,' that a possession acquired by force was wrongful. In the year 1166, we meet first with the assize of novel disseisin, a new and possessory action. This assize, in order to prevent further violence, protects a possession which has been acquired without title 1 Com. Dig. Action (D. 2), 6 p. & m. Hist. IT. 46. 2 F. N. B. 1, A. 7 " Whence bv force." The essen- 8 F. N. B. 1, G. tial character of this interdict was that * Com. Dig. Action (D. 2). it was available for a mere possessor, 6 Booth on Real Actions, Book II. whether he was owner or not. Hon- chap. IX. ter's Roman Law, 250, 332, 372. OP FORMS OF ACTIONS. 43 and by force. A lawful tenant in fee or for life is ejected by- one who has no right w^iatever to the land in dispute; the assize in such case puts a strict bound to tlie lawful owner's right of self-help ; he must re-eject the disseisor promptly, or he must himself bring the assize of novel disseisin, and appeal to the law to restore to him that possession of which he has been wrongfully deprived. The law does evil that good may come of it, and " protects the land-grabber against his victim in order that land may not be grabbed." * This assize of novel disseisin is quick in action and effective in remedy. No question of title is heard. Has there in fact been a novel (recent) disseisin ? If so, the possession taken forcefully must be given up to the person from whom it was seized, though he himself may be a disseisor without right. This, we see at once, is a long step forward. Yet it is soon apparent that the new remedy is incomplete. The action lies for the disseisee against the disseisor, but it does not lie for the heir of the disseisee, nor against the heir of the disseisor (to mention only two parties whom it fails to reach), because the heir of the disseisor is not himself guilty of any disseisin in the view of the law, and the heir of the disseisee has not been disseised. Before, however, this defect is supplied, the law provides another speedy remedy for the recovery of possession in the case where, upon the death of an ancestor within a certain degree, a stranger enters and abates. This remedy is called the assize of mort d'ancestor. Where the ancestor is beyond this degree, then the writ is changed in name so as to express the relationship, for example, if the ancestor be a grandfather, it becomes aiel^ great grandfather, besaiel, great-great-grand- father, tresaiel, and for collateral relations other than uncle and aunt (who come within the mort d'ancestor), it is called a writ of eosinage. All of these assizes were much alike in that they turned upon the question of the demandant's possession ; was he or his predecessor in right in peaceable possession at such or such a time ? 1 P. & M. Hist. II. 52. 44 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. To provide a further remedy for cases in which these assizes had never applied, and also to extend their pur- pose to degrees which they failed to reach, a whole group of writs was invented which stood midway between the possessory assizes and the writ of right. We meet with the first of these writs in the year 1205.^ All of these new writs assert the demandant's right by alleging a recent flaw in the tenant's title. They say that the tenant had no right of entry into the land in dispute save in a certain mode which they describe and attack. If there has been a disseisin, they say that the tenant had no entry unless through (per) the disseisor, or through B, to whom (per and cui) the disseisor had aliened or, when the degree is more remote still, after (post) the disseisin wrought by the original disseisor. So also, there were writs of entry upon intrusion after the death of the particular tenant, or after a certain term which had expired, or when land was given to a man by a woman whom he had promised to marry, which land he retained, although refusing to marry the woman. So these writs of entry lay upon aliena- tion (1) by a person legally incapable of aliening [as an idiot or minor], (2) by a particular tenant, and (3) by the husband of the wife's estate. There was one principle governing all of these actions : there was no going behind the entry charged. If that entry was unlawful, and if the tenant derived his possession through it, there could be no question of proprietary right.^ The advance which English real actions have made up to this point, has been thus graphically resumed by Pollock and Maitland : " A graduated hierarchy of actions has been established. ' Possessoriness ' has become a matter of degree. At the bottom stands the novel disseisin, possessory in every sense, summary and punitive. Above it rises the mort d'ancestor, summary but not so summary, going back to the seisin of one who is already dead. Above this again are writs of entry, writs which have strong affinities with the writ of right, so strong that in Bracton's day an action begun by writ of entry may by the pleadings be turned into a final, 1 P. & M. Hist. IL 64. 2 Ibid. II. 67. OF FORMS OF ACTIONS. 45 proprietary action. The writs of entry are not so summary as are the assizes, but they are rapid when compared with the writ of right ; the most dilatory of the essoins (excuses) is precluded ; there can be no battle or grand assize. Ulti- mately we ascend to the writ of right. Actions are higher or lower, some lie ' more in the right ' than others. You may try one after another : begin with the novel disseisin, go on to the mort d'ancestor, then see whether a writ of entry will serve your turn, and, having failed, fall back upon the writ of right." ^ It is true that this elaborate scheme of redress for injuries to the title or possession of real estate has been completely superseded. Real actions would be brought nowhere to-day. And yet it is necessary for the mastery of English law that their rise, development, and displacement should be studied and understood. The student is recommended to read Pol- lock and Maitland's History, Vol. II. chapters YV. and IX. Those desiring to pursue the subject further can consult Booth on Real Actions and Fitzherbert's Treatise on Writs (de Natura Brevium). Mixed Actions. The only mixed actions which it is necessary to especially mention are Quare Impedit (wherefore he obstructed), by which, when the right of a party to a benefice was obstructed, he could recover the presentation ; and Waste, to recover land wasted and treble damages for the waste committed thereon ; but the equitable remedy to enjoin waste is so much more effec- tive, that this action is obsolete. Ejectment cannot be called in strictness a mixed action ; ^ we shall speak of it later in detail. It is enough to say here that it is to-day the gen- eral remedy for the trial of title to real estate, and has displaced all real actions. In the United States a forcible entry and detainer is punished by criminal proceedings, the English Statute of 6 Ric. 2, St. 1, or some substitute therefor 1 P. & M. Hist. II. 74, Placock, Cro. Jac. 21. See also F. N.B. 2 Selw. N. P. II. 692, u. (1 ) ; Matthew Ejectione Jirmce, 220 H, n. (a) ; Steph. V. Hassell, Cro. Eliz. 144 ; Harebottle v. PI. note 3. 46 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. applying to such cases. Yery generally also in this country summary proceedings are provided by the law for the re- covery of the possession of real estate, where the owner has been unlawfully deprived of such possession. Personal Actions. As we have seen, English procedure at its origin was almost entirely confined to remedies for injuries to real estate and to its possession. It is said by Mr. Buckler, in his recent mono- graph upon the origin and history of contract in Roman law, that " poverty of contract was, in fact, a striking feature of the early Roman law. . . . The origin of contract as a feature of social life was simultaneous with the birth of trade. ... As Roman civilization progresses, we find com- merce extending and contracts growing steadily to be more complex and more flexible." ^ In striking similarity with the above statement, we learn from Pollock and Maitland's History of English Law that " the law of contract holds anything but a conspicuous place among the institutions of English law before the Norman conquest. In fact, it is rudimentary. Many centuries must pass away before it wins that dominance which we at the present day concede to it. Even in the schemes of Hale and Blackstone, it appears as a mere supplement to the law of property." 2 Our ancestors did not at first conceive of what we to-day call a contract, that is, a transaction which depends for its validity upon the mere agreement of the parties thereto. They only knew what would be termed, in Roman law, formal and real contracts. A formal contract with the Romans was one which derived its binding force from the fact that it had been concluded through a certain ceremony Qper aes et libram, with the copper and the scales), or that a certain prescribed question had been asked and answered in a man- ner also prescribed, or that an entry had been made in a cer- tain book. A real contract on the other hand was one which 1 Contract in Eoman Law, Introduc- ^ p. & m. Hist. 11. 182. tion, 1, 2. OP FORMS OP ACTIONS. 47 required for its formation the delivery of some specific thing, as a deposit, a loan for use or a pledge.^ Neither the formal nor the real contract was what we should to-day call a con- tract, for the consent of the parties involved was not the source of obligation. In the first case the question was, has a certain form been followed ? In the second case, has a cer- tain thing been delivered by one party to the other ? With our ancestors sale was a real and not a consensual proceeding. To them sale and exchange were known simply as completed transactions ; the money was paid when the object sold was delivered, and no such thing as a credit or an obligation to be discharged at some future time was thought of. Loans were made, but the borrower had to return the exact thing loaned. Pledges and gages were also given, but it was a long time before any idea of contractual obligation in connection with these arose. The recipient of the gage was bound to hand it back if, within due time, its giver came to redeem it. This was his duty rather than his contract obligation. If the gage was not restored, the owner would reclaim it thus : " You unjustly detain what is mine." We see clearly that such contracts were what were called real. They depended upon a fact and not upon an agreement. There is but one formal contract in English law, the deed or contract under seal ; all others are simple contracts re- quiring, when executory, both consideration and consent.^ The transition from the real to the formal contract in English law appears with what was called the pledge of faith. When men shook hands over a bargain, they went through a form which both made and bound that bargain, and gave it a cer- tain legal status. Such a formal contract was never enforced among the English by the secular courts. It was, however, at once seized upon by the ecclesiastical courts as a source of jurisdiction. According to the Gregorian statute book, even the nude pact could be enforced, at any rate by penitential discipline. We find that early in the reign of Henry II., the 1 Hunter's Eoman Law, 451-490. 2 ^iison's Law of Contract, 56. Howe's Studies in the Civil Law, Lec- ture VL 48 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. ecclesiastical courts, even the Roman Curia, were discussing agreements made by Englishmen with pledge of faith.^ After the quarrel with Becket, and in consequence of that quarrel, the English justices in Glanvill's day had set their faces against what might otherwise have become the English for- mal contract, and had determined that the grasp of hands or the giving of the gage are not sufficient to constitute a formal contract. Blackstone has recorded how in his day men shook hands over a bargain.^ The practice has come down to us, but all of the meaning went out of it when, in 1166, the fifteenth section of the Constitution of Clarendon provided thus: "Pleas of debt which are due by pledge of faith, or without pledge of faith, belong to the King's justiciar." ^ Thereafter the ecclesiastical courts could not, and tlie King's Court would not, enforce agreements made only with pledge of faith. Division of Personal Actions. We can now understand that when we divide personal actions into those arising ex contractu^ or on contract, and ex delicto^ or from tort, we are using a division which is younger than the actions included under it. The formed actions of debt, detinue, and covenant existed before the idea of con- tract, as we are familiar with it, was born. Formed Actions ex Contractu. Of these formed actions ex contractu, there are Debt, Detinue, Covenant, Account, and Scire Facias.^ Debt. "We must now turn to the action of debt which is prob- ably the oldest of the formed actions upon contract. We do not meet with it more frequently in early days because a shrewd creditor then obtained as security a judgment or a recognizance against his would-be debtor before the loan 1 P. & M. Hist. IL 196. whichtheplaiutiff demanded the arrears 2 Bl. Com. II. 448*. of an annual rent that was due to him. 3 Hist. Pr. 37. It has been for a long time obsolete, and * The action of Annuity was one in merits no further notice here. OF FORMS OF ACTIONS. 49 was made, and hence would not be compelled to sue on non-payment of the loan. In Glanvill's time we find an action of debt in the King's Court. From the form of the original writ in debt the development of it from the original writ in a real action is evident. The creditor is being deforced of money, just as the demandant who brings a writ of right is being deforced of land.^ The modern action of ^bt is lineally descended from the writ of right for money-debt, and is there- fore in its origin what that always was, a real action!^ The very language of the writ is significant of the way in which our ancestors thought of contract. A debtor was noti violating his agreement. He was deforcing his creditor off his due. The action of debt was rare at first ; but, as trade developed, it became much more frequent. " First from the Jew, then from the Lombard, Englishmen were learning to lend money and to give credit for the price of goods." ^ We may see the action of debt gradually losing some of the features which it had in common with the actions in which a man claimed his property. The idea of personal obligation begins to manifest itself. The offer of battle as a mode of proof of debt disappears so early that no record of a case of it remains. Thus the writ of right for land, and " what we might well call the writ of right for money," begin to separate. Very soon the action of detinue, in its turn, detaches itself from the action ~6f debt. In the writ for debt, it was said " the defendant debet (owes) et detinet (and detains) the surn^ claimed." But lawyers began to feel that in certain cases the word " debet " should not be used. One ought not to say debet when there has been a specific chattel loaned (commodatum). Even when there is a money loan (mutuum) the word " debet " should only be used so long as both parties to the transaction are alive ; if either dies, the money may be unlawfully detained by the representative of the one from the representative of the other ; but there is no longer any owing of money, 1 Hist. Pr. 163. « P. & M. Hist. II. 204. 2 Ibid. 160. 50 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. Debt is at first used to recover money loaned. Soon it is brought for the price of goods sold. Even in the time of Edward I. the action of debt was very rarely employed save for five purposes : it was used to obtain (1) money lent, (2) the price of goods sold, (3) arrears of rent due upon a lease for years, (4) money due from a surety, and (5) a fixed sum promised by a sealed document.^ As this action is entirely independent of what we should call a contract, we soon find that it can be used whenever a fixed, a certain sum, is due from one man to another. Statutory penalties, forfeitures under by-laws, amercements inflicted by inferior courts, money adjudged by any court to be due, can each and all be recovered by it. There was as yet no thought of a quid pro quo (what for what), a consideration. The action began with an assertion of right to a sum of money unjustly with- held, and developed from that conception. That a promise is the ground of action is not imagined. The plaintiff in his declaration will also mention some causam dehendi (cause of owing) and that cause will not be a promise. This is well expressed in a Norman maxim, " Ex promisso auiem nemo debitor constituitur, nisi causa precesserit legitima promit- tendi^^ which translated is, " But no one is made a debtor by a promise, unless there lias preceded a legitimate cause for the promise." ^ Thus if you sue in debt you must rely on a loan, a sale, or some other similar transaction, which is a legitimate support of a promise, and not on any one's promise distinct from such support. In the action of debt, if the plaintiff had not something to show for his debt, for example, a sealed instrument, the de- fendant's denial of the debt by oath with oath-helpers turned the plaintiff out of court. This was called " wager of law," and will be more fully explained hereafter when we speak~of modes of trial. It is enough to say here that it consisted in the defendant's swearing that he owed nothing, and then having eleven of his neighbors swear that they believed his assertion. The facility of escape which this privilege gave to the defendant in the case caused the partial disuse both of 1 P. & M. Hist. II. 208. a Ibid. II. 210 OP FORMS OF ACTIONS. 51 this action and of detinue, its child. We have not space to follow Mr. Justice Holmes in his inquiry into the develop- ment of this action, in connection with the vexed subject of the birth and growth of the idea of " consideration " as neces- sary to sustain a simple contract ; he maintains that this is one of the instances in which " an accident of procedure " became " a doctrine of substantive law." The student is re- ferred for further information on this subject to Lectures VII. and VIII. of " The Common Law." ^ The action of debt, as ultimately developed, was an extensive remedy. It lay to recover money in four classes of cases.^ i. On records, as upon the judgment of a superior or in- ferior court of record. At common law, debt was the only remedy upon a judgment after a year and a day had elapsed from the time of its recovery, for in such case execution could not issue thereon, as it was presumed to be satisfied. Debt was sometimes brought upon a recognizance against those who were bound thereby. So it lay upon a statute merchant, which was in the nature of a judgment. Debt also lay against a sheriff who had collected money, and had not paid it over, for his return of '■'•fieri feci " (I have caused to be made) was in the nature of a record. II. On statutes. If a statute prohibit the doing of an act under a penalty or forfeiture of a su m of money, to be paid to the party aggrieved or to a common informer, and do not prescribe any other mode of recovery, debt will lie at the suit of those entitled to recover such sum. It will be observed that in this and the preceding cases there is no contract to support the action. III. For money due on any specialty or contract under seal to pay money, as on single bonds (bonds without condi- tion), on charter parties, on policies of insurance under seal, and on bonds conditioned for the payment of money (or for the performance of any other act) it lay by or against the parties to any such instrument, and their personal repre- sentatives. In all of these cases, the debt was created by the act of the parties to be charged in executing the instrument 1 See also Hist. Pr. 160-165. 2 Chit. PI. 97-102. 52 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. under seal which is sued on. In other words, we have here the formal contract of English law. lY. On simple contracts and legal liabilities, debt lay to recover money lent, paid, had and received, or due on account stated; also for interest due on the loan or forbearance of money; for the reasonable WOrth (quanfum meruit) of work and labor done, of goods sold, for fees, for use and occupation of a house, on a demise not under seal, and, generally, for the omission of any duty created by common law or custom ; again it lay on an award to pay money, on by-laws for fines and on amercements, on judgments of domestic courts not of record, and of foreign courts. It lay generally wherever an act of the plaintiff had benefited the defendant in some certain sum of money which the defendant ought to pay ; the duty creates the debt. In_n0iie of these classes of cases was debt sustainable un- less the demand was for a sum certain, or for~a pecuniary demand which could readily be reduced by reference or com- putation to a certainty. In some cases debt is the peculiarly appropriate remedy, as where a lessee has been ousted from a part of the demised premises by a third person, in which case he can be sued in debt for an apportionment of the rent, since privity of estate still exists between the lessor and lessee as to the part yet possessed by the latter, and debt is the peculiar remedy to recover rent where privity of estate exists, although privityof contract may never have existed. It is also the only remedy against a devisee of land for the breach by the devisor of a covenant relating to this land, since in such case the liability of the devisee depends upon his succession to the devised land, and his consequent legal duty to respond for any breach of such covenant by the person from whom he derived such succession.^ We will gain additional knowledge of the peculiar features of this action if we consider the instances in which it did not lie. Originally, debt for rent was confined to the recovery of arrears in cases where the estate in the rent was for 1 Chit. PI. 102. OP FORMS OF ACTIONS. 53 years only. A remarkable doubt was long entertained in England as to whether a personal action could be maintained for the arrears of a freehold rent, the idea being that such arrears, like a freehold estate in land, could be recovered only by a real action, thus confounding the profits of the rent (which are as much personalty as wheat or corn severed from the land) with the rent itself.^ In consequence of this doubt, certain real actions (cessavit and others) were used to recover the arrears of freehold rents wherever a distress would not apply. It was not until the statutes of 8 Anne, c. 14, and 6 George III. c. 17, were passed that debt was used in such 'cases. Debt could not be supported on a simple contract against an executor, because in such case the testator could have waged his law if sued when living. But as there was rib wager of law allowed in the Court of Exchequer, there debt could be brought against an executor on a simple con- tract, as it could also be brought in the other courts in cases in which the testator, if living, could not have waged his law. Where the lessor has accepted rent from the assignee of the lessee, he cannot sustain debt against the lessee or his per- sonal representatives, but must proceed by action of covenant on the express contract. The reason for this provision is found in the fact above stated, that debt for rent was grounded upon privity of estate (upon the duty of the occupier of land to pay its owner the worth of such occupation) and not upon privity of contract. Of course, the lessee remained liable upon his express contract to pay rent ; but this was absolutely a contract liability, and covenant was the remedy for the breach of that contract. Jt was doubtful at common law whether debt would lie against the indorser of a negotiable security, or the drawer of a bill of exchange, because in these cases the liability depends not upon the writing only, but upon collateral acts ; i. e., presentment and demand of pay- ment and notice of dishonor. It was said debt would not lie upon a bill of exchange against the acceptor ; for, though the acceptance binds by the custom of merchants, yet it does not create a duty any more than a promise made by a stranger to 1 Min. Inst. IV. 130 ; Com. Dig. Title " Debt," A. 7. 54 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. pay, etc., if the creditor will forbear his debt; the drawer of the bill is the debtor, and continues to be the debtor, notwith- standing the acceptance, for that is a collateral engagement only.^ Debt was not sustainable where the simple contract was for the payment of the debt of a third person, or for other collateral act. Since debt lay only in cases where a legal duty arose from a fact, the mere promise of a man to pay the debt of another, or to do some collateral act, was not a fact which imposed a duty. It was, it is true, a promise, but a mere promise did not then create a duty ; it could only be legally enforced when it was made in the form of a covenant. This primitive rule continued to apply after the law recognized promises made upon a consideration as creating a legal lia- bility. This action does not lie for a debt payable by instal- ments, and not secured by penalty, until all are due, — a doctrine for which no satisfactory reason can be given, and which is in direct conflict with an early case,^ but which is too well established by authority to be disregarded.^ Formerly it was thought that in an action of debt on simple contract, the precise sum stated to be due in the declaration must be recovered, or the plaintiff would be non-suited ; but this idea no longer prevails, and the plaintiff will recover if he prove any sum to be due to liim.^ Actions of debt brought for money loaned, for money had and received, etc., differ from what are known as the " common counts," and which will be hereafter considered under the head of General Assumpsit ; debt is brought upon a sale or loan as a fact in itself, and not on any promise connected therewith. It is said that debt also lies in the detinet for goods, as 1 Hard's case, Salk. 23. It will be contract between the parties. It will, perceived by the student that this rea- therefore, lie at the suit of the drawer soning is not harmonious. It is, how- against the acceptor; by the payee ever, characteristic. For a commentary against the drawer of a bill or check, upon it, reference should be made to the or maker of a note ; by first indorsee opinion of Story, J., in the case of Ra- against the drawer of a bill payable to borg et al. v. Peyton, 2 Wheaton, 388. his own order ; and in all cases by in- The law upon the subject is stated dorsee against his immediate indorser." in Byles on Bills, 333*, as follows : - March v^ Freeman, 3 Lev. 383. "Debt is of a limited application, and 3 Min. Com. IV. 459. will only lie where there is a privity of * Chit. PI. 103, OP FORMS OF ACTIONS. 65 upon a contract to deliver a quantity of malt. This form of the action differs from detinue, in that the property in any specific goods need not be vested in the plaintiff at the time the action is brought, which is essential in detinue. But this form is probably a survival of the time when debt in the debet and debt in the detinet were the same action. Since this action was brought for the recovery of a debt eo nomine and in numero (by that name and for a definite amount), only nominal damages were awarded for the detention of the debt, and they generally covered only interest thereon. The declaration^ in debt, if on simple contract, must show "? the fact from which the duty to pay arises, and should state / either a legal liability or an express agreement, though not S a promise, to pay the debt. But on specialties or on records, the action is supported by the specialty or the record itself.^ ^ Profert (proffer) of the specialty sued on should always be rnaoe, or its omission excused.^ Th-e controlling feature of this action which the student ^ should bear in mind is that it lies for the omission of a duty I J in not paying a definite sum of money, rather than for the violation of a contract to so pay. The characteristics of this and of the succeeding forms of actions can be studied at length in Selwyn's treatise on the law of " Nisi Prius." Detinue. This action, originally identical with debt, slowly branched off from it. The first formula in debt alleges that the defendant owes the plaintiff so many marks " whereof he unjustly deforces him," as if the plaintiff were suing to recover certain specific coins. Shortly after Glanvill's time, the deforces is dropped and the formula becomes " which he owes (debet) and unjustly detains (detinet).''^ If, however, either creditor or debtor were dead, then the owes was omitted and the defendant was charged as detaining only (debt in the detinet). Here detinue began to make its appearance. If 1 The formal statement of the plain- 3 Profert will be explained hereafter tiff's demand, to be described hereafter, under the rule of pleading especially 2 Chit. PI. 104. relating to it. 56 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. one claims a particular object, one must never say debet, but oii^^injuste detinet. The idea of an obligation in connection ' with a contract is beginning to dawn, and debt in the debet is henceforth developed in that direction, while debt in the detinet, or detinue, remains a proprietary action.^ It, how- ever, never lost the marks of its origin. It could be joined with debt, although both the pleas and the judgments in the two actions became different. So also the defendant could always wage his law in detinue as in debt on simple contract. Originally detinue did not lie in a case of wrongful taking.^ Indeed, it is said that it could only be maintained by a bailor against a bailee or his representatives, and that if the bail- ment were traversed it had to be proved.^ Gradually the gist of the action becomes the wrongful detainer of the chattel against the demand of the true owner for its delivery, and the allegation of bailment is not allowed to be traversed.^ Fin- ally, it comes to be grouped by some writers among tort ac- tions, notwithstanding the manifest traces of its origin. \ Detinue ^ is the only remedy by suit at law for the recovery pi a specific chattel in specie, unless in those cases where re- /plevin lies. In trespass, trover, or assumpsit (forms of / actions which will be presently explained), damages only can be recovered,^ and in fact even in detinue an obstinate defendant can not be forced to give up the chattel itself, for the judgment is in the alternative, i.e., for the return of the chattels claimed, or for their value, with damages for their ; detention, and costs. / This action could not be maintained for real property, and tne goods or chattels for which it is brought must be distin- guishable from others by some certain means. Thus it lies for a horse, a cow, or money in a bag ; but for money or grain not in a bag or chest, or otherwise identified, it does not lie. Charters and title-deeds and any other specific chattel in which the plaintiff has the right of property may be recovered by it.^ 1 P. & M. Hist. IL 171, 172. 6 Chit. PI. 110-114. 2 Bl. Com. in. 151 *. 6 Ibid. 110. 8 P. & M. Hist. IL 174. 1 Ibid. 111. * Gledstane v. Hewitt, 1 Cromp. & J. 565. OF FORMS OF ACTIONS. 67 A person who has a right of property in the goods, and also the right of immediate possession, may support this action, although he has never had the actual possession. But if the plaintiff 's interest be only in reversion, and he have not the right of immediate possession, he cannot sustain the action. One who has only a special property, as a bailee, may also support "the action where^ he delivered the goods to the defendant or where they were taken out of his custody. / Detinue lies wherever a specific chattel is unlawfully with- T) held by the wrong-doer, whether it were originally taken law-/ ' fully or unlawfully . It cannot be supported against a person who never had possession of the goods, nor does it lie against .^^ a bailee if, before demand, he loses them. If_the defendant claim that the goods were pledged to him as security for a loan still unpaid, or if he assert a lien of any kind on the goods, he must plead the same specially. . The declaration should contain a statement of the plain- tiff's right to the goods in question, describing them with ^ such certainty as to identify them, and should aver that they .^ are in the defendant's possession; that the defendant ac- quired such possession by finding the said goods, or by their bailment to him ; that he holds such possession subject to the 1 Jj plaintiff's right to have the same upon demand, and that such demand has been made and refused.^ The value of the goods should be stated. Covenant. Glanvill does not mention the writ of covenant, but an in- stance of its use appears in the earliest extant plea roll (1194), and before the end of the reign of Henry III. it has become a popular writ. Commerce is increasing, and its wants have occasioned the practice of letting land for terms of years. The termor is protected by the writ of covenant, and for years this is his only protection. Before the end of the reign of Edward I., it is established 1 Kettle V. Bromsall, Willes' Rep. seems to require a demand on the plain- 120. Even in cases of unlawful taking, tiff's part to complete his right of the form of the declaration in detinue action. 58 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. law that the only conventio (covenant) that can be enforced by action is one that is expressed in a written document sealed by the party to be charged therewith. Thenceforward the term "covenant" denotes a sealed document. This is an- other instance of the moulding of substantive law by pro- cedure. The man who relies upon a covenant must produce in evidence a deed. Thenceforward the sealing and delivery of a piece of parchment " has an operative force of its own which intentions expressed, never so plainly, in other ways have not. This sealing and delivering of the parchment is the contractual act. Further, what is done by deed can only be undone by deed." ^ Covenant was first employed for the purpose of conveying land by way of fine, and many such actions were brought simply that they might be compromised. Family settlements were also made with its aid, the settler taking a covenant for re-feoffment from his feoffee. But, as has been said, its principal use came to be the protection of a termor, who was ousted from his term by an unscrupulous landlord. This will be explained more fully when we come to speak of the action of ejectment. One limitation upon the functions of the action of covenant- broken ( conventiononem fractam) soon becomes apparent ; it can not be employed for the recovery of a debt, even though the existence of the debt is attested by a sealed instrument. A debt can not have its origin in a covenant, but must arise from some transaction, as a sale or a loan. Covenant 2 is the only remedy for the recovery of un- liquidated damages for the breach of a contract under seal. It is the proper remedy where an entire sum is by deed stipulated to be paid by instalments and the whole is not due, nor the payment secured by a penalty. It is also the proper remedy upon all collateral agreements under seal, in order to recover damages to compensate for the breach of the agreement.3 Where an agreement has been sealed by only one party thereto, covenant may be maintained against him 1 P. & M. Hist. IL 218. 3 Min. Inst. IV. 460. 2 Chit. PI. 105-110. OP FORMS OF ACTIONS. 69 for its breach, although only assu7n2}sit could be sustained against the other party for a breach by him. The action may be maintained on a covenant relating to some fact in the past, or the present, or for the performance of something in the future. Covenant is the usual remedy on leases at the suit of the lessee against the lessor for the breach of a covenant for quiet enjoyment, etc., and by the lessor against the lessee for non- payment of rent, not repairing, etc, ; and covenant appears to be generally a concurrent remedy with debt, for the recovery of any money demand, when there is an express or an implied contract. contaiiied in._lhe deed. Where the demand is for rent, or any other liquidated sum, the lessor has an election to proceed in debt or covenant against the lessee. At common law no person could support an action of covenant, or take advantage of any covenant or condition, unless he were a party or privy thereto, and of course no grantee or assignee of any reversion or rent could take such advantage. To remedy this defect the statute of 32 Hen. VIII. c. 34, gives the assignee of a reversion the same remedies against the lessee, or his representatives or assignees, upon covenants running with the land, as the lessor, or his heirs, had at common law ; the assignee, on the other hand, is made liable for the breach of a covenant running with the land to the same extent that the lessor was at common law. As to the cases in which debt or covenant should be brought upon such covenants running with the land, and also as to the local or transitory nature of such actions, the student is referred to a careful review of the subject in Gould's Pleading, pp. 111-116. The declaration in covenant must state that the contract ■ ' was under seal, and should usually make profert thereof or excuse its omission. If performance of a condition pre- , n cedent be required to establish the plaintiff's right of action, f^r!^ such' performance must be averred. Only so much of the covenant a,s is essential to the cause of action should be set forth, and that not in full, but according to its legal effect ; \^ yet it is usual to declare, against this well-settled rule, in 60 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. .Hhe very words of the deed. The breach may be alleged in [ the negative of the words of the covenant, or according to the \ legal effect. Several breaches may be assigned at common ^ law. As damages are the main object of the suit, they / should be laid in a sum sufficiently large to cover the real V amount claimed.^ ACCOUNT.2 The action of account was closely modelled upon the pro- prietary writs. The defendant was called upon to render to the plaintiff justly and without delay a certain thing, to-wit : an account of his receipts and disbursements during the time he was the plaintiff's bailiff and, as such, receiver of his money. Even to-day we say that a man is under an obligation to render Ian account. This obligation does not rest upon contract, but \ipon a situation or a relation. An administrator, a trustee, a guardian owes an account to those who occupy a certain relation with respect to him as such officer. Accordingly the court first ascertained whether or not the duty to account existed, and if it found in the affirmative, it pronounced an interlocutory judgment, quod computet (let him account). Then auditors were appointed who stated the particulars of the account. This action would only lie where the amount sought to be recovered was uncertain and unliquidated. It is perhaps worthy of note that this was the first action in which process of execution was given against the person of the defendant. / The action has been superseded, save in a very few of the /CTnited States, by the equitable remedy for an accounting. Its further details may be found in the record and proceedings in the case of Godfrey v. Saunders, 3 Wils. 73, and also in Selwyn's work before referred to. Scire Facias.^ As the writ of scire facias is not an original but a judicial writ, it may seem irregular to class it among the formed actions. Of it Lord Coke says : " This is a judiciall writ, 1 Chit. PI. 110. " Foster on Scire Facias, passim. 2 Selw. N. P. I. 1-7. OF FORMS OF ACTIONS. 61 and properly lyeth after the yeare and day after judgment. ... So as by the writ it appeareth, that the defendant is to be warned to plead any matter in barre of execution ; and therefore albeit it be a judiciall writ, yet because the de- fendant may thereupon pleade this scire facias is accounted in law to bee in nature of an action." ^ It derived its name from the following necessary words in the writ : " Quod scire facias prcefat. T. (the defendant) quod sit corarti^ etc., (that you the Sheriff sliall cause the aforesaid T. to know that he must be before us, etc.)." /Scire Facias is an action which is always founded upon a record, and is the proper means of enforcing compliance with all obligations ofrecord upon which an execution can not immediately issue, whether by reason of lapse of time, change of parties, or their own inherent nature. If the obligation imposed by the record be that of paying a liquidated sum of money, either debt or scire facias may be used. But if the obligation be of a different nature, scire facias is the only mode of proceeding. Scire facias and debt are the only actions which can be grounded upon a record.^ In real actions, and on a writ of annuity, the writ of scire facias lay at common law if the plaintiff did not take out an execution within a year and a day. In personal actions, be- fore the Statute of Westminster 2d (13 Edw. I. St. 1, c. 45, A. D. 1285), if the plaintiff did not have execution within a year and a day, he was driven to a new action (debt) upon his judgment ; by this statute the process upon scire facias was simplified and shortened, and its aid was extended to personal actions, and, while the plaintiff might still sue upon his judg- ment as before, yet he might have execution after scire facias upon his existing judgment. In all cases where a new person, who was not a party to a judgment or recognizance, derives a benefit by, or becomes chargeable to, the execution, there must be a scire facias to make him a party to the judgment. Thus, where a judgment has been obtained by or against an unmarried woman who afterwards marries, and it is sought by the husband to have 1 Co. Litt. 290 b. 2 Evans' PI. 84. 62 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. execution of the judgment, or by the wife's creditors to have execution against him for the judgment recovered against the wife whilst unmarried, a scire facias is necessary. So upon the death of a plaintiff pending a suit in a case where the cause of action survived, his personal representatives could through this writ be admitted to prosecute the action in his stead. And upon the death of a defendant in such a case, his personal and, when proper, his real representatives (including his terre-tenants, i. e., those occupying his lands) could, by means of this writ, be substituted in his stead. The death of a sole plaintiff or defendant at any time before final judgment was, at common law, an abatement of the suit ; but by the statute of 17 Car. II. c. 8, the benefit of the writ was extended to such cases. There were other uses to which this writ was applied, to-wit : in cases of bankruptcy or insolvency to enable the assignees to make themselves parties to suits by or against the bankrupt after judgment ; and in case of judg- ment against an administrator or executor of assets quando acciderint (when they shall have come into possession), to reach subsequent assets on proof of their receipt by such officer. In England, when a bill of exceptions had been sealed, it lay to compel the judge who sealed it, or, in case of his death, his personal representatives, to acknowledge or deny his seal. If the judge died before sealing, there was no remedy on the bill. Formerly, the plaintiff in error in the Court of King's Bench had to give notice by scire facias to the defendant to appear and plead. There were other curious uses of this writ which we have not space to mention here ; indeed, so many and important were the functions of scire facias, that extensive treatises ^ have been written upon them. It is proper to add that in certain cases this writ was the commencement of an original action, and therefore the writ itseH was here called an original writ. Thus in Eng- land it was used to repeal letters-patent ; to repeal the grant of a franchise, where such grant is injurious to another, as also in the case of the abuse of a franchise by negligence ; and to repeal a patent granting an office, where the officer 1 Foster on Scire Facias. Kelly on Scire Facias. OF FORMS OP ACTIONS. 63 neglects his duties. As in the nature of an original action, it lies to have execution of a forfeited recognizance ; upon rec- ognizance of bail in error ; against pledges in replevin, and against the sheriff for taking insufficient pledges ; on bond to the Crown for the payment of excise or other duties, or for the faithful discharge of an office; and on inquest of office (inquisitions) to recover simple contract debts found due to the Crown, since the Crown, although it may sue a private subject in debt in the common-law courts, can nevertheless proceed by inquest-of-office in a manner more consistent with its dignity and with the royal prerogative. Having described as briefly as was possible, in view of the importance of the subject, the formed actions on contract, we come now to consider the Formed Actions ex Delicto, or in Tort. Tort actions are for the redress of wrongs unconnected with contract. They are for the violation of natural, as con- trasted with acquired, rights. Natural rights are those which we all possess to security of person, reputation, and estate. " The purpose of the law of torts is to secure a man indem- nity against certain forms of harm to person, reputation, or estate at the hands of his neighbors." ^ No more striking contrast exists in the history of the Anglo-Saxon people than that afforded by a comparison of the law of torts of to-day with that which existed only one hundred years ago. Of the formed actions in tort there were only two, — Trespass and Replevin. Trespass. The action of trespass cannot be understood unless we revert to the primitive times when self-help was at once the measure of responsibility and the means of redress. In the most archaic German society, before the organization of courts and of a civil government, each individual was, to the extent of his power, the protector of his own rights and the avenger of his wrongs. With respect to both the civil remedy of distress and private vengeance for injuries, this 1 Holmes' C L. 144. 64 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. was a period of summary aciion by the individual. German society was organized on the basis of the peace, i. e., a par- ticular protection or security under which certain persons and places stood ; this particular and, as it were, local peace, since it was protected by some local lord, afterwards became co-extensive with the realm under the name of the king's peace. Every violation of this primitive peace was a wrong. Upon the gradual growth of society, and the development of courts for the protection of the individual from wrongs, this private vengeance was at first retained; but it was not allowed unless clearly used by the individual as an instru- ment of law. It became a fundamental rule of German law that vengeance must be authorized by previous permission of the court ; or, if it preceded that permission, it must after- wards be justified to the court. As a survival of the primitive right of private and unre- strained' vengeance, there lingered the feud, or, as it was commonly called, the blood feud, which obliged the kindred- of a dead man to avenge his blood. This was outside of the law, and in bold opposition to it ; but it rested upon a founda- tion so strong in human nature that it held its position, even in England, long after the Conquest, although many attempts were made to control it. The great step towards the limitation of vengeance and of these blood feuds was the extension of the system of composi- tions. Vengeance and feud could be bought off. The wrath of the dead man's kindred could be extinguished with a money- payment.^ Under Anglo-Saxon law, a money value was placed on the life of every free man, according to his rank, and a corresponding sum on every wound that could be inflicted on his person, and for nearly every injury that could be done to his civil rights, honor, or peace, — the same being aggravated according to adventitious circumstances.^ If neither the lord nor the kinsman of the offender could pay this compensation, then only might vengeance be taken. When an offender broke the peace he became by that very 1 Anglo-Saxon Law, 262-305. ^ Kemble's Anglo-Saxons, L 197, 276, 277. OP FORMS OP ACTIONS. 65 act " peaceless ; " he was outside the pale of law and protec- tion ; vengeance against him was not regarded as a crime, and his life was forfeit. By bringing the charge before the court, the permission of the community enlarged the right of vengeance by binding all members of that community to assume a state of warfare against the peace-breaker ; he became an outlaw on whose head a price was set, a " lupinum caput," a wolf, glad to escape the country, and spend his life as a wretch ; and when excommunication from the Church was added, his cup was full. Although the payment of composition, or "blood-money," was at first the result of private agreement, yet later the state asserted the right to avert vengeance from him who had paid or offered to pay the fixed sum. Of this sum a part went to the state as " peace money " (ivite), and an- other to the individual injured as damages (hof). We must not, however, omit to note carefully that certain very grave crimes did not come within this system of composition. They were unemendable, and could not be bought off. Such were house-breaking, arson, open theft, certain forms of aggravated homicide, and treason against one's lord. These were punished with death, sometimes preceded by mutilation and other torture. We cannot stop here to discuss the development of the true idea of criminal law, — of the offence against the state and the infliction of punishment as such for the offence. " The difference between an offence against the state and an offence merely against the individual that suffers, although very clear and important, is not apprehended at an early stage in the history of law. Even after it is recognized a long period generally elapses before a proper distribution of offences is made. Thus theft in the early Roman law was treated purely as a civil wrong. , . . The true distinction between crime and civil wrong is to be found in the remedy that is applicable. The aim of the Civil Law is to give re- dress to a sufferer in the form either of restitution or of com- pensation. The aim of the Criminal Law is punishment." ^ 1 Hunter's Eoman Law, 1063, 1064. 5 66 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. In England, by the time we meet with our first judicial records {temp. Ric. I.) this differentiation of criminal law has begun. There are a few crimes defined in broad terms which place the life and limb of the offender at the king's mercy. The other crimes are punished chiefly by discretionary money penalties which have taken the place of the old pre- appointed wites^ while the old pre-appointed hot has given way to " damages " assessed by a tribunal. Outlawry is no longer a punishment ; it is mere process compelling the attendance of the accused.^ At about the same time we meet with a com- munal accusation (what we should to-day call an indictment or a presentment) against an alleged criminal. Prior to this, even the gravely punishable offences have been looked at from the point of view of the person who has been wronged, and the wrong-doer has been prosecuted on his complaint. A felony, .according to the old law, is a crime which can be prosecuted by an appeal, i. e., by an accusation in which the accuser must, as a general rule, offer battle. The king him- self cannot protect the man-slayer from the suit of the dead man's kin. He cannot pardon a man appealed of a felony, for " appeals of all kinds are the suit not of the king but of the party injured; "^ this right of private prosecution remained until it was abolished by act of Parliament in 1819. The woundings and house-burnings of an earlier day be- came the appeals of mayhem and of arson. The appeals de pace et plagis (of peace broken and of blows given) became, or ratlier were in substance, the action of trespass which is still familiar to lawyers. ^ The writs of trespass are closely connected with these appeals for felony. The action of trespass is, it is said, an attenuated appeal. The charge of felony is omitted; no bat- tle is offered ; but the basis of the action is a wrong done to the plaintiff in his body, his goods, or his lands, by force and arms and against the king's peace. We can now understand the quasi-criminal character of this action and the jurisdic- 1 P. & M. Hist. II. 457. 3 Holmes' C. L. 2, 3. 2 Bl. Com. IV. 312-317* 398*. See also Ashford v. Thornton, 1 B. & Aid. 405. OF FORMS OF ACTIONS. 67 tion asserted over it by the King's Bench, which court alone held Pleas of the Crown, i. e., criminal causes. The early English appeals for personal violence seem to have been confined to intentional wrongs. It was only at a late day, and after argument, that trespass was extended so as to embrace harms which were foreseen, but which were not the intended consequence of the defendant's act. Thence again it extended to unforeseen injuries.^ This action of trespass became common near the end of the reign of Henry III, It was a flexible action ; the defendant was called upon to say why with force and arms and against the king's peace he did some wrongful act ; he was threatened with a semi-criminal action ; the plaintiff was using a weapon which had in the past been reserved for felons, and was urging against the defendant the terrible process of outlawry. In the course of time the cases of trespass grouped them- selves into three great divisions. Violence was done to the goods of the plaintiff ; they were taken and carried away ; this form became trespass c?e bonis asportatis (for goods carried away). Violence was done to the plaintiff's land ; it was forcibly entered upon and trees were destroyed or other damage done ; this form became trespass de clauso fracto, or quare clausum f regit (for a close broken, or where- fore he broke the close). Finally violence was done to the plaintiff's person ; he was assaulted and beaten ; this form became trespass for assault and battery (the old appeal de pace et plagis). As has been said, the process against a contumacious de- fendant aimed at his outlawry. If convicted, he was im- prisoned until he made fine with the king; in addition he was compelled to pay damages to the plaintiff. In course of time the criminal element becomes weakened. There will be a trespass with force and arms if a man's body, goods, or lands have been even so much as unlawfully touched. The fine due the king will become obsolete, and only the civil and private aspect of the action will remain. One other historical incident of the action must, however, 1 Holmes' C. L. 3, 4. 68 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. be mentioned, for it is the origin of the anomalous practice still in force to-day of giving punitive damages in what is theoretically a merely compensatory suit. It seems that the old law did not place much reliance in public instrumentali- ties for the punishment of wrong-doers. It was not thought that royal officials or people in general would be active in bringing malefactors to justice. " More was to be hoped from the man who had suffered. He would move if they made it worth his while. And so in a characteristically English fashion punishment was to be inflicted in the course of civil actions ; it took the form of many fold reparation, of penal and exemplary damages." ^ Coming now to consider the fully developed action of tres- pass,2 we have to remark that its most general characteristic is that it lies only for injuries committed with actual or im- plied force, or,, as the Latin phrase is, vijt^ armis ^ (with force and arms). It is not easy to define that force which the law implies ; \but it is sufficient to say that the law will imply violence, (though none was actually used, when the injury is of a direct and immediate kind, and committed against the person, or tangible and corporeal property of the plaintiff, which is in his possession.^ The old words contra pacem (against the peace) remain, and in some cases are material to the founda- tion of the action, for an action of trespass to land not within the king's dominion could not be sustained. In this action the intention of the wrong-doer, be it never so innocent, is immaterial. The action can not be maintained where the wrong com- plained of was a mere non-feasance; or where the matter affected was not tangible, as reputation or health, and conse- quently not capable of immediate injury by force ; or where the right invaded is incorporeal, as an incorporeal heredita- ment of any sort; or where the plaintiff's interest is in reversion and not in possession ; or where the injury was not immediate but consequential ; or where the act com- 1 P. & M. Hist. n. 52L 8 Co. Litt. 161 b. 2 Chit. PI. 151-172. 4 Steph. PI. 47. OP FORMS OF ACTIONS. 69 plained of was not the direct act of the defendant, but of his servant in the course of his employment ; or generally where such act was not unlawful in its inception. In such cases force does not actually exist and can not be implied.^ Trespass may be divided into two large classes : injuries committed under color of legal proceedings,^ and injuries not ._. so committed. In general no action whatever can be supported for any act, however erroneous or even malicious, of a judicial officer acting within the scope of his jurisdiction.^ But when the court has no jurisdiction over the subject-matter, trespass is the proper form of action against all the parties for any act which comes properly within its scope. When a court has jurisdiction, but the proceeding is defective because it is irreg- ular or void, trespass against the attorney and the plaintiff is generally the proper form of action ; and where a judgment has been set aside for irregularity, this is the appropriate remedy for any act done under it. When the process has been misapplied, as where A or his goods are taken upon process against B, trespass is generally the only remedy. When the process of a court has been abused, trespass against the sheriff and his officer committing the abuse is the proper action, if the act of such officers was in the first instance illegal and an immediate injury to the body or to personal or real property. So also where the conduct of the officer was in the first instance lawful, but he abused his authority, and thereby became a trespasser ah initio (from the outset). When a ministerial officer proceeds without war- rant, on the information of another, trespass is the proper form of action against the informer if the information prove to be false. But no person who acts upon a regular writ or warrant g can be liable in trespass, however malicious his conduct. ' When we consider injuries not committed under color of legal proceedings,* and where consequently the mere act of injury is to be dealt with, we find that one may himself injure another in person or with respect to personal or real property. 1 Chit. PI. 150. 8 Bradley v. Fisher, 13 Wall. 335. 2 Ibid. 167-171. * Chit. V\. 151-167. 70 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. He may also injure through persons or things for whom he is responsible. Trespass is the only remedy for a menace to the plaintiff, attended with consequent damages, and for an illegal assault, battery, or imprisonment, when not under color of process. So it lies for an injury occasioned by force to the relative rights, as by menacing tenants or servants, or by beating or imprisoning a wife, child, or servant, whereby the landlord, husband, father, or master has sustained a loss ;- itJies_for_the seduction or debauching of a wife, or servant, and in the case of a daughter debauched the most liberal meaning is given to the term service in tliis connection in order to allow the benefit of the action to the father. Trespass lies for taking or injuring all inanimate personal property, and all domiciled and tame animals, including all animals usually marketable, as parrots, monkeys, etc. The person who has the absolute or general property in the thing injured may support this action, although he has never had the actual possession, or although he has parted with his mere possession to a carrier or servant, it being a rule of law that the general property in personal chattels prima facie as to all civil purposes draws to itself the possession. But if the general owner part with his possession, and the bailee at the time of injury have an exclusive right to use the chattel, there the inference of possession is rebutted, and the general owner, having only an interest in reversion, cannot maintain trespass. A bailee who has an authority coupled with an interest, as a factor or consignee of goods in which he has an interest to the extent of his commission, may support trespass for any injury done to the goods during the continuation of his in- terest, though he never had actual possession of the goods. So a bailee with a mere naked authority coupled only with an interest as to remuneration, as a carrier, pawnee, etc., may maintain this action for any injury done while he was in actual possession of the thing, but a mere servant cannot maintain it. The finder of any article, and even a person having an illegal possession of a chattel, may support tres- pass against any person but the real owner. OF FORMS OF ACTIONS. 71 The injury may be inflicted either by the unlawful taking of the chattel, or by damaging it while in the possession of another. Tre^naas is a concurrent remedy with trover for most illegal takings, even in the case of an illegal distress for rent. It also lies though there has been no wrongful intent, as if a sheriff take the goods of a wrong person. It may be supported against a bailee who has only a bare authority, as if a servant take goods of his master out of his shop and con- vert them. But trespass is not sustainable against a bailee who has the possession coupled with an interest, unless he,^ destroy the chattel; nor agaiiist a joint-tenant or tenant-in- common for merely taking away and holding the property exclusively from his co-owner, for each has an interest in the whole; but if the thing be destroyed, then trespass lies against the co-owner guilty of the destructive act. When the taking is unlawful, either the general owner, or the bailee, if answerable over, may support trespass ; but if the taking were lawful, trespass will not lie for a refusal to deliver. Trespass can be maintained for any immediate injury to ' personal property occasioned by actual or implied force, • as for shooting or beating a dog or other live animal, chasing sheep, mixing water with wine, etc., although in none of these cases is there any taking away or disposing of the chattel by the wrong-doer. It may also be supported for an injury done to personal property whilst in the lawful adverse possession of the wrong-doer, if he has been guilty of an abuse which renders him a trespasser ah initio, as where a horse which had been distrained was worked by the distrainer. Trespass is the proper remedy to recover damages for an > illegal entry upon, or an immediate injury to, real property' corporeal in the possession of the plaintiff. The real property- must be something tangible and fixed, as a house, an out-build- ing or land, or anything which is covered by the technical word close, which signifies an interest in the soil, and not merely an inclosure. Trespass lies no matter how temporary the plaintiff's interest, and although this interest be merely in the profits of the soil, if such interest be to the exclusion of 72 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. others. In England, the parson might support trespass against a person preaching in his church without his leave. It lies for an injury to land covered by water, but the close must be described as so covered ; so it lies for breaking and entering the several fishery of the plaintiff. IThe gist of the action is the injury to the possession of real estate) and unless at the time the injury was committed the 4}laintiff was actually in possession, he cannot maintain the 'action. The possession of a servant is the possession of his master for this purpose. Any possession is sufficient against a wrong-doer or a person who can not make out a title prima facie conferring the right to the possession. But there must be actual possession, for even the owner of the freehold can not maintain trepass until he has actually entered upon his land. If the plaintiff was in possession of the close at the time when the injury was committed, it is no objection to his suit that he gave up this possession before bringing his action. Trespass for injury to real property can only be supported when the injury is immediate and was committed with force actual or implied. It lies, no matter how unintentional the trespass, and although the locus in quo (place in which) were not inclosed, or although the door of the house were open, if the entry was not for a justifiable purpose. Even shooting at or killing or wounding game or any animal on another's land, without an actual entry, is an entry in law, and in such case trespass will lie. If one tenant in common forcibly prevent his co-tenant from entering or occupying the land, trespass may be maintained. Though the original entry of a party be lawful, yet by a subsequent abuse of an authority in law to enter, as to distrain, etc., such party may become a trespasser ah initio. A person will be liable for a trespass committed by his command or procurement, or by subsequently assenting to such act committed for his benefit. In the case of animals, if they are of such kind as to have a natural propensity to do the act complained of (as is the case with horses and cattle with respect to trespasses on land, and with notoriouslv fero- cious or wild animals, which have not been properly confined, OP FORMS OP ACTIONS. 73 as to other injuries), trespass may be supported for injuries inflicted by such animals. The declaration in trespass should contain a concise state- ment of the injury complained of, whether to the person or to personal or real property, and should allege that such injury was committed vi et armis and contra pacem. ' ^ ' ■-^' Replevin. Where goods had been illegally distrained, their owner could at once regain their possession by an orighial writ of replevin. The student will note at the outset the peculiar characteristic of this action in that, at the inception of the suit, it put the plaintiff in possession of the property claimed. Distress was a very severe kind of self-help, as we have seen, and the king's courts were much concerned when it was abused. The offence that the distraining lord committed, when he retained the beasts distrained after the tenant had offered gage and pledge for their return to him, was known as vetitum namii (refusal of the nam or distress), and stood next door to robbery. ^ If the distrainer will not deliver the beasts after gage and pledge have been offered, then it is the sheriff 's duty to deliver them. To deter the person distrain- ing from refusing or neglecting to deliver a distress which had been driven into a stronghold, the Statute of Westminster I. c. 17, directed that such stronghold or castle should he razed and thrown down by the sheriff, aided, if necessary, by the posse comitatus (power of the county). Under this name of replevin, in the time of Henry II., an action was developed which proved to be convenient for the settlement of disputes between landlord and tenant, and which owed its vigor and its rapidity to the supposition that a serious offence had been committed against the king. Replevin gave back at once to the husbandman his chattels, so that his labors might not be interfered with, and ultimately, if he prevailed in the suit, gave him damages for their wrongful distraint. It is said in Comyn's Digest (^Title Pleader, 3 K. 1),^ "If a man tortiously takes the person or goods or chattels of 1 P. & M. Hist. II. 575. 2 See also Selw. N. P. II. 1184. 74 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. another, and detains them, a replevin lies, upon which the sheriff shall be commanded upon pledges to make deliverance of the same person or goods." By the common law the per- son of a man was replevied by a writ de Jiomine replegiando (for the replevying of a man). Of this last writ we shall speak again when considering the writ of Habeas Corjms. Originally in this action the plaintiff procured from the Chancery the writ of replevin commanding the sheriff to seize and restore to him his chattels. He could not get this writ until he had given security to prosecute an action against the tortious taker to determine the right to the chattels, and to return them, if the right should be determined against him, to that taker who was of course the defendant in the action. If the sheriff made return to this writ that the defendant had eloigned (removed afar off) the chattels, or that they were dead, etc., then the plaintiff could have a capias in withernam (you shall take as a further distress) authorizing the sheriff to seize so many of the defendant's cattle as were equivalent in value to those distrained.^ Under the original writ the plaintiff, whether or not he got back his chattels or their equivalent in value, was compelled, in accordance with the terms of his engagement and security given, to prosecute his action against the tortious taker. In his declaration, the plaintiff alleged, if he had recovered his chattels, that the defendant had detained (detinuif) them ; and he only got damages for their detention ; but if he had not recovered the chattels, then he declared that the defendant detains (detinef) them, and he got damages not only for the detention but also for the value of the goods. These forms were called respectively replevin in the detinuit and in the de- tinet ; if only a part of the goods had been recovered the action was in the detinuit as to those that were restored and in the detinet as to the rest.^ From the necessity of an application to Chancery, when the distress was taken in a distant part of the kingdom, delay and expense resulted. To remedy this, the Statute of Marlebridge ^ Com. Dig. ubi supra. 2 McKelvey on Pleading, 49 ; Com. Dig. Title Pleader (3 K. 10). OF FORMS OF ACTIONS. 75 (52 H. III.) provided that " if the beasts of any person are taken and unjustly detained, the sheriff, after complaint made to him, may deliver them without the hindrance or refusal of the person who shall have taken the beasts." ^ After this statute was enacted, the tenant made his complaint to the sheriff, gave his security as before to prosecute his suit and at the same time filed his declaration, which was always in the detinuit and assumed that the goods or their equivalent would be taken by the sheriff upon the writ and delivered to the plaintiff. But the damages recovered included the value of the chattels in case they were not restored to the plaintiff, and for this purpose it was customary to allege their value.^ Upon these points there is some confusion. It is said by Gilbert : " When the sheriff does not replevy the beasts, there you must recite the writ in the detinet and count in the detinet also because the beasts are not delivered ; and there you recover as well the value of the beasts in damages, as damages for the detention anU this is a shorter way than to sue a withernam, etc." ^ A more recent writer confirms him thus : the plaintiff may, if the cattle be withheld, proceed in the cause, and recover damages to the full amount of the goods, as well as for the detention.^ But in fact the goods were almost universally delivered to the plaintiff in the replevin.^ Hence, we find Chitty saying that replevin in the detinet has become obsolete ; that only replevin in the detinuit remains in force, in which the plaintiff can not recover the value of the goods them- selves.^ And this is fortified by a note of Sergeant Williams to the effect that it was not usual to insert the price of the chattels in the declaration in replevin, as their value could not be recovered.' . Replevin ^ can only be supported for taking a personal ; chattel, and not for an injury to things affixed to the free- 1 hold. The plaintiff must at the time of the tortious taking * 1 Selw. N. P. II. 1186. 5 ii,id, 4.3. 2 McKelvey on Pleading, 50 ; F. N. « Chit. PI. 146. B. 69 L. note (c). ^ 2 Saund. 320, n. (I). See also 3 Gilbert on Replevin, 167. Selw. N. P. II. 1215. < Wilkinson on Keplevin, 20, 43. 8 Chit. PI. 145-149. 76 COMMON-LAW PLEADING, i have bad either the general property in the goods taken, or a special property in them as bailee, pawnee, etc. Replevin can not be supported if the plaintiff have not the imme- diate right of possession. At common law, it lay only for an unlawful taking. An excessive distress was not therefore remediable by this action, and consequently if any rent, how- ever small, were due, replevin would not lie. In this action both the plaintiff and the defendant are con- sidered as actors. The defendant, having distrained, is called on to justify his action ; this he does in his plea which, if he justify in the right of himself or of his wife is called an avowry, or a cognizance, if he justify in the right of another by whose command he acted. This plea, as it contains the defendant's justification and presents the real question to be tried, ^. e., the legality of the distress, is in its functions a declaration, and the plaintiff 's replication, a plea ; and so in this case the pleadings are all postponed one step. The defendant might not justify, but might deny the taking. He might also claim property in the chattels, in which case the sheriff 's power to replevy them was suspended until the question of property was settled.^ Again, he might deny tak- ing the chattels in the place alleged. None of these incidents is of importance to us here. The declaration in this action, which is local, requires certainty in the description of the place where the distress was taken, and the description, number, and value of the goods taken must be given with certainty. The judgment, when for the plaintiff, is that he recover his damages and costs ; when for the defendant, it was at common law pro retorno hahendo (to have a return) to him of the goods replevied. ;/ The action of replevin has in many of the United States displaced detinue and trover, and is the common remedy to recover possession of a chattel and damages for its wrongful detention, or, in case it can not be specifically recovered, damages for its value as well as for its detention. Space is ^ The student may consult Wilkinson on Replevin, 46, and passim, as to the details of this action. OP FORMS OP ACTIONS. 77 wanting here to consider this development of the action, but the student who understands the common-law action will have little difficulty in mastering its present form and functions.! Inadequacy op Formed Actions. Pausing now to reckon and estimate the means of redress offered to us by the old common law, we find that we are provided with remedies more or less adequate with respect to injuries to land and to its possession. Injuries to incorporeal hereditaments are, however, not remediable by a personal action. When we consider personal rights, there are many serious defects in the legal machinery. No remedy is pro- vided for the enforcement of an agreement not itself under seal or protected by a sealed instrument. The remedy which is given for the recovery of a debt not evidenced by a judg- ment, statute, or sealed instrument is miserably inefficient, for the defendant can defeat it by wager of law. The remedy for the recovery of specific articles of personal property is liable to this same disaster, and moreover requires a definite- ness of description of the article pursued, which often cannot be given. When we consider the protection afforded against acts of personal wrong, we find that only direct, forceful, immediate injuries are recognized. No remedy exists for injuries to reputation, or to health ; none for acts of omis- sion, of negligence, or of deceit ; and none for the violation of personal rights which are not in possession. Actions on the Case. It is thus apparent that the formed actions had ceased to be adequate. There were many cases which did not fall exactly within the definition of a trespass, but which required a remedy. But in order to have a new remedy a new form of writ must first be provided. Accordingly the famous Statute of Westminster y 2d (13 Edward I. c. 24) authorized the Chancery to frame new \ writs in cases similar in principle to those in which the old ' formed writs had applied. Thus writs of trespass on the case ^ See Cobbey, Morris, or Wells on Keplevia. 78 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. began to make their appearance. These writs stated a ground of complaint analogous to, but not quite amounting to, a trespass as sued for in the old writs. Thus a smith might lame a horse, left with him to be shod, by negligently driving a nail in his hoof. The owner could not bring trespass, if he had left the horse in the smith's possession. But laming the horse was equally a wrong whether the owner held the horse by the bridle or left it in the possession of the smith, and as, in the latter case, the wrong was closely connected with a trespass, although not one, the new law gave the owner a writ of trespass on the case.^ In his commentary on this statute Lord Coke asserts that it is merely declaratory of the common law, and Mr. Bige- low has shown that in earlier times the framing of writs had been to some extent in the discretion of the Chancery .^ " The words of the stjitute_give no power to make a com- pletely new departure ; writs are to be framed to fit cases similar to, but not identical with, cases falling within existing writs, and the examples given in the statute itself are cases of extension of remedies against a successor in title of the i;aiser of a nuisance, and for the successor in title of a person who had been disseised of his common. ... In the course of centuries, by taking certain writs as starting points, and ac- cumulating successive variations upon them, the judges added great areas to our common law, and many of its most famous hranchcs,{ assumjjsit and trover and conversion for instance, were developed in this way ; but the expansion of the com- mon law was the work of the 15th and subsequent centuries, when, under the stress of eager rivalry with the growing equitable jurisdiction of the Chancery, (the judges strove, not only by admitting and developing actions on the case, but also by the use of fictitious actions, following the example of the Roman Praetor, to supply the deficiencies of their system."JP The student will note that only the deficiencies of the formed 1 Holmes, C. L. 274, 275. Chit. PI. 83 ; Kinlyside v. Thornton 2 Ker. Eq. Ju. 10; Hist. Pr. 198; e« a^., 2 Bla. Rep. 1113. 8 Ker. Eq. Ju. 10, 11. OF FORMS OF ACTIONS. 79 actions with respect to remedies for wrongs were provided for at the outset. The defects on the side of contract had to wait. As he will presently see, more than two Imndred years elapsed before the action of special assumpsit was sustained, and the writ of general assumpsit was later still. After assumpsit and trover had split off from the general action on the case, the latter remained, as it had been from its origin, distinctly a tort action. Nevertheless, as will be seen when we speak of the election of actions, case ^s a__con- current remedy with assumpsit for many breaches of contract, the plaintiff being allowed to state the gravamen of his action as a neglect of duty , i nstead of as a b?!G?;Ch_of contract.^ ^ctions on the c ase^ lie generally to recover damages for torts not committed with force actual or implied, or £oi\acts committed by force when the thing injured is not tangible ; or when the injury is not immediate but only consequential ; or where the interest in the property affected is only in reversion; or wlli:^_tli At Law, No. C. D., Defendant. ) The President of the United States to the defendant, greeting : You are hereby commanded to appear in this court on or be- fore the twentieth day, exclusive of Sundays and legal holidays, after the day of the service of this writ on you, to answer the lo>» COMMON-LAW PLEADING. plaintiff's suit and show why he should not have judgment against you for the cause of action stated in his declaration. Witness the honorable , chief justice of said court, the day of A. D. 18 . , Clerk. J , Assistant Clerk. Eule 10. A notice to plead shall be subscribed to every declaration in the following form : The defendant is to plead hereto on or before the twentieth day, exclusive of Sundays and legal holidays, occurring after the day of the service hereof; otherwise, judgment. Except this notice to plead, subscribed to the declaration, no rule to plead or demand of plea shall be necessary. / A capias ad respondendum, authorizing the arrest of the I defendant's person, is of very limited use in this country as I original process. It is allowed in some jurisdictions by / express statutory authority in cases of fraud, breach of trust, t or other gross wrong-doing. An attachment is similarly authorized against the property /of absconding debtors, non-residents, and other classes of persons specifically designated in the statutes providing for this summary process. I Reference must be had to local legislation upon these \ subjects, and to books of practice for information as to the proper service of process and kindred topics. The Appearance of the Defendant. The main object of all process was to compel the appear- ance of the defendant, for until that was effected there could, in a personal action, be no pleading, and of course no judgment given, nor could any other act be done in court beyond the issuing of the process, which, as we have seen, had its final resource in outlawry. When the defendant appeared the following entry was made upon the records of the court: '-'■ And the said C. D. [the defendant] hy E. F., his attorney, comes " (venit), &c. This word, venit, is the state- ment on record of the defendant's appearance in court, and was at one time erroneously said to be necessary to make OP THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 169 him a party to the suit.^ The appearance may be stated to be in person or by attorney, according to the fact, but in pleas to the jurisdiction it must be in person. Actual and personal appearance in open court, either by the defendant or by his attorney, was originally necessary, ^ This, how- ever, is no longer required, and the defendant's appearance is effected by making a formal entry of the fact in the proper office, or, if he has been arrested, by his giving bail. ^ An entry of a general appearance will waive objection to the jurisdiction of the court over the person of the defendant, to a misnomer, to want of service of process, and to formal defects. If, therefore, the defendant desire to urge these objections, he should appear specially^ and, where a plea to the jurisdiction is interposed, in person.* As the appear- ance was at first actually and afterwards constructively in open court, it, of course, always purported to be in term time, when only pleading and all proceedings whatever in open court can take place. As the plaintiff has, by the institution of the suit, himself appeared, no formal entry of his appearance is made, and, upon appearance of the defendant, both parties are con- sidered as in court, and the pleadings begin. ^ The Pleadings. "Pleadings are the mutual altercations of the parties to a suit, expressed in legal form, and in civil actions reduced to writing. In a more limited sense, however, ' the plead- ings ' [in the plural] comprehend only those allegations, or altercations, which are subsequent to the count or declara- tion. In England these altercations were anciently oral, having been offered viva voce by the respective parties or their counsel, in open court; as is still generally done in the pleadings on the part of the defendant, or prisoner, in criminal prosecutions. And hence it is in the Norman 1 Chit. PI. 367. St. Louis, &c. Railway v. McBride, 141 2 Steph. PI. 58. U. S. 127. 8 Thid. 61. 6 Tj^e learning on the Subject of * Knox V. Summers, 3 Cranch, 496; Appearance will be found in Com. Dig. Title Pleader, B. 3- 160 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. language, in which most of the ancient books of the English law are written, the pleadings are frequently denominated the parol; though for centuries past all pleadings in civil actions have been required to be written. In some instances, however, the term j^ai-ol is still used to denote the entire pleadings in a cause, as when in an action brought against an infant heir, on an obligation of his ancestor's, he prays that the parol may demur, i. e., that the pleadings may be stayed, till he shall attain full age. The mutual altercations, which constitute the pleadings in civil actions, consist of those formal allegations and denials, which are offered on one side for the purpose of maintaining the suit, and on the other for the purpose of defeating it; and which, generally speaking, are predicated only of matters oifact. For plead- ing is practically nothing more than affirming or denying, in a formal and orderly manner, those facts which consti- tute the ground of the plaintiff's demand and of the defend- ant's defence. Pleading therefore consists in merely alleging matters of fact, or in denying what is alleged as such by the adverse party. " ^ But we have very imperfectly described Pleading when we have said that it consists in merely affirming or denying facts. Every pleading involves a syllogism "of which the body of judicial rules is the major, and the declaration of facts the minor premise. "^ Even the final judgment of a court "may be described as a conclusion from a legal syllo- gism. The question. Are such cases as that alleged entitled to redress? involves the major premise ; Is this'cas^such ? the minor; and if both inquiries are answered affirmatively, the judgment follows as a necessary inference. " ^ In pleading, therefore, every averment of fact implies some principle of law by virtue of which the statement of fact becomes a claim of right. If it does not, then it is demurrable, i. e., the opposite party can reply: " Whether your averment of fact he true or not, it can not he made the foundation of any legal claim against me." An illustration 1 Gould's PI. 1,2. 8 Hare on Contracts, 43, 44. 2 Anglo-Saxon Law, 183. OP THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 161 will make this clear. In an action brought for a trespass committed upon land, we may suppose the plaintiff to say : ^^ Against him who has forcibly eyitered upon my land, I have a right by law to recover damages : The defendant has forcibly entered upon my land : Therefore, against him I have a right by law to recover damages. " We may suppose the defendant to answer: "i/" he upon ivhose land I have forcibly entered, releases to me his right of action for such entry, he has thence- forth no right by laiv to recover damages for such entry against me : But the plaintiff has released to me his right of action for my entry upon his land : Therefore he has, by law, no right to recover damages for that cause against me. " To this the plaintiff may have his reply ready as follows: '■'■ A release extorted from me by duress does not in law destroy any pre- existing right of mine to recover damages : But the release pleaded by the defendant was extorted from me by duress : Therefore that release does 7iot destroy my right to recover damages against him. " ^ In this process, which might be prolonged, the major premise, containing the affirmation of the rule of law relied upon by the plaintiff or by the defendant in their respective pleadings, has been expressed; the pleadings are, in fact, made substantially as follows : The defendant has forcibly entered upon my land. To which the defendant answers : The plaintiff has released to me his right of action. Whereto the plaintiff replies : That release was extorted from ine by duress. It is thus seen that the pleadings in the case sup- posed have consisted only of the several minor premises, each asserting matter of fact, and that the major premise, involving the rule of law relied upon to give legal vitality to its minor, is in each case only implied. Let us now suppose a case in which the minor premise is this : " For ten years I conducted a profitable school in Loyidon, when the defendant established a new school near mine, and my pupils deserted me and resorted to his school to my great loss. " Here it is at once perceived that there is no valid 1 Gould's PI. chap. I. 11 162 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. major premise implied, and hence the plaintiff's averment of fact is impotent, and therefore demurrable. The facts are alleged because they are supposed to be unknown to the judges. But, as these judges are presumed to know judicially what the law applicable to any state of facts is, it is not necessary to allege the general rules of the law. As has been said, these pleadings were originally spoken by the parties themselves or by their counsel in open court. ^ They were then minuted down by the chief clerk or protho- notary, and, together with the entries from time to time made touching the cause, they constituted the record in the cause. ■ J This record, when complete, was preserved as ^ jyerjjetual^ ■ intrinsic, and exclusively admissible testimony of all the judicial transactions which it comprised. From the begin- ning of the reign of Richard I. (1189) commences a still extant series of records down to the present day ; and such, as far back as can be traced, has always been the stable and authentic quality of these documents in contemplation of law.^ As this record was originally the contemporaneous minute made by the prothonotary, it was entered as a narrative in the third person, and hence the pleadings follow the same form of expression, e. g., " C. D conies and defends the wrong and injury, ^^c, and says, ^c." It was the office of the judges to direct and control this oral contention conducted before them. This they so man- aged as to compel the disputants to come finally to some specific fact, affirmed by one and denied by the other, or to some disputed point of law. Then the parties were said to be at issue (ad exitum, i. e., at the end of their pleading). The question so determined upon was specifically called The Issue, and was, from its nature, either an issue in fact, or an issue in law. The latter the judges themselves decided ; the former was referred to such one of the various methods ^ 1 Interesting examples of this early 219-223 ; also bv TVarren in his Law viva voce pleading are given by Reeves Studies, 722, 723, note, in his History of the English Law, II. 2 Steph. PI. 6L OF THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 163 of trials then practised as the court thought applicable, or was, when proper, by mutual agreement of the parties, referred to a trial by jury.^ Continuances. These proceedings of course required time, and yet in contemplation of law the parties were supposed to be always in court ready to urge their respective contentions. To meet this difficulty, the law allowed the proceedings to be adjourned over from one term to another, or from one day to another in the same term. When this happened, an entry of an adjournment to a given day, and of its cause, was made on the parchment roll (the record), and by that entry the parties were also appointed to re-appear on the given day in court. Such adjournment was called a continuance. If any interval took place without such an adjournment, duly obtained and entered, the break or chasm thus occasioned was called a discontinuance, and the cause was considered as out of court by the interruption, and was not allowed afterward to proceed. ^ It was probably in the middle of the reign of Edward III. (1327-1377) that pleadings ceased to be had orally or in open court. Gradually the pleader discontinued the oral delivery, and in lieu of it entered his statement, in the first instance, upon the parchment roll on which the record used to be drawn up. The pleader of the other party had access to this roll in order that he might prepare his answer, which he afterwards entered in the same manner, and the roll thus became both the pleadings themselves and also their record. Later, as more convenient, the pleadings were first put on paper, then delivered in that shape to the adverse party, or filed in the proper court office, and not entered of record until a subsequent stage of the cause.^ These pleadings so written are framed upon the same prin- ciples as those which governed the oral allegations. The 1 Steph. PI. 59. 2 Hid. 60. 8 md. 63. 164 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. parties are made to come to issue exactly in the same manner as when really opposed to each other in verbal altercation at the bar of the court; and all the rules which the judges of former times prescribed to the actual disputants before them are, as far as possible, still enforced with respect to these paper pleadings.^ The oral pleadings could formerly be delivered by none but regular advocates, and so it is now necessary that these paper pleadings should be signed by a barrister; in fact, however, they are frequently prepared by persons of learn- ing, not barristers, who are known by the name of special pleaders.^ Having learned generally what the pleadings in a cause are, we must next consider their respective titles, functions, and order. We have reached the point when the parties are in court. As they stand opposite to each other, it next becomes necessary for the plaintiff to state his case by his own mouth or by that of his pleader. His statement is called in Latin narratio (story or narrative), in French conte ; in English it was probably first called tale,^ but later cou7it in real, and declaration in personal and mixed actions; ultimately the term "declaration" was applied commonly in all actions. The Declaration. Originally the declaration was "a formal statement bristling with sacramental words, an omission of which would be fatal. ... In a civil action begun by writ the plaintiff's count must not depart by a hair's breadth from the writ, or there will be a variance of which the defend- ant will take advantage."* In Anglo-Saxon times, when, according to the old procedure, a defendant had to repeat the claim of the plaintiff and to deny it word for word, he lost his suit if he stammered in the repetition.^ The brief statement of the original writ must be expanded, and also made more detailed, by the declaration. " Thus a 1 Steph. PI. 64. * Ibid. II. 603. 2 Ibid. 64. 5 Anglo-Saxon Law, 183. 8 P. & M. Hist. II. 602. OP THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION, 165 writ of Debt will merely tell William that he must say why he has not paid fifty marks which he owes to Alan and unjustly detains; but the count [declaration] will set forth how on a certain day came this William to this Alan and asked for a loan of fifty marks, how the loan was made and was to have been repaid on a certain day, and how, despite frequent requests, William has refused and still refuses to pay it. The count on a Writ of Right will often be an elaborate history. A seisin as of fee and of right with a taking of esplees [profits or produce of the land] will be attributed to some ancestor of the demandant [plaintiff], and then the descent of this right will be traced down a pedigree from which no step may be omitted."^ The pleading is said to begin with the declaration or count, which is a statement on the part of the plaintiff of his cause of action. In the declaration, the plaintiff, as we have seen, states the nature and quality of his case more fully than in the original writ, but still in strict conformity with the tenor of that instrument.^ This will be more readily understood by a consideration of two forms of declarations, corresponding with the speci- mens of original writs already given. Declaration in Debt. On a Bond. In the King's Bench, Term, in the year of the reign of King George the Fourth : Middlesex, to wit, C. D. was summoned to answer A. B. of a plea, that he render to the said A. B. the sum of pounds, of good and lawful money of Great Britain, which he owes to and unjustly detains from him. And thereupon the said A. B. by , his attorney, complains : For That Whereas the said C. D. heretofore, to wit, on the day of , in the year of our Lord , at , in the County of , by his cer- tain writing obligatory, sealed with his seal, and now shown to the court here (the date whereof is the day and year aforesaid) acknowledged himself to be held and firmly bound to the said A. B. in the sum of pounds, above demanded, to be paid to the said A. B. Yet the said C. D. (although often requested) 1 P. & M. Hist. II. 603. 2 steph. PI. 65. 166 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. hatli not as yet paid the said sum of pounds above de- manded, or any part thereof, to the said A. B. ; but so to do hath hitherto wholly refused and still refuses, to the damage of the said A. B. of pounds ; and therefore he brings his suit, &c. Declaration in Trespass (for an Assault and Battery). In the King's Bench, Term, in the year of the reign of King George the Fourth : Middlesex, to wit, C. D. was attached to answer A. B. of a plea, wherefore he, the said C. D., with force and arms at , in the county of , made an assault upon the said A. B., and beat, wounded, and ill-treated him, so that his life was despaired of, and other wrongs to him there did, to the damage of the said A. B. and against the peace of our Lord the now King. And thereupon the said A. B., by , his attorney, complains : For that the said C. D. heretofore, to wit, on the day of , in the year of our Lord , with force and arms, at aforesaid, in the county aforesaid, made an assault upon the said A. B. and then and there beat, wounded, and ill-treated him, so that his life was despaired of, and other wrongs to the said A. B. then and there did, against the peace pf our said Lord the King, and to the damage of the said A. B. of pounds; and therefore he brings his suit, &c. Similar declarations to the two preceding would to-day in the English Supreme Court of Judicature be in the following form : — Action on an Annuity Bond. 1. The plaintiff's claim is for principal and interest due upon the defendant's bond to the pbintiff, dated the first day of Jan- uary, 1883, and conditioned for payment to the plaintiff of £150 half-yearly, on the 1st of July and the 1st of January in every year during the life of the plaintiff. 2. Two instalments, of £150 each, due on the 1st of July, 1883, and the 1st of January, 1884, are due and unpaid. Particulars : — Principal £300 "Interest 500 £305 The plaintiff claims £305. OF THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 167 Action for Assault and Battery. 1. The plaintiff has suffered damage from personal injuries to the plaintiff, caused by the defendant assaulting him on the 1st of May, 1882, and beating him about the head and shoulders. Particulars of expenses : — Mr. Jones, Surgeon £20 The plaintiff claims £100.* It does not consist with the purpose of this work to con- sider in detail the forms of declarations proper to the various forms of actions. For these, reference must be had to books of Practice and of Forms. It is sufficient here to say gen- erally that "the declaration must allege all the circumstances necessary for the support of the action, and contain a full, regular, and methodical statement of the injury which the plaintiff has sustained, and the time and place, and other circumstances, with such precision, certainty, and clearness, that the defendant, knowing what he is called upon to answer, may be able to plead a direct and unequivocal pica, and that the jury may be able to give a complete verdict upon the issue, and that the court, consistently with the rules of law, may give a certain and distinct judgment upon the premises." ^ The formal parts of the declaration will be con- sidered hereafter, in connection with certain definite rules of pleading, and others of these rules will prescribe the man- ner of making those substantial averments upon which the cause of action must rest. The facts set forth by these aver- ments of course vary in each particular case. Their legal virtue is matter of substantive rather than of adjective law, and consequently not the subject of our study here. Proceeding by Bill. Proceeding by bill, instead of by declaration, without the suing out of an original writ, requires only a brief expla- nation. We have seen how the King's Bench, by its process of hill of Middlesex and latitat, and the Exchequer by its 1 Cnnnimrhnm & Mattinson's Pre- " Cliit. PI. 229. cedents (2d ed.), 134, 193. 168 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. attachment of 'privilege (quo minus), extended their respec- tive civil jurisdictions in personal actions, and brought defendants within their control bj process founded upon fictions. We have further learned that such defendants could, when once within the jurisdiction of these courts, be proceeded against by bill instead of by declaration. The I billj as it is called, filed in such cases is exactly equivalent ' to a declaration, differing from it only in some formal words ' at the commencement and conclusion; this bill is, therefore, i considered as belonging to one of the regular forms of actions j as strictly as if an original writ had issued to determine the i form.^ It was used of necessity because a declaration was I regularly preceded by an original writ, and in these cases \ there was no original. Production of Suit. We must not leave this subject without calling attention Lto the concluding words of the declaration : And therefore he brings suit and good proofs "It is not enough that the plaintiff should tell his tale: he must offer to prove its truth. In an Appeal of Felony he offers ' proof by his body ; ' in a Writ of Right he offers proof by the body of a certain free man of his, A. B. by name, who, or whose father, witnessed the seisin that has been alleged ; in other cases he produces a suit (secta) of wit- nesses. No one is entitled to an answer if he ol!ers nothing but his bare assertion, his nude parole. . . . What the plaintiff relies on as a support for his word is suit. This suggests that the suitors (sectatores) whom the plaintiff produces in a civil action have been, at least in theory, men who along with him have pursued the defendant. . . . When we first obtain records from the King's Court, the pro- duction of suit is beginning to lose its importance, and we know little as to what the suitors did or said when they had thus been introduced to the court. But we may gather from the Norman books that each of them in turn ought to have stepped forward and said, ' This I saw and heard, and 1 Steph. PI. 76. a Evans' PI. 29. OP THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 1C9 (by way of proof) I am ready to do what the court shall award. ' At this stage the suitors make no oath and are not questioned. They are not yet making proof; the proof will not he made until the court has spoken after hearing ivhat the defendant has to say. " ^ As to the number of thcse\ suitors requisite when no battle was offered, they could not] be less than two; the rule was testis unus, testis 7iullus (one\ witness, no witness), and was thought to be deduced from the Bible. There might be as many as thirteen suitors.^ The Defence. " The time has now come when the defendant must speak, | and as a general rule the only plea that is open to him is a | flat denial of all that the plaintiff has said. He must ' defend ' all of it, and in this context to defend means to deyiy. In the past he has been bound to ' defend ' the charge word by word, with painful accuracy. By the end of the thir- teenth century he is allowed to employ a more general form of negation." Gradually this defence becomes a mere form, | but it remains to tell us of a time, before the science of . special pleading was conceived, when a downright No ! (a \ thwertutnay^ as it was called) was the one possible answer to the plaintiff's tale; until our own day it remained tli©"' indispensable preliminary to every possible answer.^ Examination of the Plaintiff's Suit. If the defendant wished to rely upon this original com- mon traverse, this thereto-nay, or defence, he might demandl an examination of the plaintiff's suit. He may object that J no suit at all has been produced. In such cases he insists] that he is not bound to answer the nude parole (naked word)' of the plaintiff. If suit has been produced, the defendant can demand that it be examined, but in so doing he aban- dons every other defence. This demand would have led to a purely formal and indisputable oath on the part of the suitors, and if they duly pronounced the necessary formal 1 p. & M. Hist. II. 603, 604 ; Thay. 2 p. & m. Hist. IT. 605. Jury, 10-13. » Ibid. II. 605, 606. A 170 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. words of this oath, the defendant lost his case. But later these suitors could, on the demand of the defendant, be examined one by one by the court to discover whether they really knew anything about the facts of the plaintiff's claim. ( If they break down under examination, and disclose their \ ignorance of the alleged facts, or disagree, the suit is null 'and the plaintiff fails. If they agree, then the defendant's cause is lost by the examination which he has himself demanded. 1 This examination of the plaintiff's suit begins to be questioned as early as 1314, and finally in 1343 it was idenied as antiquated ; yet the allegation of the production (of suit was continued on as a form to our own day.^ Offer op Proof. When the defendant did not wish to stake his case upon the examination of the plaintiff's suit, he had to offer to make good his downright No ! When battle has been offered, he must accept the offer. Having verbally defended the (iharge, he professes his willingness to again defend it, in some cases by his own body, in others by the body of his freeman, "When and where the court shall consider that .defend he ought." Where the plaintiff has not offered battle, the defendant will follow up his defence by the words : " And this he is ready and willing to defend when and where he ought as the court shall consider." In the former case the court will award a wager of battle. In the latter it will award the defendant some other law, to wit: an oath with helpers ; the defendant must at once tvage this law, that is, find gage and pledges that he will, on a later day, make this law by producing compurgators or oath- helpers to sustain by their oaths his denial of the plaintiff's claim, 3 " Such have been the modes whereby a man made good his thwertutnay. In Bracton's day {temp. Hen. III.), they are being concealed from view by an overgrowth of special plead- ing and the verdicts of jurors. But the background of the 1 P. & M. Hist. II. 607 ; Thay. Jury, 2 Thay. Jurv, 15. 12,15. 8 P. & M. Hist. 11. 608. OP THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 171 law of pleading and trial still is this, that the defendant must take his stand upon a downright No, whereupon there will be a wager of battle or of some other law." ^ Origin op Special Pleading. Although it was not until a centur}' after Bracton that English lawyers had grasped the first principles of that system of pleading which, in the future was to become the most exact, if the most occult, of the sciences, ^ yet already the idea of the exceptio of the Roman law was developing in England. According to Roman law the prgetor in some cases denied to a person having a perfect legal right his proper remedy. The plaintiff's claim might be valid by the civil law, and yet to give effect to it might work injustice. In order to prevent this result, the praetor recognized a merely equitable defence, which was called an exceptio (exception).^ The English medieval lawyer was familiar with the well-known language of Justinian : " It often Jiapjyens that although the action which the jwZa/;^^!/^ prose- i cutes is lawful, nevertheless it is utijnst to p)rosecute it againsty the particular defendant. " * He, however, knew little or nothing of any system of equity as contrasted with a system of law, and therefore could not mark off any proper sphere for these exceptional cases in which it was unjust to pursue a legal right. Hence, he was led to believe that every kind of answer to an action was an excejytio, and that Roman law allowed an almost unlimited license to the pleader of exceptions. "This new idea set up a ferment in England and elsewhere. When the old rigid rules had once been infringed, our records became turbid with exceptions."^ The right of exception first obtained a firm footing in the then new procedure of the Petty Assizes, of which we shall speak later. In certain cases, from the very nature of the procedure, it was evident 1 P. & M. Hist. II. 608. 4 Inst. 4, 13 pr. 2 Ibid. II. 609. 6 p. & M. Hist. II. 609. * Hunter's Roman Law, 40. 172 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. from the outset that gross injustice would be done the defendant. 1 Hence he was allowed to assert that for a given reason the assize ought not to proceed, and that assertion was an exceptio, and was also a special plea. "From the province of the Petty Assizes the exceptio spread with great rapidity throughout the domain of the other actions. For one thing, the old reasons for refusing to answer were brought under the new rubric. From of old a defendant must have had some power of urging such reasons; of saying, for example, / will 7iot answer, for tJus court is not competent to decide this cause, or / will not answer you, for you are an outlaw. Under the influence of the Romano-canonical procedure these preliminary objections were now called exceptions; they were ' temporary ' or ' dilatory ' exceptions. A classifi- cation of exceptions and a theory about the order in which they should be propounded were borrowed. First you must except tothe jurisdiction of the court, then to the person of the judge, then to the writ, then to the person of the plaintiff, then to the person of the defendant, and so on. ... In a very short time we find the defendant propounding, by way of exception, pleas that we cannot regard as mere prelimi- nary objections, for they are directed to the heart of the plaintiff's case ; these are ' peremptory ' or ' perpetual ' ex- ceptions, the ' special pleas in bar ' of later law. For a while the utmost laxity prevails. Of this the best examples are to be found among the Appeals. By way of exception to an appeal of homicide, the appellee is suffered to plead that the appeal is not a ' true ' [that is, not a bona fide] appeal but is the outcome of spite and hatred [odium et atia'\. A climax seems to be reached when an appellee pleads an alihi by way of exceptio; a climax, we say, for the plea of alihi can be nothing but an argumentative traverse of the charge that has been made against him, a charge that he will already have traversed in large and explicit words by his ' defence. ' 1 A son and heir might enter upon cover the land from his feoffee, yet he the father's land at liis death, and then could do it if in such case a mort d' an- enfeoff a third person. It would be cestor were allowed to proceed. P. & iL scandalous if this son could then re- Hist. I. 610. OP THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 173 And here we may see how exotic the exceptio once was, though it is now flourishing but too luxuriantly in our soil: it is always, or almost always, preceded by a thwertutnay^ that is, by a flat denial of the plaintiff's assertions. The exception may be met by a replication, the replication by a triplication, and so on ad infinitum. We may occasionally find long debates between the parties. Not only are they long, but, if judged by the standard of a later time, they are loose and irregular. The pleaders must be charged with many faults which would have shocked their successors; they habitually ' plead evidence,' they are guilty of argu- mentativeness and duplicity. The curious rule that in later days will confine a man to a single ' plea in bar ' appears already in Bracton, justified by the remark that a litignnt must not use two staves to defend himself withal. But this rule had not always been observed ; defendants were allowed a second staff, at all events if when using the first they expressly reserved the right of picking up another. These men are drunk with the new wine of Romanism: such may be the comment which a modern reader will make when for the first time he watches the exploits of our ancient pleaders. But we ought to see that there is an under-current of good sense running beneath their vagaries. The exten- sion of the exceptio is the extension of a new mode of jjroof ; it is the extension of a mode of proof which will become famous under the name of trial hy jury,^^'^ as we shall see more fully hereafter. Here, plainly, we have the birth of special pleading, and the history of its earliest years. The defence, instead of being "one of those verbal subtleties, by which the science of special pleading was, in many instances, anciently dis- graced," ^ was, as has been discovered since Stephen wrote, the original denial by the defendant of the plaintiff's claim. It existed before special pleading came into being, and for centuries after the birth of the latter the special plea had to be almost invariably preceded by the unequivocal and direct defence of the earlier law. 1 P. & M. Hist. II. 611-614. 2 steph. PI. 377. 17-i COMMON-LAW PLEADING. The Demurrer. The plaintiff having made or filed his declaration, and the defendant having duly defended the same, the latter had next to consider the specific nature of his response to the attack of the former. We have seen that every averment of fact implies a rule of law on which it relies for its potency. The first care, therefore, of the defendant, or of his pleader, was to examine the declaration narrowly, and to determine whether the facts averred in it, supposing them to be true as averred, state a legal cause of action. If the matter of the plaintiff's declaration be insufficient in law, then the defendant demurs to the declaration. "A demurrer cometh of the Latin word demorari^ to abide ; and therefore he which demurreth in law, is said, he that abideth in law; moratur or demoratur in lege.'^ ^ To demur, therefore, is to rest or pmise ; and the party who demurs in law upon his adversary's pleading rests or pauses upon it as requiring no answer by reason of its supposed Jegal insufficiency. A demurrer, therefore, is no plea, but lis, on the contrary, an excuse for not pleading. - * The defect apparent upon the face of the plaintiff's decla- ration may be one of substance, in that no legal cause of action is stated, or one of form, in that the declaration is not framed according to the rules of pleading. Under the common law, either defect was a ground of demurrer; the objection for defect of substance was called a general, and that for want of form a special demurrer. The following is an instance of the former : — General Dejiurrer to the Declaration (in Debt). In the King's Bench, Term, in the year of the reign of King George the Fourth : C. D. "^ And the said C. D., by , his attorney, comes and ats. V defends the wrong and injury, when, &c. ; and saj'S that A. B. .)■ the said declaration and the matters therein contained, in i Co. Litt. 71, b. 2 Haiton et d. v. Jeffreys, 10 Mod. E. 280. OF THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 175 manner and form as the same are above stated and set forth, are not sufficient in law for the said A. B. to have or maintain his aforesaid action against him, the said C. D. ; and that he, the said C. D,, is not bound by the law of the land to answer the same. And this he is ready to verify. Wherefore, for want of a sufficient declaration in this behalf, the said C. D. prays judg- ment, and that the said A. B. may be barred from having or maintaining his aforesaid action against him, &c." ^ Here the defendant says plainly that he is not bound to answer the declaration, and prays the judgment of the court, which judgment he will await. The subject of the demurrer will be more fully discussed hereafter. It is proper to add here that special demurrers have been quite universally abolished. Pleas. If the defendant does not demur, he must answer the declaration by counter-averments of fact, and in doing this he is said to plead, as distinguished from demurring, and his answer of fact so made is called the plea. Pleas are divided into pleas Dilatory and Peremptory ; this is their most general division. Dilatory Pleas are again subdivided into the following: — (1) Pleas to the Jurisdiction of the Court; (2) Pleas in Suspension of the Action; and (3) Pleas in Abatement of the Writ. Peremptory Pleas are always in bar of the action.^ Dilatory Pleas. (1) A Plea to the Jurisdiction is one by which the defend- ant excepts to the jurisdiction of the court, in which he is sued, to entertain the action against him. As we have seen, he must appear and plead in proper person, and not by attorney; in the conclusion of his plea he prays judgment, if the court of our lord the king here will or ought to have further cognizance of the plea faction) aforesaid.^ (2) A Plea in Suspension of the Action is one which alleges 1 Steph. PI 82, 83. 2 jf^id. 83. 3 Ibid. 84. 176 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. some fact constituting an objection to the proceeding in the suit at that time by the court, and prays that the pleading may be suspended until that objection be removed. The number of these pleas is small. Among them is that which alleges the non-age of an infant heir who is sued on an obligation of his ancestor, and which is called a parol demurrer (a suit- stayer); it concludes with the infant's averment (through his guardian) that he does not conceive that during his minor- ity he oiight to ansiver the said A. B. in his said plea. And he prays that the parol may demur until the full age of him, the said C. D.^ (3) A Plea in Abatement of the Writ is one which shows some ground for abating or quashing the original writ, and it concludes with a prayer that this may be done. The grounds for thus abating the writ are any matters of fact which assail its correctness, without denying the right of action- itself. If the original writ vary from the declara- tion, or if it has been sued out pending another action already brought for the same cause, or if it name only one person as defendant, when it should have named several, or if it appear to have been defaced in a material part, — all or any of these facts are grounds for its abatement. H Pleas in abatement are addressed — (1) To THE Person of the Plaintiff, (2) To the Person of the Defendant, (3) To THE Count or Declaration, and (4) To the Original Writ. A plea in abatement addressed to the person (1) of the plaintiff, or (2) of the defendant, avers some fact of per- sonal disability in the plaintiff to sue or in the defendant to be sued. It may allege that the plaintiff is an alien enemy or an outlaw, or that the defendant is a married woman or a bankrupt. These pleas to the person are not strictly in abatement, for they do not pray that the writ be quashed; they -pray judgment if the plaintiff ought to be answered. As, however, they do not deny the right of action itself, but 1 Steph. PI. 84. OF THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. "^^ urge an objection of form and not of substance, they are con- sidered as, and classed with, pleas in abatement. (3) A plea in abatement to the count or declaration is founded on some objection applying immediately to the de- claration, and only indirectly affecting the writ. All cases of variance between the declaration and the original are instances of such objections. But this sort of plea was generally founded on facts that could only be ascertained by an examination of the writ itself, and hence the pleader was compelled to demand the reading (oyer) of the original before pleading in abatement on such grounds. To discourage such pleas, the courts refused to grant oyer of the original in these cases, and hence pleas in abatement based on such facts were no longer possible. But there are pleas in abatement of the declaration which do not require any examination of the writ itself, e. g., the non-joinder as defendant of one of two joint-contractors, tbe suing out of a writ pending another action, pleas to the person of the plaintiff or defendant, — these and many others do not require oyer of the original, for the defendant has the right to assume that the original and the declaration agree with each other, and he may plead such matters in abatement without the production and reading of the original.^ (4) A plea in abatement to the writ is based on some objection to the writ itself, as, for example, where in an action on a joint contract it omits to name as defendants all of the joint-contractors. These pleas are subdivided into such as are addressed to the forin of the writ, and such as relate to its action. The former are again subdivided into such as are founded on objections apparent on the writ itself, and such as are founded on extraneous matter? Of these sub- divisions Mr. Stephen says that they are " more subtle than useful." 3 Objections to the action of the writ are that the wrong form of action has been brought, as, e. g., case instead of trespass, or that the action is prematurely brought. Objec- tions to the form of the writ apparent on its face are 1 Steph. PI. 86, 88. » Ibid. 86, n. 2 Ibid. 86. 12 178 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. repugnancy, variance from the record or specialty sued on, and the like. Objections not apparent on its face, and founded on extraneous matter, are misnomer of the plaintiff or defend- ant, non-coverture of persons suing or sued as husband and wife, and generally the want of proper parties.^ !i Pleas in abatement applied as well to proceedings by bill as to those by original writ, only the necessary verbal changes being made in the wording of the plea.^ i The effect of all pleas in abatement, if successful, is to defeat the particular action. The right of action itself, however, is not destroyed, and the plaintiff, on obtaining a better form of writ, may maintain a new action if the objec- tion were founded on matter of abatement ; or, if the objection were only to the disability of the person, and in mere sus- pension of the action, he may bring a new action when that disability is removed.^ ^ By Statute 4 Ann. c. 16, s. 11, all dilatory pleas must be verified by affidavit, or, at least, some probable matter must be shown to the court to induce it to believe that the fact of the plea is true. Peremptory Pleas. A Peremptory Plea, or a Plea in Bar of the Action, may be defined as one which shows some ground for barring or defeating the action, and its prayer is to that effect. A plea in bar is, therefore, distinguished from all pleas of the dilatory class in that it denies the right of action alto- gether, instead of seeking to divert the proceedings to another jurisdiction, to suspend them, or to abate the particular writ. It aims to be a substantial and conclusive answer to the action. Obviously, then, it must deny all, or some essential part, of the averments of fact in the declaration ; or, admitting these alle- gations to be true, it must allege new facts which either qualify or destroy the legal effect of the former. In tlie first case, the defendant is said, in the language of pleading, to traverse (deny) the matter of the declaration ; in the latter, to confess and avoid it. 1 Chit. PI. 391, 392. » Ihid. 87. 2 Steph. PI. 89. OF THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. VL^ I Pleas in bar are consequently divided into pleas hy way of ^averse^ and pleas by way of confession and avoidance} The Issue. If we suppose the defendant to plead in bar to the declara- tion by way of traverse^ it is evident that a question is at once raised between the parties ; this question is one oifact, viz., whether the averments in the declaration which the defendant denies are true. Here is a specific matter, affirmed on one side and denied on the other. According to the ancient practice the defendant, who is the party traversing, is gen- erally obliged to offer to refer this disputed matter to some mode of trial, and he does this by closing his traverse with an appropriate formula, proposing either a trial by the country, i. e., by a jury, or some other proper method of decision. We shall explain this more fully when we speak of the modes of trial. If this offer of the defendant's be accepted by the plaintiff, the parties are then, conformably to the language of the ancient pleading, said to be At Issue, and the question itself is called the Issue. Hence, a party who thus traverses, annexing such formula, is said to tender issue, and the issue so tendered is called an issue in fact.^ If, however, the defendant, instead of traversing the decla- ration, demurs, it is obvious that in this case also a ques- tion is raised between the parties, only here it is a question of law, and involves the legal sufficiency of the facts, alleged in the declaration, to maintain the action. Here, again, the defendant is the denying party, and he accordingly uses a formula referring the question of law involved to the judg- ment of the court, which is the only proper mode of trial of such question. As upon a traverse he tenders an issue in fact, so upon a demurrer he tenders an issue in law. A party may sometimes, as will be hereafter seen, traverse or deny without offering any mode of trial ; but, upon a demurrer, he always necessarily tenders an issue in law, for the only known form of a demurrer contains an appeal to the judgment of the court. This tender of an issue in law is necessarily accepted 1 Steph. PL 89. 2 Jijid. 91. 180 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. by the plaintiff, for he can not object either to the question itself (since he prepared his own declaration, and must main- tain its sufficiency or abandon it), or to the proposed mode of decision, for only the court can decide issues in law. He is L therefore obliged to accept or join in the issue in law, and this he does by a formula called a joinder in, demurrer} But, when an issue in fact is tendered, the plaintiff is not obliged to accept it, for manifest reasons. The traverse, as we have seen, may only involve a part of the declaration, and the defendant may, in the case supposed, have so framed his trav- erse as to involve only an immaterial part of the declaration, or a part insufficient to decide the action. Again, the plaintiff may consider the traverse defective in point of form, and he may object to its sufficiency in law on that ground. Or, the mode of trial proposed may be legally inapplicable to the particular kind of issue. For any of these grounds he may demur to the traverse as insufficient in law. This, however, would only postpone the acceptance of issue one step; for, by the demurrer, he himself tenders an issue of law which must be accepted at once. If the tender of issue in fact be not demurred to, it must be accepted along with the mode of trial which it proposes, and this acceptance is expressed by a formula called Si joinder in issue, or a similiter (likewise). The issue in law or fact being thus tendered and accepted by the other side, the parties are at issue, and the pleading is at an end. But this end may not come so soon as we have hitherto supposed. Instead of demurring, or pleading in bar by way of traverse to the declaration, the defendant may plead some one of the dilator?/ pleas, which we have described, or a jylea in bar by way of confession and avoidance. In either case the plain- tiff has the option of demurring to the plea, as insufficient in law to answer the declaration by reason of a defect in form or substance, or of pleading to it by way of traverse, or by way of confession and avoidance of its allegations. Such plending on the part of the plaintiff is called the replication. If this rep- 1 Steph. PL 92. OF THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. lication be by way of traverse, it should generally tender issue. So, if the plaintiff demur, an issue in law is tendered, and in either case a joinder in issue results. But, if the replication be in confession and avoidance, the defendant has in his turn the opportunity to demur to, traverse, or confess and avoid its allegations. If he so plead, his pleading is called the rejoinder. In the same manner, and subject to the same law of proceed- ing, viz., that of demurring, traversing, or pleading in confession and avoidance, is conducted all the subsequent altercation to which the nature of the case may lead. These alternate alle- gations of fact, ov pleadings, are in order and name as follows : \ Declaration, Plea, Replication, Rejoinder, Sur-Rejoinder, / Rebutter, and Sur-Rebutter, after which last the pleadings seldom extend, and have no distinctive name.^ However the altercation be prolonged, it is obvious that this process must sooner or later end in a demurrer or a traverse. The parties can not go on indejifiitelg alleging relevant new matter by way of confession and avoidance. So they arrive at issue after a long series of pleadings, precisely in the same manner as when the process ends with the plea. After thus discussing the respective functions of the de- murrer and of the pleading, the student will hardly need to have his attention called to the fact that a demurrer is never based upon matter extraneous to the pleading which it opposes,] but must be supported by the face of that pleading ; a plead- ing, on the other hand, is always founded on extraneous matter. A demurrer admits facts, alleged in proper form ; a pleading brings into the case new facts, e. g., if the declaration in a given case fail to name the plaintiff, this defect is apparent on its face, and should be taken advantage of by demurrer ; but if the defendant be improperly named in the declaration as "William instead of John, the fact that his name is John is an extraneous fact, not disclosed by the declaration itself, and must be brought into the case, therefore, by way of a plea in abatement.^ 1 Steph. PI. 93, 94. 2 Hid. 96, 97. 182 common-law pleading. Occasional Pleas and Incidents. The pleading has been hitherto supposed to take its direct and simple course. There are, however, 8ome pleas and inci- dents of occasional occurrence by which its progress is some- times interrupted, and such pleas are called Pleas Puis Darreign Continuance, It will be remembered that under the ancient law there were continuances, i. e., adjournments of the proceedings, for certain purposes, from one day or one term to another ; and that, in such cases, there was an entry made on the recoi'd, expressing the ground of the adjournment, and appointing the parties to re-appear at the given day. In the intervals, between such continuances and the day appointed, the parties were of course out of court, and consequently not in a situation to plead. But it sometimes happened that, after a plea had been pleaded, and while the parties were out of court in consequence of such a continuance, a new matter of defence arose which did not exist, and which the defendant had consequently no opportunity to plead, before the last continuance. Tiiis new defence he was therefore entitled, at the day given for his re- appearance, to plead as a matter that had happened after the last continuance (louis darreign continuance — post ultimam con- tinuationemj . In the same cases that occasioned a continuance in the ancient law, but in no other, a continuance still takes place. At the time, indeed, when the pleadings are filed and delivered, no record actually exists, and there is therefore no entry at that time made on record of the award of a contin- uance ; but the parties are, from the day when, by the ancient practice, a continuance would have been entered, supposed to be out of court, and tlie pleading is suspended till tlie day arrives to which, by the ancient practice, the continuance would extend. At that day the defendant is entitled, if any new matter of defence has arisen in the interval, to plead it according to the ancient plan, puis darreign continuance. A plea puis darreign continuance is always pleaded by way of substitution for the former plea, on which no proceeding OF THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 183 is afterwards had. It may be either in bar or abatement, and is followed like other pleas, by a replication and other plead- ings, till issue is attained upon it.^ Demand of View. One of the incidents of occasional occurrence, by which the progress of the pleading was sometimes varied, was the demand of view. In most real and mixed actions, in order to ascertain the identity of the land claimed with that in the tenant's posses-! sion, the tenant is allowed, after the demandant has counted! (i.e., filed his count or declaration), to demand a view of theJ land in question ; or, if the subject of claim be a rent, a right ' of advowson, a right of common, or the like, a view of the land \ out of which it issues. This, however, is confined to real or ^ mixed actions. For in actions personal, the view does not lie. The view being granted, the course of proceeding is to- issue a writ, commanding the sheriif to cause the tenant to have view of the land. It being the interest of the demandant to expedite the proceedings, the duty of suing out the writ lies upon him, and not upon the tenant ; and when, in obedience to its exigency, the sheriff causes view to be made, the de- mandant is to show to the tenant, in all ways possible, the thing in demand with its metes and bounds. On the return of the writ into the court, the demandant must count de novo, that is, declare again, and the pleading proceeds to issue.^ Under modern practice, and, generally, in pursuance of / statutory authority, what is called a view is now, in the dis- / cretion of the court, granted to the jury in civil and criminal I cases, in order that, by an examination of the premises I involved in the evidence, they may be the better able to 1 apply that evidence. But this practice has no connection/ with this incident of pleading which we are considering,' and pertains properly to the law of evidence.^ 1 Steph. PI. 98. 3 Mill. Com. IV. 607. 2 Ibid. 99. Booth on Real Actions, 37. 184 common-law pleading. Voucher to Warranty. A warranty is a covenant real, annexed to lands and tene- ments, whereby a man is bound to defend such lands and tenements for another person, and, in case of eviction by title paramount, to give him lands of equal value.^ Voucher to warranty fvocatio ad warrantizandumj is the calling of such warrantor into court by the party warranted (when tenant in a real action, brought for recovery of such lands) to defend the suit for him ; and the time of such voucher is after the demandant has counted. It lies in most real and mixed actions, but not in personal. Where the voucher has been made and allowed by the court, the vouchee either voluntarily appears, or there issues a judi- cial writ, called a summons ad warrantizandum, commanding the sheriff to summon him. When he, either voluntarily or in obedience to this writ, appears, and offers to warrant the land to the tenant, it is called entering into the warranty ; after which he is con- sidered as tenant in the action, in the place of the original tenant. The demandant then counts against him de 7iovo, the vouchee pleads to the new count, and the cause proceeds to issue.2 Voucher to warranty does not exist in modern practice, as real actions have been abolished ; but the rule seems to be established that when a person is responsible over to another, either by operation of law or by express contract, and notice has been given him of the pendency of the suit, and he has been requested to take upon himself the defence of it, he is no longer regarded as a stranger to the judgment that may be recovered, because he has the right to appear and defend the action equally as if he were a party to the record. When notice is thus given, the judgment, if obtained without fraud / or collusion, will be conclusive against him whether he has appeared or not.' 1 Co. Litt. 365. 179, 187; Washington Gas Co. ?-. 2 Steph. PI. 100. District of Columbia, 161 U. S. 327, 3 Littleton v. Kichardson, 34 N. H 328, 330. OF THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. PrOFERT AND OyER.I Where either party alleges any deed, he is generally obliged, by a rule of pleading that will afterwards be considered in its proper place, to make profcrt (proffer) of such deed, that is, to produce it in court simultaneously with the pleading in which it is alleged. This, in the days of oral pleading, was of course an actual production in court. Since then, it consists of a formal allegation that he shows the deed in court, it being in fact retained in his own custody. Where a profert is thus made by one of the parties, the other, before he pleads in answer, is entitled to demand oyer, that is, to hear the deed read. For it is to be observed that the forms of pleading do not in general require that the whole of any instrument which there is occasion to allege should be set forth. So much only is stated as is material to the pur- pose. The other party, however, may reasonably desire to hear the whole, and this, either for the purpose of enabling him to ascertain the genuineness of the alleged deed, or of founding on some part of its contents, not set forth by the ad- verse pleader, some matter of answer. He is therefore allowed this privilege of hearing the deed read verhatim. When the profert was actually made in oiocn court the de- mand of oyer, and the oyer given upon it, took place in the same manner, and the course was that, on demand by one of the pleaders, the deed was read aloud by the pleader on the other side. By the present practice, the attorney for the party by whom it is demanded, before he answers the pleading in which the profert is made, sends a note to the attorney on the other side, containing a demand of oyer, on which the latter is bound to carry to him the deed, and deliver to him a copy of it, if required, at the expense of the party demanding ; and this is considered as oyer, or an actual reading of the deed in court. Oyer is demandable in all actions, real, personal, and mixed. It is said to have been formerly demandable not only of deeds, but of records alleged in pleading, and (as has been 1 Steph. PI. 100-104. 186 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. before stated) of the original ivrit also ; but, by the present practice, it is not now granted either of a record or of an original writ, and can be had only in the cases of deeds, pro- bates, and letters of administration, etc., of which profert is imade on the other side ; of private writings not under seal, l^yer has never been demandable.^ Oyer can be demanded only where profert is made.^ In all cases where profert is necessary, and where it is also, in fact, made, the opposite party has a right, if he pleases, to demand oyer ; but if it be unnecessarily made, this does not entitle to oyer ; and so, if profert be omitted when it ought to have been jnade, the adversary cannot have oyer, but must demur. When a deed is pleaded with profert, it is supposed to remain in court during all the term in which it is pleaded, but no longer, unless the opposite party, during that term, plead in denial of the deed, in which case it is supposed to remain in court till the action is determined. Hence, it is a rule, that oyer can not be demanded in a subsequent term to that in which profert is made. A party having a right to demand oyer is yet not obliged, in all cases, to exercise that right ; nor is he obliged, in all cases, after demanding it, to notice it in the pleading that he after- ,iwards files or delivers.* Sometimes, however, he is obliged to ■do both, viz., where he has occasion to found his answer upon any matter contained in the deed of which profert is made, and not set forth by his adversary. In these cases the only admis- 1 But where an action is founded on ^ Therefore, in an action on a bond a written instrument not under seal, conditioned for performance of the though the defendant cannot pray oyer, covenant in another deed, the defendant yet the court will in some cases make cannot crave oyer of such deed, but an order for delivery of a copy of it to must himself plead it with a profert the defendant or his attorney, and that (Chit. PI. 370). all proceedings in the meantime be ^ I Tidd, 6.38, 8th ed., where it is stayed (1 Tidd, 639, 8th ed. ; 1 Saund. said that if the defendant omits to set 9 d, n. g.). It seems that oyer is not forth the oyer in his plea, the plaintiff demandable of an act of Parliament in Common Pleas may insert it for him (1 Tidd, 637); nor of letters patent at the head of his plea in making up (1 Arch. 169); nor of a recognizance the issue; but in King's Bench can (Ibid.). But it is demandable of a deed only avail himself of the deed by pray- enrolled, or of the exemplification of ing that it be enrolled at the head of the enrolment, according to the terms his own replication. And see Com. of the profert (IbLd.J. Dig. Pleader, P. L OF THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 187 sible method of making such matter appear to the court is to demand oyer, and from the copy given to set forth the whole deed verbatim in his pleading.^ When oyer is demanded and the deed thus set forth, the effect is as if it had been set forth in the first instance by the opposite party ; and the tenor of the deed, as it appears upon oyer, is consequently considered as forming a part of the pre- ceding pleading. Therefore, if the deed, when so set forth by the plea, be found to contain in itself matter of objection or answer to the plaintiff's case, as stated in the declaration, the defendant's course is to demur, as for matter apparent on the face of the declaration ; and it would be improper to make the objection the subject of plea. Imparlances.2 By the ancient practice, if a party found himself unprepared to answer the last pleading of his adversary immediately, his course was to pray the court to allow him a further day for that purpose ; which was accordingly granted by the court i to any day that, in their discretion, they might award, either in the same or the next succeeding term. The party was, in this case, said to pray, and the court to grant, an imparlance finterlocutio, or interloquelaj , a term derived from the suppo- sition that in this interval the parties might talk together and amicably settle their controversy. An imparlance, when granted, was one of the cases of continuance, of which doctrine some general explanation has, already been given. It was grantable in almost all actions,; real, personal, and mixed. The prayer of imparlance, when made by the defendant prior to his plea, was either general or special. The first was simply a prayer for leave to imparl. Of such general impar- lance it was a consequence that the defendant was afterwards 1 Com. Dig. Pleader, 2 V. 4 ; 2 it, the plaintiff may either sign jnilg- Saund. 410, n. 2 ; 1 Saund. 9 b, n. 1 ; ment for want of plea, or by liis repli- Stibbs V. Clough, 1 Stra. 227 ; Ball v. cation may pray that the deed be Sqiiarry, Fort. 354 ; Colton v. Good- enrolled ( Jevons v. Harridge, 1 Saund. ridge, 2 Bl. R. 1108. If he does not set 9 b ; and see Com. Dig. p. 1). forth the whole deed, or misrecites ^ Steph. PI. 104 ; Chit. PI. 375-378. 188 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. precluded from certain proceedings of a dilatory tendency, which might before have been competent to him. Thus he fcould not, after a general imparlance, demand oyer, nor (ac- cording to some authorities) a view, nor could he plead a plea to the jurisdiction or in abatement. Accordingly, if he wished to preserve his right to these advantages, he varied the form of his prayer, and made it with a reservation of such right. If his object was to preserve the right of pleading in abate- ment, he prayed what is called a special imparlance ; but, if he desired to plead to the jurisdiction, he had to resort to a general-special imparlance, which reserved all advantages and exceptions whatsoever. This subject is now of no practical importance, and any further notice of it is unnecessary. In modern practice the rules of court allow a fixed time to the parties wherein to plead, which allowance may be enlarged upon cause shown. Counter-Pleas to Oyer, etc. These, and other incidents of a similar kind, may occur in pleading. If they take their course without opposition, they do not, as we have seen, long interrupt the main series of the allegations. But, with respect to most of them, the opposite party has a right, if he pleases, to oppose the prayer made on the other side ; and for this purpose he was entitled, in the ancient practice of pleading, to demur or plead to it, as if it were a statement of fact made in the direct course of the pleading. Thus, if a party demanded oyer in a case where, upon the face of the pleading, his adversary conceived it to be not demandable, the latter might demur, or if he had any matter of fact to allege as a ground why the oyer could not be demanded, he might plead such matter. If he pleaded, the allegation was called a counter-plea to the oyer. So the demandant might have occasion, in the same manner, to counterplead the voucher or counterplead the view ; all plead- ings of this incidental kind, diverging from the main series of the allegations, were termed counterpleas. And in the latter instances, as well as upon oyer, it would seem thci-e might be demurrer instead of counterplea, if the objection OP THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 189 appeared on the face of the proceedings. Again, on the counterplea, in all these cases, there might be a replication and other subsequent pleadings ; and so the parties might come to issue in law or in fact on this collateral subject, in the same manner as upon the principal matters in controversy. ^ Demurrer-Book. — Paper-Book. Supposing the cause to be at issue, the next proceeding is to make a transcript upon paper of the whole pleadings that have been filed or delivered between the parties. This transcript, when the issue joined is an issue in law, is called the demurrer-book ; when an issue in fact, it is called, in the King's Bench, in some cases, the issue, in others, the paper-book, and in the Common Pleas, the issue. It contains^ not only the pleadings, but also entries, according to the ancient forms used in recording, of the appearance of the parties, the continuances, and other acts supposed to be done in court up to the period of issue joined, even though such entries have not formed part of the pleadings as filed or delivered ; and it concludes with an entry of an award by the court of the mode of decision tendered and accepted by the pleadings. The making of this transcript upon an issue in law, is called making up the demurrer-book ; upon an issue in fact, making up the issue or paper-book. The de- murrer-book, issue, or paper-book, when made up, is delivered to the defendant's attorney, who, if it contains what he admits to be a correct transcript, returns it unaltered ; but, if it varies from the pleadings that were filed or delivered, he makes ap- plication to the court to have it set right.^ Amendments. During the course of the pleading, if either party per- ceives any mistake to have been committed in the manner of his allegation, or if, after issue joined on demurrer for matter of form, he should think the issue likely to be de- cided against him, he ought to apply, without delay, for leave to amend. 1 Steph. PI. 107. 2 Hid. 108. 190 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. Under the ancient system, the parties were allowed to correct and adjust their pleadings during the oral alterca- tion, and were not held to the form of statement that they might first advance. So, at the present day, until the judg- ment is signed, in the manner to be afterwards mentioned, either party is generally at liberty to amend his pleading as 1 at common law ; the leave to do which is granted, as of course, I upon proper and reasonable terms, including the payment of the costs of the application, and sometimes the whole costs of the cause up to that time. And, even after the judgment is signed, and up to the latest period of the action, amend- ment is, in most cases, allowable at the discretion of the court, under certain statutes passed for allowing amendments of the record ; and in late times the judges have been much more liberal than formerly in the exercise of this discretion. "Amendments are,however, always limited by a due considera- tion of the rights of the opposite party ; and where, by the amendment, he would be prejudiced or exposed to unreason- able delay, it is not allowed.^ Entering the Issue on Record. The pleadings and issue being adjusted by the making up, delivery, and return of the demurrer-book, issue, or paper- book, the next step is to enter the issue on record. It will be remembered that the pleadings are framed as if they were copied from a roll of the oral pleadings. Such a roll, as has been shown, did, in the time of oral pleading, exist, and still exists in contemplation of law ; but no roll is now actually prepared or record made till after issue joined and made up, in the manner above described. At that period, however, a record is drawn up on a parchment roll. This proceeding is called entering the issue ; and the roll on which the entry is made is called the issue roll. The issue roll contains an entry of the term, of which the demurrer-book, issue, or paper-book is entitled ; and (in the King's Bench) the warrants of attorney supposed to have been given by the parties at the commence- ment of the cause, authorizing their attorneys to appear for 1 Steph. PI. 110. OF THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 191 them respectively ; and then proceeds with a transcript of the declaration and subsequent pleadings, continuances, and award of the mode of decision, as contained in the demurrer-book, issue, or paper-book. When drawn up, it is filed in the proper office of the court.^ Modes of Trial. The action being now brought to that stage at which the issue is recorded, the next subject for consideration is the manner in which that issue is decided. Decision of Issues in Law. The decision of issues in law is vested, as it always has been, exclusively in the judges of the court. Therefore, when,,' upon a demurrer, the issue in law has been entered on record in the manner above described, the next step is to move for a concilium ; that is, to move to have a day appointed on which the court will hear the counsel of the parties argue the de- murrer. And such day being appointed, the cause is then^ entered for argument accordingly. On that day, or as soon ! afterwards as the business of the court will permit, it is accord- ingly argued viva voce in court by the respective counsel for the parties ; and the judges, in the same manner and place, pronounce their decision according to the majority of voices.^ . Trial of Issues in Fact. The manner of deciding issues in fact will require explana-[ tion at greater length. The decision of the issue in fact is| called the trial. Before we can understand the immense function assigned to the trial by jury to-day, and for centuries past, in all English speaking countries,^ we must go back to a time when such a mode of trial did not exist ; to a time, in fact, when there was no such thing as a trial at all, as we understand that word. " We must once for all discard from our thoughts that familiar 1 Steph. PL 111. and its varied workings, end in simply 2 Thid. 114. bringing twelve good men into a 8 "All we see about us, Kings, Lords, box." — Lord Brougham, Present 67a;e and Commons, the whole machinery of of (he Law, Feb. 7, 1829. the state, all the apparatus of the system, 192 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. picture of a trial in which judges and jurymen listen to the evidence that is produced on both sides, weigh testimony against testimony, and by degrees make up their minds about the truth. The language of the law, even in Bracton's day, has no word equivalent to our trial. "We have not to speak of \ trial ; we have to speak of proof." ^ " That thing [trial], so \ obvious and so necessary, as we are apt to think it, was only worked out after centuries.^'' '^ Among the Germanic races popular courts and popular justice were ancient and abiding institutions. These courts were originally an assembly of the people, in which all were judges. Of law so administered, Maine says : " I will say no more of its general characteristics than that it is intensely technical, and that it supplies in itself sufficient proof that legal technicality is a disease, not of the old age, but of the infancy of societies."^ These courts assembled, not to hear witnesses and to balance doubtful testimony, but to see that certain forms were strictly observed. The conception of a trial was that of a public proceeding between the parties, carried on in a certain prescribed way. As we have seen, it was once true that if a man stammered in repeating a formula, or if, while holding the Bible in the act of swear- , ing, every finger was not placed in a certain prescribed ', position, the suit was irretrievably gone.^ Proof meant, not what we call evidence, but the due observance of prescribed rules of procedure. And hence some room for choice existed. There were many modes of such trial, but the proof was largely one-sided^ i. e., to be performed by one of the parties only. In some cases the right to supply this proof was a privilege, in others a danger ; hence an important question to be decided was this : who has the right to go to the proof in '. this case ? For determining this question there were tradi- tional rules, and the judgment upon it (called the Medial Judgment) came before the trial, for the actual trial was simply the following out of a certain form which the judg- ment itself prescribed.^ 1 p. & M. Hist. II. 596. * Thay. Jury, 25. 2 Thay. Jury, 10. 6 /^j-j. 9. 3 Early Law and Custom, 170. OP THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 193 We must recall here what has already been said as to the secta or suit. No complaint made on the naked word of the plaintiff could put a defendant to his proof ; there must be something to support the complaint, the seeta, or the defendant's own writings, or his tally, etc.^ The old forms of trial were, in cases not conclusively deter- mined by the production of the defendant's own deeds, the fol- lowing: (1) Witnesses; (2) The Party's Oath, with or without fellow-swearers (compurgators); (3) The Ordeal ; (4) Battle. (1) The Trial by Witnesses. This appears to be one of the oldest, as it is also one of the most formal, kinds of " one-sided proof," Under Anglo-Saxon law certain transactions, such as sales, had to take place before official witnesses ; ^ a woman was endowed at the church-door, and a charter was executed, both before wit- nesses. In case of controversy as to any of these facts, thej formal oath of these witnesses, who could not be cross- examined, ended the matter. So too if the question werej of the non-age of a party, or, originally, of the ownership of chattels, or of the death of the husband in an action of dower, in all of these cases trial by witnesses was had. But when these witnesses came it was merely in order to swear to a set formula, The^ made no promissory oath to tell the truth in answer to questions^ hut an assertory oath.^ This mode of trial is obsolete, and requires no further notice. (2) The Trial by Oath. The most common and popular medieval form of trial by oath was where the party swore with oath -helpers, and was called compurcjation. It consisted in the producing, by the party adjudged to make the proof, of a specific number of persons to make oath in his favor ; the requisite number varied with the rank of the parties and of the compurgators,/ the value of the property in dispute, and the nature of the! suit. These persons were not witnesses, and they swore, 1 Thay. Jury, 10, 11. 3 P. & M. Hist. II. 599. 2 Anglo-Saxon Law, 187, 216. 13 194 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. not as to facts, but as to the truthfulness of the party who produced them in his behalf.^ In small matters the oath taken was an informal one, but in serious criminal cases it was made so intricate that its words could only with great difficulty be repeated, and if a wrong word was used the oath hurst and the adversary won. " In the twelfth century such elaborate forms of asseveration had been devised that, rather than attempt them, men would take their chance at the 'hot iron' [the ordeal]." ^ " From being a favored mode of trial, this ' law ' or, as it is commonly called, wager of law [from its preliminary stage of giving pledges to perform it] steadily tended to become a thing exceptional ; not going beyond the line of the precedents, and within that line being a mere privilege along side of the grow- ing . . . trial by jury. In the newer forms of action it was not allowed, and finally it survived mainly in detinue and debt." ^ It did survive in these actions, however, and so late as 1824 it was demanded as a right.* In 1833 it was abolished by act of Parliament. (3) The Trial by Ordeal. Primitive man lived very closely in contact with what we call the supernatural. In doubt or in perplexity he turned to the miraculous as the natural source of help. Men have at all times and everywhere required God to denounce guilt or to protect innocence by some action manifestive of His power ; by making the flowing water uphold the guilty body cast into it, or the hot iron spare the innocent hand that grasped it. This trial by ordeal was at first adopted and consecrated by the church ; later (1215) she repudiated it, and in conse- quence of that repudiation it ceased to be practised generally, and especially in England. No case of trial by ordeal later than 1214 is found recorded in English books, but in the year 1679 a defendant is reported to have seriously demanded this form of trial. ^ 1 Hist. Pr. 301. 4 King v. Williams, 2 Barn. & Cress. 2 P. & M. Hist. II. 599. 538 ; s. c. 4 Dow. & Ry. 3. 8 Thay. Jury. 28, 29. ^ xhay. Jury, 38. OF THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 195 It was only when the party had no charters, and could furnish neither witnesses nor compurgators, that he resorted to the ordeal, except in cases provided for by special legislation. It was the typical mode of trial among tlie English, as con- trasted with the Norman trial by battle. It was used frequently in civil, as well as in criminal, cases before and for a consid- erable time after the Conquest.^ When the accused was unable, through age, sex, or bodily infirmity, to fight in the duel, then this trial by ordeal was found to be a convenient last resort. The three varieties of ordeal in Anglo-Saxon law were those of fire, water, and th^ morsel or corsned} (4) The Trial by Battle. The judicial combat or duel is a two-sided ordeal. The; combatant who was vanquished was looked upon as a con-i victed perjurer, and it was truth that was thought to triumph,' not the mere superior strength or skill of the conqueror. This mode of trial was introduced into England by William the Norman, but was, according to Blackstone, only used inl three cases, one military, one criminal, and the third civil J The first was in the court of chivalry or honor ; the secondl in appeals of felony, and the third upon issue joined in a) writ of right.^ But Glanvill writes of it as of one of the chief modes of trial in the king's courts, and even in the courts-baron.* It was a new thing in England, and was hated by the natives as the Frenchman's mode of trial. In form, it was a fight i between two champions, one appearing for each of the con- tending parties, armed with staves, and he who was conquered was forced to cry " craven^^ and became an infamous man. J Tlie combatants were bound to fight until the stars appeared in the evening; if the champion of the tenant can defend 1 Hist. Pr. 322. 303, and to the fourth book of Black- 2 For a particular description of stone's Commentaries, 342-346*. ...| the ordeal, the student is referred to » Bl. Com. III. 337* 338*. "Essays on Anglo-Saxon Law," 300- * Lib. 10, c. 17; Lib. 9, c. 1 ; Thaj. Jury, 39, 40. 196 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. himself so long he shall prevail, for he has maintained his ground and the battle is a drawn one.^ It was not until 1819, that this barbarous relic of a long past age was formally abolished in England by act of Parliament.2 Miscellaneous Proofs. There were, in addition to the foregoing regular modes of trial, a few miscellaneous methods of proving particular facts. Certain questions were decided by the certificate of the bishop, such as the questions whether a certain church had a properly constituted parson ; whether two people were lawfully married ; whether a child was legitimate. ,* Again, there was a trial by inspection. If it was asserted /that a litigant was a minor, the justices would sometimes (decide the fact upon an inspection of him with their own eyes.^ The Trial by the Record. Before proceeding to consider the next mode of trial and its immediate forerunner, we must notice the proof required in cases where the contents of a record are drawn in question. The trial hy the record applies to cases where an issue of nul tiel record (no such record) is joined in any action. If a record be asserted on one side to exist, and the opposite party deny its existence, under the form of traverse that there is no such record remaining in court as alleged, and issue be joined thereon, this is called an issue of nul tiel record ; and the court awards, in such case, a trial by inspection and examina- tion of the record. Upon this, the party affirming its exist- ence is bound to produce it in court, on a day given for the purpose ; and, if he fail to do so, judgment is given for his adversary. The trial by record is not only in use when an issue of this kind happens to arise for decision, but it is the only legitimate mode of trying such issue, and the parties can not put themselves upon the country.'^ 1 For a very detailed and interesting 2 Stat. 59 Geo. III. c. 46. account of this mode of trial the student ^ 7. & M. Hist. II. 637. is referred to the third book of Black- * Steph. PI. 130. fltone's Commentaries, 337-341*. OP THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 197 If we pause now to reckon our available modes of proof, we find that for the most important and numerous class of actions, the writs of right, we have the proof by battle ; for actions of debt and detinue, the proof by wager of law ; for actions of covenant, the papers or charters of the de- fendant himself ; for sales, the proof by witnesses ; for records, the proof by inspection of the record ; for exceptional cases, the proof by ordeal. But as yet we have not heard even men- tion of the proof by jury. Trial by Jury. It is impossible to do more than to present the barest out- line of the introduction and growth of this remarkable institu- tion of our own race. Fortunately, in the recently published work by Professor Thayer upon this topic, the student has a masterly and thorough exposition of the subject. It seems to be conceded to-day that Henry 11. was a " great and sagacious king ; " ^ under him " England takes for a short while the lead among the States of Europe in the production of law and of a national legal literature."^ He was Duke of Normandy before he was Chief Justiciary, and later King, of England. As Duke of Normandy, he had there developed and organized the Norman Inquisition, which was simply the practice of ascertaining facts hy summoning together, ly public authority, a number of people most likely and most com- petent, as being neighbors, to know and tell the truth about a given matter, and call'mg for their answer under oath.^ This was the origin of our jury of to-day. In Normandy, this process of inquisition was applied both in legal controversy and in political administration. When the King of the Franks wanted a point determined which involved the royal revenue, he ordered that inquiry should be made, not by witnesses brought forward by the party interested, but " through those who in that comity are known to be of the best character and most truthful; let inquiry be made through their testimony, and according to wJiat they shall testify in the ^premises, let 1 Thay. Jury, 53. » Tbay. Jury, 7. 2 P. & M. Hist. II. 145, 146. 198 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. ""^^lem (taxes) be ivithheld or rendered^ This reformed pro- cess for the ascertainment of facts connected with the revenue naturally extended to the administration of justice. And yet only a strong central power could compel parties to abandon the old familiar formal procedure in favor of this new and strange trial. Only royal authority could put a man to an oath as a juryman, and this fact made and kept trial by jury the special possession of the royal courts.^ This strong kingly power the Normans brought with them to England. With them came also the inquisition. It appears to have been occasionally resorted to in judicature prior to the reign of Henry II. ; of its administrative use the compilation of Domesday Book in 1085-6 is an example. But with this great king the inquisition began to assume the place which its inherent potency fitted it for. He established the use of this mode of trial as a right, and compelled suitors to accept it in lieu of the old established proofs. Before his time, it had been granted merely as a royal favor to particular suitors ; under him in certain cases any suitor had a right to the king's writ ordering it. It now began to be called a recognition instead of an inquisition, but the new name only signified the answer of the jurors, while the old one denoted the inquiry which they made.^ " These recognitions were so many new modes of trial on particular questions, established by a dead lift of royal power." By the old law men had tried their own cases, " To put upon a man, who had the right to go to the proof, instead of the proof (the defence, the purgation of the older law, where he produced the persons or things that cleared him), the necessity of submitting himself to the test of what a set of strangers, witnesses selected by a public officer, might say — this was a wonderful thing." ^ It was only by con- tinued effort that the change was accomplished. The writer of the Blirror (1291-2) says : '■''It is an abuse that the Justices drive a lawful man to 2>ut himself on the country when he offers to defend himself against the approver by his body.''"' * 1 Thay. Jury, 49. s Ibid. 55, 56. 2 Ibid. 55. 4 Ibid. 57. OF THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 199 We now understand why a man in pleading has to offer to put himself upon the country, and why in criminal procedure the terrible torture of la peine forte ct dure (the strong and hard punishment) was used to open the mouth of a prisoner who stood mute. The trial by jury was not originally a law- ful trial, and could not be forced on a man without at least the form of his assent. It was probably at the council of Clarendon (1166) that Henry II. authorized the proceeding known as the assize of novel disseisin.^ We have already seen that this new remedy was devised to protect the mere possession of land. " The ownership of land may be a matter for the feudal courts ; the king himself will protect by royal writ and inquest of neigh- bors every seisin of a free tenement." ^ Later, the same king took a fresh step in advance, and decreed that no man need answer for his tenement without a royal writ. He decreed further that a tenant (defendant), pursued in the local feudal court (court-baron) in a proprietary action for land, might,* if he so desired, have the action removed into the King's Court, and there have the whole question of right determined by a verdict of neighbors. In this case the inquest was called the grand assize, and was made more solemn in form than the assize of novel disseisin and other similar ones subsequently instituted, which were called, by way of distinction, the petti/ assizes. To constitute the grand assize the sheriff chose four knights " girt with swords," who, in the presence of the court, then chose twelve other knights, likewise '•'• gladiis cinetos;^' this jury of twelve (but some authorities say, of sixteen) constitute the jury for the trial of all writs of right,^ and for that purpose only. ,» To form a petty assize or an ordinary jury, twelve free and I lawful men of the neighborhood were summoned directly by' the shcriff.4 We must now recur to the development of the exception and of special pleading in connection with the spread of the new method of trial by jury. 1 P. & M. Hist. I. 124. 8 P. & M. Hist. II. 618 [cf. Steph. 2 Ibid. 125. PI. 129). * Ibid. II. G19. 200 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. In the case of these petty assizes, which were all of recent institution, when the litigants came into court they found there these twelve recognitors or jurymen, who formed a con- venient body to try the truth of any exception which might be pleaded in the case. In fact, these jurymen were used for that purpose, either by the consent of parties or by the order of the court. It soon became common that the court would compel the plaintiff to submit the question of the truth of an exception pleaded by the defendant to the verdict of a jury, under penalty of having his cause decided against him if he refused.^ This procedure spread rapidly beyond the domain of the petty assizes. In civil causes generally the defendants became desirous of referring not only the new exceptions, but also the old absolute denials, to a form of trial which enabled them to escape the dangerous and costly modes of proof under the old law. " By its intrinsic fairness as contrasted with the older modes, and by the favor of the Cfown and the judges, it grew fast to be regarded as the one regular common-law mode of trial, always to be had when no other was fixed." ^ Then, too, all new writs and forms of action in civil cases re- quired by their terms a jury trial, and as these were demandable as of right they gave a great impetus to the new mode of proof. It will be interesting to turn for a moment to the instru- mentality of introducing the inquisition into the domain of the criminal law. On an appeal of felony it was open to the party so appealed of crime to plead that the appeal was not made bona fide, but that it was brought maliciously to dis- inherit or otherwise injure him (the innocent appellee). This was called the exceptio de odio et atia (exception of spite and hatred). This plea often involved practically a decision of the real guilt or innocence of the appellee. By Magna Carta this writ of spite and hatred issued gratis and without any denial, and the sheriff must under its terms take an inquest to determine the truth of the appellee's exception. In this way the accused could ask for and obtain the benefit of a trial by jury.^ But if he did not demand it, if, on the 1 p. & M. Hist. IL 615. 3 ii,d. 68; P. & M. Hist. IL 585, 586- 2 Thay. Jury, 60. OF THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION, 201 contrary, he remained mute and refused to " put himself on the country," then came, as we have seen, the torture, which brought either death or consent to the jury-trial. As showing emphatically, however, the intrusion of this method of trial, and the persistence of the old regular custom- ary modes of proof, we must recur to the fact that the trial by battle was not dead in 1819, and that wager of law lingered on until 1833 ; in each case, as has been said, an act of Par- liament was required to terminate an outworn but a long and a once vigorous life. The student must pursue elsewhere the study of that course of development which converted the ancient witnesses as to facts, for such the inquisition was, into the modern triers of facts, for such the jury came to be. It belongs properly to the law of evidence.^ Venire Facias. Recurring now to the general subject of trial by jury, it will be remembered that, when the parties have mutually re- ferred the issue to decision by jury, or (as it is technically termed) have put themselves ujyon the country^ there is entered upon the roll (as in all other cases) the award of the mode of decision so adopted. In the case of the trial by jury, that award directs the issuing of the writ of venire facias (you shall cause to come) commanding the sheriff of the county, where the facts are alleged by the pleading to have occurred, to sum- mon a jury to try the issue ; and such writ is accordingly sued out. Trials at Nisi Prius. The venire facias directs the jury to be summoned to ap- pear in the superior court. This is because the trial was, in fact, anciently had there. But, except in some few cases, to be presently noticed, the trial by jury no longer takes place before the superior court. It is now usually conducted in the county where the facts are alleged, in pleading, to have oc- curred, and into which the venire facias issues, and before 1 Thay. Jury, passim ; P. & M. Hist, sub voc, " Jury." 202 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. certain judges called the justices of assize and nisi prius. The trial is, in such cases, said to be had at nisi prius. The term is derived from the Latin words at one time used in the writ of venire facias, by which the sheriff was commanded to summon the jurors to be, by a given day, at Westminster, to try the issues, unless before (nisi prius) tliat time, the justices came into the sheriff's own county, on their semi-annual cir- cuit, as they were sure to do ; when the jurors, instead of going to Westminster, were summoned to the assize town of their own county .1 When the trial is to be so had, the course of proceeding is, after an issue to be tried by jury has been en- tered on record on the issue roll, to sue out the venire facias, together with another writ, for compelling the attendance of the jury, called the distringas in the King's Bench ; in the Common Pleas the habeas corpora. The next step is to make up and pass, at the proper offices, another record, on a parch- ment roll, called the record of nisi prius, which is a transcrij> tion from the issue roll, and contains a copy of the pleadings and issue. This 7iisi prius record is then delivered to the judges of assize and nisi prius, and serves for their guidance as to the nature of the issue to be tried. The trials at 7iisi prius now take place, in London and Middlesex, several times in the course of each term, and also during a considerable part of each vacation ; in every other county they are held twice a year, and always in time of vacation. The justices of assize and nisi prius, for trials in London and Middlesex, consist of the chief justices of the three courts respectively, each trying only the issues from his own court. For trials in the other counties, they consist of such persons as are appointed for the purpose by temporary commission from the Crown, among whom are usually, for each circuit, two of the judges of the superior courts, the whole kingdom being divided into six circuits for the purpose.^ Trial at Bar. Though the trial by jury is thus, in general, had at nisi prius, this is not universally the case ; for, in causes of great 1 Min. lust. IV. 189. 2 Steph. PI. 116. OP THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 203 difficulty and consequence, these inquests are allowed to be / taken before the four judges in the superior court in which/ the pleading took place, as in the ancient practice. The pro-' ceeding is then technically said to be a trial at har^ by way of distinction from the trial at yiisi prius. After these explanations as to the time and place of trial by jury, the next subject for consideration is the course of the proceeding itself. Conduct op Jury Trial. The whole proceeding of trial by jury takes place under the superintendence of the presiding judge or judges, who usually decide all points as to the admissibility of evidence, and direct the jury on all such points of law arising on the evidence as 1 is necessary for their guidance in appreciating its legal effect, J and drawing the correct conclusion in their verdict. After hearing the evidence of the witnesses, the addresses of counsel, and the charge of the judge, the jury pronounce their verdict, which the law requires to be unanimously given. The verdict is usually in general terms, " for the plaintiff," or "for the defendant," finding at the same time (in case of ver- dict for the plaintiff, and where damages are claimed by the action) the amount of damages to which they think him entitled.2 The principles upon which the law requires the jury to form their decision, are these : — 1. They are to take no matter into consideration but the question in issue ; for it is to try the issue, and that only, that J they are summoned. Example: Where to an action of assumpsit the defendant pleaded that he did not promise within six years, to which there was a replication that he did promise within six years, on which issue was joined, it was held not to be competent to the plaintiff to offer evidence that the action was grounded on a fraudulent receipt of money by the defendant, and that the fraud was not 1 For an instance of a trial at bar States, see State of Georgia v. Braila- in the Supreme Court of the United ford, 3 Dallas, 1. 2 Steph. H. 117. ^ 204 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. discovered till within six years of the action, for the issue was merely upon the promise within six years. ^ 2. They are bound to give their verdict for the party who, upon the proof, appears to them to have succeeded in estab- lishing his side of the issue. 3. The burden of proof, generally, is upon that party who, in pleading, maintained the affirmative of the issue ; for a I negative is, usually, incapable of proof. Consequently, un- less he succeed in proving that affirmative, the jury are to consider the opposite proposition, or negative of the issue, as established.^ VAEI4.NCE. / The proof offered may, in some cases, wholly fail to ' support the affirmative* of the issue; but in others, it may fail by a disagreement in some particular jjoint or points only between the allegations and the evidence. Such disagreement, when upon a material point, is called a variance and is as fatal to the party on whom the proof lies as a total failure of evidence, the jury being bound, upon variance^ to find the issue against him. Examples : (1) The plaintiff declared in covenant for not repair- ing, pursuant to the covenant in the lease, and stated the covenant as a covenant to " repair when and as need should require ; " and issue was joined on a traverse of the deed alleged. The plaintiff, at the trial, produced the deed in proof, and it appeared that the covenant was thus : to repair '' when and as need should require, and at farthest after notice" the latter words having been omitted in the declaration. This was held to be a variance, because the additional words were material, and qualified the legal effect of the contract.^ (2) So where the plaintiff declared in assumpsit that for certain hire and reward the defendants undertook to carry goods from London and deliver them safely at Dover, and the contract was proved to have been to carry and deliver safely, Jire and robbery excepted, this was held to be a variance.* 1 Clarke v. Hougham, 2 Barn. & ' Horsefall v. Testar, 7 Taunt. 385. Cress. 149. * Latham v. Kutley, 2 Barn. & Cress. 2 Steph. PI. 118. 20. OF THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 205 On the other hand, however, the principle is not so rigor- / ously observed as to oblige the party on whom the proof lies i to make good his allegation to the letter. It is enough if the ! substance of the issue is exactly proved,^ and a variance in; mere form, or in matter quite immaterial, \y\\\ not be regarded. Example : In debt on bond conditioned for payment of money, where the defendant pleaded payment of principal and interest, and the plaintiff replied that he had not paid all the principal and interest, and issue was joined thereon, and the proof was that the whole interest was not, in fact, paid, but that the de- fendant paid a sum in gross, which was accepted in full satisfac- tion of the whole claim, the issue was considered as sufficiently proved on the part of the defendant.^ The Verdict. The verdict, when given, is afterwards drawn np in form, and entered on the back of the record of nisi prius. This is done upon trials in King's Bench, in London and Middlesex, by the attorney for the successful party ; in other cases, by an officer of the court. Such entry is called the postea (after- ward) from the word with which, at a former period (when the proceedings were in Latin), it commenced. The poste(i is drawn up in the negative or affirmative of the issue, accordj ing as it may be for the plaintiff or for the defendant.^ j Such is the course of trial at nisi prius, in its direct and simple form ; and the practice of a trial at bar is generally the same. Trials by jury, however, whether at bar or nisi prius, are subject to certain varieties of proceeding, some of which require to be here noticed. Incidents of Jury Trial. If, at a trial, a point of law arises, either as to the legal effect or the admissibility of the evidence, the usual course (as already stated) is for the judge to decide these matters. But-^ it may happen that one of the parties is dissatisfied with the « Com. Dig. Pleader, S. 26. Towne, 5 "Wall. 689, 698, and Moses v. 2 Price V. Brown, Str. 690. The old United States, 166 U. S. 579. rnle as to variance has been greatly re- ^ gteph. PI. 120. laxed in this country. See Nash v. 206 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. decision, and may wish to have it revised by a superior juris- diction. If he is content to refer it to the superior court in which the issue was joined, and out of wliich it is sent (called, by way of distinction from the court at nisi prius, the court in banc), his course is to move in that court for a neiv trialj — a subsequent proceeding which will be considered hereafter in its proper place. But, as the 7iisi prius judge himself fre- quently belongs to that court, a party is often desirous, under such circumstances, to obtain the revision of some court of error, i. e., some court of appellate jurisdiction, having authority to correct the decision. For this purpose, it becomes necessary to put the question of law on record for the information of such court of error ; and this is to be done pending the trial, in a form marked out \b}^ an old statute (Westminster 2, 13 Edward I. c. 31). Bill of Exceptions. /' The party excepting to the opinion of the judge tenders /him a bill of exceptions ; that is, a statement, in writing, of the objection made by the party to his decision, to which state- ment, if truly made, the judge is bound to set his seal in con- \__firmation of its accuracy. The cause then proceeds to verdict as usual, and the opposite party, for whom the verdict is given, is entitled, as in the common course, to judgment upon such verdict in the court in bayic, for that court takes no notice of the bill of exceptions. But, the whole record being afterwards /removed to the appellate court by writ of error (a proceeding / to be hereafter explained), the bill of exceptions is then taken / into consideration in the latter court, and there decided.^ Demurrer to Evidence. Though the judge usually gives his opinion on such points of law as above supposed, yet it may happen that, for various reasons, he is not required by the parties, or does not wish to do so. In such case several different courses may be pursued for determining the question of law. 1 Steph. PI. 121, and see especially Money v. Leach, 3 Burr. 1692. OF THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 207 First, a party disputing the legal effect of any evidence f offered may demur to the evidence. A demurrer to evidence is analogous to a demurrer in pleading ; the party from whom it I comes declaring that he will not proceed, because the evidence ; offered on the other side is not sufficient to maintain the issue. [ Upon joinder in demurrer by the opposite party, the jury j are generally discharged from giving any verdict ; and the ' demurrer, being entered on record, is afterwards argued and decided in the court in banc, and the judgment there given upon it may ultimately be brought before a court of error.^ I Special Verdict. A more common, because more convenient, course than this to determine the legal effect of the evidence is, to obtain from ' the jury a special verdict., in lieu of that general one of which the form has been already described ; for the jury have an option, instead of finding the negative or affirmative of the issue, j as in a general verdict, to find all the facts of the case as disclosed upon the evidence before them, and, after so setting them forth, to conclude to the following effect : " That they are ignorant^ in point of law, on which side they ought, upon these facts, to find the issue; that if, upon the whole matter, the court shall be of opinion that the issue is proved for the plaintiff, they find for the plaintiff accordingly, and assess the damages at such a sum, etc. ; biit if the court are of an opposite opinion, then vice versaP'^ This form of finding is called a special verdict? However, as' on a general verdict the jury do not themselves actually frame ^\^postea, so they have, in fact, nothing to do with the formal preparation of the special verdict. Wlien it is agreed that a verdict of that kind is to be given, the jury merely declare their opinion as to any fact remaining in doubt, and then the verdict is adjusted without their further interference. It is settled, under the correction of the judge, by the counsel and 1 Steph. PI. 122. In this country, the jury that, admitting the evidence generally, a demurrer to evidence was to he true, tlie party offering it is not heard hy the trial-justice. But here it entitled to recover. Parks y. Ross, 11 has fallen into disuse ; in lien of it, the How. 362. practice prevails of requesting the trial ^ The form of this will he found in court to give anahsolute instruction to Cook v. Gerrard, 1 Saund. 171 a. 208 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. attorneys on either side, according to the state of facts as found by the jury, with respect to all particulars on which they have delivered an opinion, and, with respect to other particulars, according to the state of facts which it is agreed ^that they ought to find upon the evidence before them. The special verdict, when its form is thus settled, is, together with the whole proceedings on the trial, then entered on record ; and the question of law arising on the facts found is argued before the court in banc, and decided by that court as in case of demurrer. If the party be dissatisfied with their decision, he may afterwards resort to a court of error. It is to be observed that it is a matter entirely in the f option of the jury whether their verdict shall be general or I special. The party objecting in point of law cannot therefore ' insist on having a special verdict, and may consequently be \ driven to demur to the evidence, at least if he wishes to put j the objection on reeord, without which no writ of error can \ be brought nor the decision of a court of error obtained.^ A speeial verdict differs from a demurrer to evidence in two marked particulars : (1) the former ascertains the facts proved, the latter recites the whole evidence adduced ; (2) in favor of the former no inferences as to matter of fact are allowable, whilst it is the court's duty in deciding a demurrer to the evidence to draw, from the evidence demurred to, all \ inferences that a jury must or might reasonably draw. I General Verdict Subject to a Special Case. /But if the object be merely to obtain the decision of the court in banc, and it is not wished to put the legal ques- tion 071 record, with a view to a writ of error, then the more common, because the cheaper and shorter course, is neither to take a special verdict nor to demur to the evidence, but to take a general verdict, subject (as the phrase is) to a special case ; that is, to a written statement of all the facts of the 'case drawn up for the opinion of the court m banc, by the counsel and attorneys on either side, under correction of 1 Steph. PI. 123. OP THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 209 the judgG at nisi prius, according to the principle of a,'' special verdict, as above explained. The party for whom ) the general verdict is so given is of course not entitled to^ judgment till the court in banc has decided on the special case ; and, according to the result of that decision, the ver- dict is ultimately entered either for him or his adversary. A special case is not (like a special verdict) entered on record, and consequently a writ of error cannot be brought on this decision.! A special verdict differs from a general verdict subject to a special case or a case agreed, as it is sometimes called, in this respect also : the case agreed may occur at any time after the suit is instituted, but a special verdict only after issue joined. Like the special verdict, the case agreed admits of no infer- ences of fact, but is rigorously construed.^ The object of all of these three proceedings is by their operation to withdraw facts, pregnant with disputed law, from the jury, and to bring them before the court for its decision of the law.^ Proceedings Subsequent to Yerdict. We must now return to the course of proceeding, after trial by jury in what has been here called its direct or simple form. The proceedings on trial by jury, at 7iisi prins or at bar, terminate with the verdict. In case of trial at nisi prius, the return day of the last jury process (the distringas or habeas corpora, which, like all other judicial writs, is made returnable into the court from which it issues) always falls on a day in term subsequent to the trial, and forms the next continuance of the cause. On the day given by this continuance, therefore (which is called the day in banc), the parties are supposed again to appear in the court in banc, and are in a condition to receive judgment. On the other hand, in case of trial at bar, the trial takes place on or after the return day of the last jury process ; and, therefore, immediately after the trial, the parties are in court, so that 1 Steph. PI. 124. 8 Warren's Law Studies, 738. 2 Min. iDSt. IV. 752, 753. U 210 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. judgment may be given. In either case, however, a period of four days elapses before, by the practice of the court, judgment can be actually obtained. And during this period certain proceedings may be taken by the unsuccessful party to avoid the effect of the verdict. He may move the court to grant a new trial, or to arrest the judgment, or (if he be the plain- tiff) to give judgment no7i obstante veredicto (despite the verdict), or to award a repleader, or to award a venire facias de novo. Of these briefly in their order.^ Motions for a New Trial. With respect to a new trial. It may happen that one of the parties may be dissatisfied with the opinion of the nisi prius judge, expressed on the trial, whether relating to the effect or the admissibility of evidence ; or he may think the evidence against him insufficient in law, where no ad- verse opinion has been expressed by the judge, and yet may not have obtained a special verdict, or demurred to the evidence, or tendered a bill of exceptions. He is at liberty, therefore, after the trial, and during the period above men- tioned, to move the court hi banc to grant a new trial, on the ground of the judge's having misdirected the jury, or having admitted or refused evidence contrary to law, or (where there was no adverse direction of the judge) on the ground that the jury gave their verdict contrary to the evi- dence, or on evidence insufficient in law. And resort may -be had to the same remedy in other cases, where justice appears not to have been done on the first trial, as where the verdict, though not wholly contrary to evidence, or on insufficient evidence in point of law, is manifestly wrong in point of discretion, as contrary to the weight of the evidence and on that ground disapproved by the nisi prius judge.'' So, 1 Steph. PI. 124. who tried the cause. And "the court, 2 But not unless the finding is mani- in granting new trials, does not inter- festl}' wrong ; for where there is a con- fere, unless to remedy some manifest trariety of evidence, which brought the abuse or to correct some manifest error question fairly within the discretion of in law or fact." Carstairs v. Stein, 4 the jury, the court will not disturb the M. & S. 192 ; and see Swinnerton v. -verdict, though disapproved by the judge Marquis of Stafford, 3 Taunt. 91, 232. OP THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 211 too, a new trial may be moved for, where a new and material fact has come to light since the trial, which the party did not know, and had not the means of proving before the jury, or where the damages given by the verdict are excessive, or where the jury have misconducted themselves, as by casting lots to determine their verdict, etc. In these and the like instances the court will, on motion, and in the exercise of their discre- tion, under all the circumstances of the case, grant a new trial, that opportunity may be given for a more satisfactory decision of the issue, A new jury process consequently issues, ^ and the cause comes on to be tried de novo. But except onl such grounds as these, tending manifestly to show that the discretion of the jury has not been legally or properly exer-, cised, a new trial can never be obtained ; for it is a great f principle of law, that the decision of a jury, upon an issue in' fact, is in general irreversible and conclusive.^ Motions in Aerest op Judgment. Again, the unsuccessful party may move in arrest of judg- ' ment ; that is, that the judgment for the plaintiff be arrested or withheld, on the ground that there is some error appearing | on the face of the record, which vitiates the proceedings. In ! consequence of such error, on whatever part of the record it may arise, from the commencement of the suit to this period, the court are bound to arrest the judgment. It is, however, only with respect to objections apparent on the record that such motion can be made. Nor can it be made, generally speaking, in respect of formal objections. This was formerly otherwise, and judgments were constantly arrested for errors of mere form ; but this abuse has been long remedied by certain statutes, passed at different periods, to correct incon- veniences of this kind, and commonly called the statutes of amendments and jeofails^ by the effect of which, judgment,] at the present day, can not generally be arrested for any objection of form.^ 1 Steph. PI. 126. 8 steph. PI 126. 2 Old form of J'ai failli (I have failedj. 212 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. Perhaps the student will best understand the nature of a motion in arrest of judgment if he consider it as a postponed deinurrer, i. e., a demurrer interposed after judgment, instead of during the pleadings, and applying to all substantial errors appearing on the face of the record from the institution of the suit down to the making of the motion itself.^ Motion for Judgment Non Obstante Veredicto. If the verdict be for the defendant, the plaintiff, in some cases, moves for judgment non obstante veredicto : that is, that judgment be given in his own favor, without regard to the ver- dict obtained by the defendant. This motion is made in cases where, after a pleading by the defendant in confession and avoidance, as, for example, a plea in bar and issue joined thereon and verdict found for the defendant, the plaintiff, on retrospective examination of the record, conceives that such Ylea was bad in substance, and might have been made the subject of demurrer on that ground. If the plea was itself siihstantially had in law, of course the verdict, which merely shoivs it to he true in point of fact, can not avail to entitle the defendant to judgment ; while, on the other hand, the plea, being in confession and avoidance, involves a confession of the plaintijf^s declaration, and shows that he was entitled to main- tain his action. In such case, therefore, the court will give judgment for the plaintiff without regard to the verdict ; and this, for the reason above explained, is also called a judgment as upon confession. Sometimes it may be expedient for the plaintiff to move for judgment non obstante, etc,, even though the verdict be in his own favor ; for if, in such a case as above described, he takes judgment as upon the verdict, it seems that such judgment would be erroneous, and that the only safe course is to take it as upon confession. ^ Before the Statute of Anne (allowing several pleas), the question whether there should be a repleader or judgment non obstante veredicto, depended on whether the plea, on ^ A motion in arrest of judfi;ment purpose. Bond v. Dustin, 112 U. S. can only be maintained for a defect 604, 608. apparent upon the record, and the * Steph. PL 127. evidence is no part of the record for this OP THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 213 which the immaterial issue arises, admits a cause of action by way of confession and avoidance. But since that statute it has been held that, although the plea (on which the imma- terial issue was found for the defendant) did not confess the cause of action, yet if it was confessed or proved on the other pleas which were found for the plaintiff, there should be no repleader, but judgment for the plaintiff. And even although the pleas on which the good issues have been taken and found for the plaintiff were not pleas in confession and avoidance, but traverses of material allegations in the declaration, and although some of the material allegations were neither trav- ersed nor proved, nor admitted by way of confession and avoidance, nevertheless, it has been held that, when the other material pleas enabled the court to give judgment — without requiring the parties to replead in order to show on which side the right was — there should be no repleader, but judg- ment non obstante veredicto.^ Motion for a Repleader. The motion for a repleader is made where the unsuccessful ' party, on examination of the pleadings, conceives that the issue joined was an immaterial issue, that is, not taken on a point proper to decide the action. It has been shown that the issue joined is always some question raised between the parties, and mutually referred by them to judicial decision ; but that point may nevertheless, on examination, be found not proper to decide the action. For either of the parties may, from misapprehension of the law, or oversight, have passed over without demurrer a statement on the other side insufficient and immaterial in law ; and an issue in fact may have been ultimately joined on such immaterial statement; and so the issue will be immaterial, though the parties have made it the point in controversy between them. It was said that a repleader was never granted to the party who had made the first fault in the pleading, but to that sug- gestion Tindal, C. J., once answered : " A repleader is rather 1 Coaling v. Coxe, 6 Dow. & L. 399. 214 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. the act of the court, where it sees that justice can not be done without adopting that course." ^ The difference between a repleader and a judgment non obstante veredicto is best expressed bj the following language of Chief Justice Holt : — " Where the plea of the defendant confesses the duty for which the plaintiff declared, but doth not sufficiently avoid it, and thereupon issue is joined on an immaterial thing, if it is found for (or against) the plaintiff, he shall have judgment, though the issue was immaterial ; but where the defendant's plea avoids the plaintiff's duty, who replies and traverses a matter not material, and issue is taken upon such immaterial traverse, and it is found for (or against) him, the statute of jeofails will not help in such case ; but there must be a repleader.2 If the issue might in any aspect of the case have been material, a repleader will not be awarded.^ According to the English practice the motion for a judgment non obstante vere- dicto could be made by the plaintiff only, the defendant avail- ing himself of the same ground by a motion in arrest of judgment ; the motion for a repleader could be made by either party. Again, it must be noted that a judgment non obstante veredicto is always upon the merits^ as shown in the pleadings, while a repleader is upon a formal defect in the pleadings.* Example : If in an action of debt on bond, conditioned for the payment of ten pounds ten shillings at a certain day, the defend- ant pleads payment of ten pounds, according to the form of the condition, and the plaintiff, instead of demurring, tenders issue upon such payment, it is plain that, whether this issue be found for the plaintiff or the defendant, it will remain equally uncertain whether the plaintiff is entitled or not to maintain his action ; for in an action for the penalty of a bond, conditioned to pay a certain sum, the only material question is, whether the exact sum were paid or not, and a payment in part is a question quite beside the legal merits.® 1 Gordon v. Ellis, 7 M. & G. 607. « Min. Inst. TV. 774, 775. 2 Witts V. Poleliampton, 3 Salk. 305. 5 Kent v. Hall, Hob. 113. ^ Kempe v. Crews, 1 Ld. Raym. 167. OF THE PKOCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 215 In such cases, therefore, the court, not knowing for whom to give judgment, will award a repleader, that is, will order the parties to plead de novo (anew), for the purpose of obtain- ing a better issue.^ Venire Facias de Novo. A venire facias de novo, that is, a new writ of venire facias, will be awarded when, by reason of some irregularity or de- / feet in the proceedings on the first venire, or the trial, the' proper effect of that writ has been frustrated, or the verdict become void in law ; as, for example, where the jury has been improperly chosen, or given an uncertain, or ambiguous, or defective verdict. The consequence and object of a new venire are, of course, to obtain a new trial ; and accordingly this pro- ceeding is, in substance, the same with a motion for a new trial. Where, however, the unsuccessful party objects to the verdict, in respect of some irregularity or error in the prac- tical course of proceeding, rather than on the merits, the form of the application is a motion for a venire de novo, and not for a new trial.^ The Judgment. It has now been shown in what manner the issue, whether in law or fact, is decided. It has been explained, too, by what means the unsuccessful party may, upon an issue in fact, avoid in some cases by motion in court the effect of the | decision. Supposing, however, that such means are not! adopted, or do not succeed, or that the issue be an issue in law, the next step is the judgment.^ As the issue is the question which the parties themselves have, by their pleading, mutually selected for decision, they are generally considered as having each put the fate of the cause upon that question ; and as soon, therefore, as the issue is decided in favor of one of them, that party generally be- comes victor in the suit ; and nothing remains but to award the judicial consequence which the law attaches to such ^ Steph. PI. 128; 2 Saund. 319 b, 2 Withani v. Lewis, I Wils. 48. n. 6. 8 Steph. PL 132. 216 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. success : The award of this judicial consequence is called the judgment, and is the province of the judges of the court. The nature of the judgment varies with that of the action, ^he plea, the issue, and the manner and result of the decision. Judgment for the Plaintiff. It shall be first supposed that the issue is decided for the plaintiff. In this case, if it be an issue in law, arising on a dilatory- plea, the judgment is only that the defendant answer over, which is called a judgment of respondeat ouster. The plead- ing is accordingly resumed, and the action proceeds. This judgment, therefore, does not fall within the definition of the term just given, but is of an anomalous kind. Upon all other issues in law, and, generally, upon all issues in fact, the judg- ment is that the plaintiff do recover^ which is called a judgment V quod recuperet. The nature of such judgment, more particu- f larly considered, is as follows : It is of two kinds, interlocn- 1 tor^ and final. If tlie action sound in damages (according to r"the technical phrase), that is, be brought not for specific re- ' covery of lands, goods, or sums of money (as is the case in real and mixed actions, or the personal actions of debt and ' detinue), but for damages only, as in covenant, trespass, etc. ; , and if the issue be an issue in law, or any issue in fact not 'i tried by jury, then the judgment is only that the plaintiff ought to recover his damages, without specifying their amount ; for, as there has been no trial by jury in the case, the amount of damages is not yet ascertained. The judgment is then said to be interlocutory. On such interlocutory judgment the court does not, generally, itself undertake the office of assessing [ damages, but issues a writ of inquiry directed to the sheriff of the county where the facts are alleged by the pleading to have occurred, commanding him to inquire into the amount of the damage sustained, " by the oath of twelve good and lawful men of his county," and to return such inquisition, when made, to the court. Upon the return of the inquisition, the plaintiff is entitled to another judgment, viz. : that he OF THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 217 recover the amount of the damages so assessed ; and this is / called final judgment. But if the issue be in fact, and was tried by a jury, then the jury, at the same time that they tried the issue, assessed the damages. In this case, therefore, no writ of inquiry is necessary ; and the judgment is final in the first instance, and to the same effect as just mentioned, viz. : that the plaintiff do recover the damages assessed. Again, if the action do not sound in damages, the judgment is in this case also generally final in the first instance ; and to this effect, that the plaintiff recover seisin of the land, etc., or re- cover the debt, etc. But there is, beside this, in mixed actions, a judgment for damages also ; and this is either given at the same time with that for recovery of seisin, if the damages have been assessed by a jury, or, if not so assessed, a writ of inquiry issues, and a second judgment is given for the amount found by the inquisition.^ Judgment for the Defendant. The issue shall next be supposed to be decided for the defendant. In this case, if the issue, whether of fact or law, arise on a dilatory plea, the judgment is, that the writ for bill) he quashed (quod breve (or billa) cassetur) upon such pleas as are in abatement of the writ or bill, and that the pleading remain without day, until, etc., upon such pleas as are in sus- pension only ; the effect, in the first case, of course being that the suit is defeated, but with liberty to the plaintiff to prose- cute a better writ or bill ; in the second, that the suit is suspended until the objection be removed. If the issue arise upon a declaration or peremptory plea, the judgment generally is that the plaintiff take nothing by his writ (or bill), and that the defendant go thereof without day, etc., which is called a judgment of nil capiat per breve, or, per billam. What has been said as to the different forms of judgment relates to those on direct issues. Upon an issue of the coUat- 1 2 Saund. 44 n. 4. •f 218 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. eral or incidental kind (which is a case that does not occur in modern practice), the judgment is sometimes respondeat ouster ; in other cases, quod recuperet ; but the law, with re- spect to the judgment on issues of this kind, does not seem to be, in every instance, clearly settled.^ Judgments by Default, Confession, etc. Judgment has hitherto been supposed to be awarded only upon the decision of an issue. There are several cases, how- ever, in which judgment may be given though no issue have arisen, and these cases will now require notice. In the de- scription given in this chapter of the manner of suit, it will be observed that the action has been uniformly supposed to proceed to issue, and this has been done to prevent digression and complexity. But an action may be cut off in its progress and come to premature termination by the fault of one of the parties in failing to pursue his litigation ; and this may happen either with the intention of abandoning the claim or defence, *or from failing to follow them up within the periods which jthe practice of the court in each particular case prescribes. In such cases the opposite party becomes victor in the suit, as well as where an issue has been joined and is decided in his favor, and is at once entitled to judgment. Thus, in a real .(though not in a personal) action, if the defendant holds out against the process, judgment may be given against him for default of appearance. So, in actions real, mixed, or per- sonal, if after appearance he neither pleads nor demurs, or if ] after plea he fails to maintain his pleading till issue joined, I by rejoinder, rebutter, etc., judgment will be given against ' him for want of plea, which is called judgment by nil dicit (he nothing says). So if, instead of a plea, his attorney says >he is not informed of any answer to be given to the action, judgment will be given against him ; and it is in that case called a judgment by nan sum informatus (I am not informed). Again, instead of a plea, he may choose to confess the action ; / or, after pleading, he may at any time before trial both con- fess the action and withdraw his plea or other allegations ; 1 Steph. PI. 135. OF THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION, 219 and the judgment against him in these two cases is called a judgment by confession or by confession relicta verificatione ^ A^ (proof being waived). On the other hand, judgment may be given against the plaintiff, in any class of actions, for not declaring or replying, or surrejoining, etc., or for not entering the issue ; and these are called judgments of non pros, (from non prosequitur, he does not pursue). So, if he chooses, at any stage of the action after appearance and before judgment, to say that he " will not further prosecute his suit," or that " he withdraws his suit," or (in case of plea in abate- ment) prays that his " writ " or " bill may be quashed, that he may sue or exhibit a better one," there is judgment against him of nolle prosequi, retraxit, or cassetur breve, or billa, in these cases respectively. Again, judgment of nonsuit may pass against the plaintiff, which happens when, on trial by jury, the plaintiff, on being called or demanded, at the instance of the defendant, to be present in court while the jury give their verdict, fails to make his appearance. In this case no verdict is given, but judgment of nonsuit passes against the plaintiff. So if, after issue is joined, the plaintiff neglects to bring such issue on to be tried in due time, as limited by the course and practice of the court in the particular case, judgment will also be given against him for this default ; and : it is called judgment as in case of nonsuit. These judgments by default, confession, etc., when given for the plaintiff, are generally quod recuperet, and may be either interlocutory or final, according to a distinction already \ explained. For the defendant, the form generally is nil capiat (let him take nothing). ^ Upon judgment in most personal and mixed actions, whether upon issue, or by default, confession, etc., it will be observed that it forms part of the adjudication that the plaintiff or defendant recover his costs of suit or defence, which costs are taxed by an officer of the court at the time when the judgment is given. There is generally an addition, too, when the judgment is for the plaintiff, that the defendant " be in mercy " (in miscri- 1 Steph. PL 135, 136, 137. 220 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. cordiaj^ that is, be amerced or fined for his delay of justice ; when for the defendant, that the plaintiff be in mercy, for his false claim. The practice, however, of imposing an actual amercement has been long quite obsolete. Judgments, like the pleadings, were formerly pronounced in open court, and are still always supposed to be so ; and they are consequently always considered as taking place in term time. But, by a relaxation of practice, there is now, generally, except in the case of an issue in law, no actual delivery of judgment, either in court or elsewhere. The plaintiff or defendant, when the cause is in such a state that by the course of practice he is entitled to judgment, obtains the signature or allowance of the proper officer of the court, expressing gen- erally that judgment is given in his favor, and this is called signing judgment, and stands in the place of its actual de- livery by the judges themselves.^ Though supposed to be pronounced during term, judgments are frequently signed in time of vacation. Entering Judgment on Record. Regularly, the next proceeding is to enter the judgment on record. Where it has been signed after trial or demurrer, it will be remembered that the proceedings up to the time of issue and the award of venire, or the continuance by curia advisare vult(ih.Q court wishes to consider), have already been recorded. It will remain, however, to enter the subsequent proceedings to the judgment inclusive, which is called enter- ing the judgment. This is done by drawing them up with continuances, etc., on the same roll on which the issue was entered, by way of continuation, or further narrative, of the proceedings there already recorded ; and the judgment is entered in such form as the attorney for the successful party conceives to be legally appropriate to the particular case, sup- posing that it were actually pronounced by the court. The roll, when complete by the entry of final judgment, is no longer called the issue roll, but has the name of the judgment roll, and is deposited and filed of record in the treasury of the 1 Steph. PI. 137. OF THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 221 court. This whole proceeding of entering the judgment on record is, in practice, usually neglected. Yet there are several cases in which, by the practice of the court, it becomes essential, after final judgment, to do so, and in which it is, therefore, actually done. When judgment is signed, not after trial or demurrer, but as by default, confession, etc., there having been no issue roll yet made up, the whole proceedings, to the judgment inclusive, are to be entered for the first time on record. This is accord- ingly done by the attorney upon a parchment roll, and upon the same principles as to the form of entry that have been already stated with respect to recording the issues and judg- ment thereon.i Execution. The course of the action, till the entry on record of the final judgment, has now been described, but the student will not have a complete view of the history of a suit without taking some notice of two other subsequent proceedings. These are the writ of execution and the writ of error.^ Upon judgment, the successful party is, generally, entitled to execution, to put in force the sentence that the law has given. For this purpose he sues out a writ, addressed to the sheriff, commanding him, according to the nature of the case, either to give the plaintiff possession of the lands, or to enforce the delivery of the chattel which was the subject of the action, or to levy for the plaintiff the debt or damages and costs recovered, or to levy for the defendant his costs ; and that either upon the body of the opposite party ,^ his lands, or goods, or, in some cases, upon his body, lands, and goods ; the extent and manner of the execution directed always depending upon the nature of the judgment. Like the judgment, writs of execution are supposed to be actually awarded by the judges in court, but no such award is generally made. The attorney, after sign- ing final judgment, sues out of the proper oflice a writ of 1 Steph. PI. 138. debt has taken away this method of 2 Ibid. 141. execution. 8 The abolition of imprisonment for 222 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. execution in the form to which he conceives he would be entitled upon such judgment as he has entered, if such entry has been actually made, and, if not made, then upon such as he thinks he is entitled to enter ; and he does this, of course, upon peril that if he takes a wrong execution, the proceeding will be illegal and void, and the opposite party entitled to redress.^ Writs of Error. After final judgment is signed, the unsuccessful party may bring a writ of error ; and this, if obtained and allowed before execution, suspends (generally speaking) the latter proceeding till the former is determined. A writ of error is an original writ, and therefore is sued out of Chancery, directed to the judges of the court in which judgment was given, and com- manding them, in some cases, themselves to examine the record ; in others, to send it to another court of appellate jurisdiction to be examined, in order that some alleged error in the proceedings may be corrected. The first form of writ. Called a writ of error coram nobis (or vobisj before us (or you) is where the alleged error consists of matter of fact ; the second, called a writ of error generally, where it consists of matter of law. The words coram nobis (before us, the king) were used when reference was made to the King's Bench, where the king was supposed in contemplation of law to actually sit ; the Common Pleas was designated by the other formula, coram vobis (before you, the judges). When a writ of error is obtained, the whole proceedings, to final judgment inclusive, are then always actually entered (if this has not before been done) on record ; and the object of the writ of error is to reverse, the judgment for some error of fact or law that is supposed to exist in the proceedings as so recorded. It will be proper here to explain in what such error may consist. Where an issue in fact has been decided, there is (as formerly observed) no appeal in the English law from its decision, except by way of motion for a new trial ; and its 1 Steph. PL 142. OP THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 223 being wrongly decided is not error in that technical sense to/ which a writ of error refers. So, if a matter of fact should exist, which was not brought into issue, but which, if brought into issue, would have led to a different judgment, the exist- ence of such fact does not, after judgment, amount to error in the proceedings. For example, if the defendant has a release, but does not plead it in bar, its existence can not, after judgment, on the ground of error or otherwise, in any manner be brought forward. But there are certain facts wliich affect . the validity and regularity of the legal decision itself ; such as the defendant having, while under age, appeared in suit by ; attorney, and not by guardian, or, the plaintiff or defendani;?' having been a married woman when the suit was commenced'. / Such facts as these, however late discovered and alleged,/ are errors in fact, and sufficient to traverse the judgmenjt upon writ of error. To such cases the writ of error coram nobis applies, because the error in fact is not the error of the judges, and reversing it is not reversing their own judgment.^ But the most frequent case of error is when, upon the face / of the record, the judges appear to have committed a mistake in law. This may be by having wrongly decided an issue in law brought before them by demurrer, but it may also happen in other ways. As formerly stated, the judgment will generally follow success in the issue. It is, however, a prin- ciple necessary to be understood, in order to have a right apprehension of the nature of writs of error, that the judges are, in contemplation of law, bound, before in any case they give judgment, to examine the whole record, and then to adjudge either for the plaintiff or defendant, according to the legal right as it may on the whole appear, notwithstanding, or without regard to, the issue in law or fact that may have been raised and decided between the parties ; and this, be- cause the pleader may, from misapprehension, have passed by a material question of law without taking issue upon it. Therefore, whenever, upon examination of the whole record, j right appears on the whole not to have been done, and judg- 1 Steph. PI. 143. 224 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. ment appears to have been given for one of the parties, when it should have been given for the other, this will be error in law. And it will be equally error, whether the question was raised on demurrer, or the issue was an issue in fact, or there was no issue, judgment having been taken by default, con- fession, etc. In all these cases, indeed, except the first, the judges have really committed no error; for it may be col- lected from preceding explanations, that no record, or even copy of the proceedings, is actually brought before them, except upon demurrer ; but, with respect to a writ of error, the effect is the same as if the proceedings had all actually taken place and been recorded in open court, according to the fiction and supposition in law. So, on the same principle, there will be error in law if judgment has been entered in a wrong form, inappropriate to the case ; although, as we have seen, the judges have in practice nothing to do with the entry on the roll. But, on the other hand, nothing will be error in law that does not appear on the face of the record ; for matters not so appearing are not supposed to have entered into the consideration of the judges. Upon error in law, the remedy is not by writ of error coram nobis (for that would be merely to make the same judges reconsider their own judg- ment), but by a writ of error requiring the record to be sent into some other court of appellate jurisdiction (that the error may be there corrected), and called a writ of error generally.^ With respect to the writ of error of this latter description, it is further to be observed, that it cannot be supported unless the error in law be of a substantial kind. For as, by the effect of the statutes of amendments and jeofails, errors of mere form are no ground for arresting the judgment, so, by the effect of the same statutes, such objections are now in- sufficient to support a writ of error, though at common law the case was otherwise. When, on the ground of some error in law, the record is removed by writ of error, the following is the course of appeal among the different courts : From the Common Pleas the record may be removed into the Court of King's Bench, 1 Steph. PI. 144. OF THE PROCEEDINGS IN AN ACTION. 225 and from thence, by a new writ of error, into the House of Lords ; from the Exchequer into the Court of Exchequer Chamber, held before the Lord Chancellor, Lord Treasurer, and the judges of the Courts of King's Bench and Common Pleas, and from thence into the House of Lords ; from the King's Bench, in proceedings by bill, in most of the usual actions, into the Court of Exchequer Chamber, held before the judges of the Common Pleas, and the Barons of the Exchequer, and from thence into the House of Lords ; in proceedings by original writ, into the House of Lords in the first instance.^ By what course of proceeding the error in the record is dis- cussed and corrected in the appellate court, and the judg- ment reversed or affirmed, it is not material to the purpose of the present treatise to explain. The student is referred for information on that subject to the many valuable books of practice. 1 Steph. PI. 145. This whole process has been changed by the Supreme Court of Judicature Acts. 16 CHAPTER VIII. OF THE KULES OF PLEADING. It is evident that, in the administration of justice, there must be an orderly method of ascertaining the exact point or points to be decided in each particular case. The contending parties naturally state their respective claims. By the rules of the Roman law, which are substantially followed in the modern civil law and in our equity jurisprudence, the respec- i\ I tive parties were allowed to state their case at large, i. e., in a /narrative form and upon all points involved. This process requires a review by the court of the opposing statements of the litigants, and a winnowing by it of the substantial ques- tions controverted from what is often a mass of irrelevant and immaterial (therefore improper and unnecessary) matter. The common law of England pursued from the outset a dif- ferent course. It obliged the parties themselves to so state their cases, or, as it was called, to plead, as to develop a single issue by means of their opposing statements ; it further com- pelled them to agree upon this issue as the sole point for .decision in the cause. The student will the better comprehend /this by a study of the following practical example from Minor's Institutes.^ He will especially note how, in the supposed case, the proceedings are so conducted as at each stage to put aside matters which are not in dispute, until finally the real ques- tion controverted is alone presented for decision. Thus, the execution and delivery of the bond sued on, and of the release pleaded, are only mentioned to be conceded and passed over, until at last the real matter to be decided (the alleged offer to deliver the horse) is affirmed on one side and denied on the other, and thus becomes the sole issue for trial. 1 Min. Inst. IV. 554, 555. OP THE RULES OF PLEADING. 227 Abstract op Proceedings in a Supposed Cause. A. holds a bond of Z.'s for v$lyff>/ on which he proposes to institute suit by causing Z. to be summoned to answer his complaint, which purports to be a plea of debt. At the return- day of the summons (supposing it to be returned " executed "J, and from time to time afterwards, the following altercations and proceedings might occur : — Declaration. A. — This man Z. owes me $1,000, as ap- pears by his bond here, which I now produce to the court, yet he has not paid me. Oyer. Z. — Let me hear it read f Pleas. I say it does not bind me : 1, Because I was an infant when I executed it; 2, Because it was founded on an usurious consideration ; 3, Because it is not my deed ; and 4, Because the plaintiff afterwards released the bond to me by this writing here, under his seal, which I now produce to the court. Demurrer to Pleas. A. — Stop ! I say you cannot make more than one distinct ansiver to my demand ; and I submit it to the court. Joinder in Demurrer. Z. — Let the court say ! Judgmt. on Demurrer. CouRT. — Defendant by the common law (it is otherwise by statute) can make only one answer. Deft, relies on 4th plea. Z. — Then I rely on the fourth, — the re- lease. Replication. A. — I say that the so-called release does not bar my demand : 1, Because it was obtained from me by duress of violent threats ; 2, Because I delivered it to W. as an escrow, to take effect only on condition that Z. should deliver me a horse the next day, which he did not do. Demurrer to Replic'n. Z. — Stop ! I say you cannot make more than one distinct answer to my plea; and I submit it to the court. Joinder in Demurrer. A. — Let the COurt say ! 228 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. Jndgmt. on Demurrer. CouRT, — Plaintiff is not permitted by the law to make mo7-e than one answer. Plaintiff relies on Sec- A. — Then I rely on the second, — that the ond Replication. Rejoinder. Demurrer to rejoinder Joinder in Demurrer Judgment {quasi) Demurrer. Demurrer withdrawn with leave. Leave given. Sur-Rejoinder and sue tendered. Similiter and Issue. Jurj Impanelled. Verdict. Judgment. so-called release was delivered by me as an escrow. Z. — I offered to deliver the horse and you refused to receive it. A. — Stop ! I admit that you offered to de- liver the horse, and that I refused to receive it ; but I say that that is not a sufficient answer to my replication, for you do not say that you have ever since been ready to deliver it ; I sub- mit it to the court, if that is not necessary. Z. — Let the court say ! on CouKT. — I am inclined to think it is not necessary ; but I will take time to consider. A. — I will not trouble the court to consider it ; but with its permission I will withdraw my objection to the rejoinder, and answer to the fact. Court. — Leave is given of course. Is- A. — I say that the defendant did not offer to deliver me the horse as he has said ; and I submit it to the country. Z. — And I do the like. And thereupon comes a jury, to wit Wouter Van Twiller, and eleven others, who being duly elected, tried, and sworn the truth to speak upon the issue joined, upon their oath do say that the said Z. did not offer to deliver the horse to the said A. as the said Z. hath in pleading alleged, and, therefore, they find for the plaintiff the debt in the declaration men- tioned, with lawful interest from the 1st day of January, 18 — , until paid. Wherefore it is considered by the court that the plaintiff recover against the defendant, the sum of one thousand dollars, with interest thereon, after the rate of six 'per centuw, per annum, from the 1st day of January, in the year of our Lord eighteen hundred and until paid, and his costs by him about his suit in this behalf ex- pended J and the said defendant in mercy, etc. OF THE RULES OF PLEADING. 229 Mr. Stephen is of the opinion that this characteristic of the English law is to be attributed to the original practice of oral pleading, and that it was adopted to avoid charging the mem- ory with too many and too complicated points of dispute. Another reason assigned for its development is that the dif- ferent modes of trial formerly existing required the prelim- inary settlement of the exact question to be tried, in order that the particular mode of trial, appropriate to that question, might be determined. Whatever is its origin, it is certain that this method has been followed in the English courts from the time of Henry II.i The introduction of an issue was not the only object of this system. An issue might be reached and yet be of such nature as not to involve the merits of the question to be decided. This would, of course, render the trial useless, and would, as we have seen, be occasion for the awarding of a repleader. Therefore, to avoid this mishap, the issue must in all cases be / ynaterial to the question to be tried. / Again, it was important to the judges, when the contention was conducted orally, that the process should be as brief and as simple as possible. Therefore, it was originally established as a rule that the pleaders should be confined to a single issue in respect of each single claim. . It was hardly less essential that the issue should be specific j or, as it was called, certain.^ This was required in order that the mode of decision might be marked out by the issue itself. But especially was it demanded by the nature of the trial by jury as originally practised. As the jurors were then witnesses, the sheriff was directed to summon them from the immediate neighborhood where the facts occurred, and from among those 1 These rules of pleading do not cated thing), and might always there- seem to have been originally of legis- after be identified as such, and therefore lative enactment, or to have had any not subject to be tried again. Washing- authority, except usage or judicial ton, &c., S. P. Co. v. Sickles, 24 How. regulation. They grew gradually into 341-346. Certainty in the issue was an entire and a connected system of also necessary in connection with the pleading. Steph. Pi. 147. evidence to be adduced on the trial. A 2 Certainty, in the broad sense of that definite law of evidence is an offshoot word, was required in tlie pleadings and from the system of special pleading, issue in order that the matter tried Tyler's Pleading, 48. might become res judicata (an adjudi- 230 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. persons who best knew the truth of the matter. Hence the issue must specify the place where the alleged matter was said to have occurred, and also the time and other particulars of the transaction in question in order to guide the sheriff in summoning proper persons as jurors. It is apparent, from the foregoing considerations, that the chief objects of pleading are these : That the parties be brought to an issue, and that the issue so produced be material, single, and certain in its quality. Moreover, this result should be reached without obscurity in the process, and further, without prolixity and delay. The whole body of the established rules of pleading has been accordingly distributed by Mr. Stephen under the following heads : — I. Rules which tend simply to the Production of an Issue. II. Rules which tend to secure the Materiality op the Issue. III. Rules which tend to produce Singleness or Unit>- iN the Issue. IV. Rules which tend to produce Certainty or Par- ticularity IN THE Issue. V. Rules which tend to prevent Obscurity and Con- fusion IN Pleading. YI. Rules which tend to prevent Prolixity and Delay in Pleading. Vn. Certain Miscellaneous Rules. These rules and their discussion will lay before the student a general but complete view of the whole system of pleading. The following pages will consist in the main of the text of Mr. Stephen's work (2d London edition), with such departures therefrom, principally by way of illustration and detail, as experience has suggested. CHAPTER IX. OF RULES WHICH TEND SIMPLY TO THE PRODUCTION OF AN ISSUE, Upon examination of the system of allegation by which the parties are brought to issue, as that process has been described, it will be found to resolve itself into the following fundamental rules or principles : — I. After the Declaration the Parties must at each STAGE Demur, or plead by Way of Traverse, or by Way OF Confession and Avoidance. J I, Upon a Traverse, Issue must be tendered. III. The Issue, when well tendered, must be accepted. Either by virtue of the first rule, a demurrer takes place (which is a tender of an issue in law), or, by the joint opera- tion of the first two, the tender of an issue in fact ; and then, by the last of these rules, the issue so tendered, whether in fact or in law, is accepted, and becomes finally complete. It is by these rules, therefore, that the production of an issue is effected ; and they will consequently form the subject of the present chapter. Rule I. After the Declaration, the Parties must at each stage Demur, or plead by Way of Traverse, or by Way of Confession and Avoidance. Exceptions : (1 ) Where a Dilatory Plea is interposed. (2) Pleadings in Estoppel. (3) Wliere a New Assignment is necessary. This rule has two branches — 1. The party must demur or plead. One or other of these courses he is bound to take (while he means to maintain his ^ 232 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. action or defence) until issue be tendered. If he does neither, but confesses the right of the adverse party, or says nothing, the court immediately gives judgment for his adversary ; in the former case, as by confession ; in the latter, by non jjros. or nil dicit. 2. If the party pleads, it must either be by way of traverse or of confession and avoidance. If his pleading amount to neither of these modes of answer, it is open to demurrer on that ground.^ Such is the effect of this rule generally and briefly consid- ered. But, for its complete illustration, it will be necessary to enter much more deeply into the subject, and to consider at large the doctrines that relate both to demurrers and to pleadings. I. Of Demureers. Under this head it is intended to treat, (1) of the nature and properties of a demurrer ; (2) of the effect of passing a fault by without demurrer, and pleading over ; (3) of the considerations which determine the pleader in his election to demur or plead. (1) Of the Nature and Properties of a Demurrer. A demurrer may be for insufficiency either in substance or in form ; that is, it may be either on the ground that the case shown by the opposite party is essentially insufficient, or on \the ground that it is stated in an inartificial manner ; for " the law requires in every plea " (and the observation equally applies to all other pleadings) " two things : the one that it be in matter sufficient, the other that it be deduced and expressed according to the forms of law ; and if either ^the one or the other of these be wanting, it is cause of de- ^murrer." 2 A violation of any of the rules of pleading that will be hereafter stated is, in general, ground for demurrer ; and such fault occasionally amounts to matter of substance, but usually to matter oiform only. 1 Reg. Plac. 59; 21 Hen. VL 12; 2 Per Lord Hobart, Colt v. Bishop 5 Hen. VII. 13 a, 14 a, b ; 1 Tidd, 665, of Coventry, Hob. 164. 8th ed. ; Merceron v. Dowson, 5 Barn. & Cress. 479. RULES WHICH TEND TO THE PRODUCTION OF AN ISSUE. 203 A demurrer, as in its nature, so also in its forvi, is of twfll kinds : it is either general or special, k. general demurrer excepts to the sufficiency in general terms, without show- ing specifically the nature of the objection ; a special de- murrer adds to this a specification of the particular ground of exception.^ A general demurrer is sufficient where the objection is on a matter of substance. A special demurrer is necessary where it turns on matter of form only ; that is^ where, notwithstanding such objection, enough appears to entitle the opposite party to judgment, as far as relates to the merits of the cause. For, by two statutes, 27 Eliza- beth, c. 5, and 4 Anne, c. 16, passed with a view to the dis- couragement of merely formal objections, it is provided, in nearly the same terms, that the judges " shall give judgment according as the very right of the cause and matter in law shall appear unto them, without regarding any imperfection, omission, defect, or want of form, except those only which the party demurring shall specially and particularly set down and express, together with his demurrer, as causes of the same ; " the latter statute adding this proviso : " So as sufficient matter appear in the said pleadings, upon which the court may give judgment according to the very right of the cause." Since these statutes, therefore, no mere matter of form can be ob- jected on a general demurrer ; but the demurrer must be in the special form, and the objection specifically stated.^ But,| on the other hand, it is to be observed that, under a special \ demurrer, the party may, on the argument, not only take ad- '■■. vantage of the particular faults which his demurrer specifies, \ but also of all such objections in substance, or regarding " the :| very right of the cause " (as the statutes express it) as do not i require, under those statutes, to be particularly set down.^ It' follows, therefore, that unless the objection be clearly of this substantial kind, it is the safer course, in all cases, to demur 1 Co. Litt. 72 a; Reg. Plac. 125, 126; Kenyon, 10 East 139; Bowdcll v. Bac. Ab. Pleas, &c. n. 5. Parsons, ibid. 359 ; Bolton v. Bisliop 2 For examples of cases where a of Carlisle, 2 H. Bl. 259. A demurrer special demurrer is considered as neces- to a plea in abatement need not be spe- sary, and where, on the other hand, a cial. (2 Saund. 2 b, n. k.) general one is sufficient, see Buckley v. ' Chit. PI. 576. 234 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. specially.! Yet, where a general demurrer is plainly sufficient, it is more usually adopted in practice ; because, the eifect of the special form being to apprise the opposite party more dis- tinctly of the nature of the objection, it is attended with the inconvenience of enabling him to prepare to maintain his pleading in argument, or of leading him to apply the earlier to amend. With respect to the degree of particularity with which, under these statutes, the special demurrer must assign the ground of objection, it may be observed, that it is not suf- ficient to object, in general terms, that the pleading is " un- certain, defective, informal," or the like ; but it is necessary to show in ivhat respect uncertain, defective, or informal. ^ i ^"Effect of a Demurrer. With respect to the effect of a demurrer, it is, first, a rule that a demurrer admits all such matters of fact as are sufficiently pleaded.^ The meaning of this rule isj that the party, having had his option whether to plead or demur ^ shall be taken, in adopting the latter alterna- tive, to admit that he has no ground for denial or traverse. A demurrer is consequently an admission that the facts alleged are true ; and therefore the only question for the court is, whetlier, assuming such facts to be true, they sustain the case of the party by whom they are alleged. It will be observed, however, that the rule is laid down with this qualification, that the matter of fact be sufficiently pleaded. For, if it be not pleaded in a formal and sufficient manner, it is said that a demurrer, in this case, is no admission of the fact.* But this is to be understood as subject to the alterations that have been introduced into the law of demurrer by the statutes already mentioned ; and therefore, if the demurrer be general., instead of special., it amounts, as it is said, to a confession, though the matter be informally pleaded.^ Again, it is a rule that on demurrer the court will consider the whole record., and give judgment for the party who, on the 1 1 Arch. 313 ; Clue v. Baily, 1 Vent. 1 East. 634 ; Gtrndry v. Feltham, 1 240. T. R. 334. 2 1 Saund. 160, n. 1 ; 337 b, n. 3. * Com. Dig. Pleader, Q. 6. 3 Bac. Ab. Pleas, &c. n. 3 ; Com. 5 i Saund. 337 b, n. 3 ; I Arch. 318. Dig. Pleader, Q. 5 ; Nowlan v. Geddes, RULES WHICH TEND TO THE PRODUCTION OP AN ISSUE. 235 \ whole, appears to he entitled to it} Thus, on demurrer to -the replication, if the court think the replication bad, but perceive a substantial fault in the plea, they will give judg- ment, not for the defendant, but the plaintiff,'-^ provided the declaration be good ; but if the declaration also be bad in substance, then, upon the same principle, judgment would be given for the defendant.^ This rule belongs to the general principle already stated, that when judgment is to be given, whether the issue be in law or fact, and whether the cause have proceeded to issue or not, the court is always bound to examine the whole record, and adjudge for the plaintiff or defendant, according to the legal right, as it may on the whole appear. It is, however, subject to the following Exceptions : First, if the plaintiff demur to a plea in abate-, ment, and the court decide against the plea, they will give judg-i ment of respondeat ouster, without regard to any defect in the \ declaration.* Secondly, though on the whole record the right may! appear to be with the plaintiff, the court will not adjudge in i favor of such right, unless the plaintiff have himself put I his action upon that ground. Example : Where, on a covenant to perform an award, and not to prevent the arbitrators from making an award, the plaintiff declared in covenant, and assigned as a breach that the defendant would not pay the sum awarded, and the defendant pleaded that, before the award made, he revoked, by deed, the authority of the arbitrators, to which the plaintiff demurred, the court held the plea good, as being a sufficient answer to the breach alleged, and therefore gave judgment for the defendant, although they also were of opinion that the matter stated in the plea would have entitled the plaintiff to maintain his action, if he had alleged, by way of breach, that the defendant prevented the arbitrators from making their award.^ 1 Com. Dig. Pleader, M. 1, M. 2; 8 Piggot's Case, 5 Co. Eep. 29 a; Bac. Ab. Pleas, &c. A. n. 3 ; 5 Co. Rep. Bates v. Cort, 2 Barn. & Cress. 474. 29 a; 1 Saund. 285, n. 5; Foster v. * Belasyse v. Hester, Lutw. 1.592; Jackson, Hob. 56; Anon. 2 Wils. 150; Routh v. Weddell, Ibid. 1667; Hastrop Le Bret v. Papillon, 4 East. 502. r. Hastings, 1 Salk. 212; Rich r. Pilking 2 Anon. 2 Wils. 150; Thomas i; ton, Carth. 172. Heathom, 2 Bam. & Cress. 477. 6 Marsh v. Bulteel, 5 B. & Aid. 507. 236 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. Lastly, the court, in examining the whole record, tol i adjudge according to the apparent right, will consider only \ '"^ \ the right in matter of substance, and not in respect of mere \ form, such as should have been the subject of special '^ demurrer. Examijle: Where the declaration was open to an objection of form, such as should have been brought forward by special demurrer — the plea bad in substance — and the defeudant demurred to the replication, the court gave judgment for the plaintiff, in respect of the insufficiency of the plea, without regard to the formal defect in the declaration.^ (2) Effect of Pleading over without Demurrer. It has been shown that it is the effect of a demurrer to admit the truth of all matters of fact sufficiently pleaded on the other side ; but it cannot be said, e converso, that it is the effect of a pleading to admit the sufficiency in law of the facts adversely alleged. On the contrary, as has been seen upon a demurrer arising at a subsequent stage of the pleading, the court will take into consideration, re- trospectively, the sufficiency in law of matters to which an answer in fact has been given. And, as has been shown, even after an issue in fact and verdict thereon, the court are bound to give judgment on the whole record, and therefore to examine the sufficiency in law of all allegations through the whole series of the pleadings ; and, accordingly, advantage may often be taken by either party of a legal insufficiency in the pleading on the other side, by motion in arrest of judg- ment or motion for judgment non obstante veredicto ^ or writ of error, according to the circumstances of the case. It thus appears that in many cases a party, though he has pleaded over without demurring, may nevertheless afterwards avail himself of an insufficiency in the pleading j of his adversary. But this is not universally true. For, first, it is to be observed, that faults in the pleading are, in some cases, aided by pleading over? 1 Humphreys v. Bethily, 2 Vent. 222. those in which the plaintiff moved for 2 According to English practice, as judgment non obstante veredicto. has been noted, the defendant moved in ^ Com. Dig. Pleader, C. 85, E. 37 ; arrest of judgment in cases similar to Co. Litt. 303 b. ; Pract. Reg. 351 ; Anon. RULES WHICH TEND TO THE PRODUCTION OF AN ISSUE. 237 Example : In an action of trespass, for taking a hook, where the plaintiff omitted to allege in the declaration that it was his hook, or even that it was in his possession, and the defendant pleaded a matter in confession and avoidance, justifying his tak- ing the hook out of the plaintiff^ s hand, the court, on motion in arrest of judgment, held, that as the plea itself showed that the hook was in the possession of the plaintiff, the objection, which would otherwise have been fatal, was cured.^ And with respect to all objections ofform^ it is laid down as a general proposition, " that if a man pleads over he shall never take advantage of any slip committed in the pleading of the other side, which he could not take advantage of upon a general demurrer." ^ Again, it is to be observed that faults in the pleading are^ in some cases, aided hy a verdict.^ Thus, if the grant of a reversion, a rent charge, an advowson, or any other heredita- ment which lies in grant, and can only be conveyed by deed, be pleaded, such grant ought to be alleged to have been made hy deed, and, if not so alleged, it will be ground of demurrer ; but if the opposite party, instead of demurring, pleads over, and issue be taken upon the grant, and the jury find that the grant was made, the verdict aids or cures the imperfection in the pleading, and it can not be objected in arrest of judgment or by writ of error.* The extent and principle of this rule of aider hy verdict is thus' explained in a modern decision of the Court of King's Bench : " Where a matter is so essentially necessary to be proved that, had it not been given in evidence, the jury could not have given such a verdict, there the want of stating that matter in express terms in a declaration, provided it contains terms sufficiently general to comprehend it in fair and reasonable intendment, will be 2 Salk. 519; Fowie v. Welsh, 1 Barn. & Johnstone v. Sutton, ibid. 545; Nerot Cress. 29 ; Fletcher v. Pogson, 3 Barn. & v. Wallace, 3 T. R. 25 ; Jackson v. Cress. 192. Pesked, 1 M. & S. 234; Campbell v. 1 Brooke v. Brooke, Sid. 184, cited Lewis, 3 Barn. & Aid. 392; Keywortli Bac. Ab. Trespa.ss, 603. ^'. Hill, ihld. 685 ; Pippet v. Hearn, 5 2 Per Holt, C. J. ; Anon. 2 Salk. 519 ; Barn. & Aid. 634 ; Lord Hiintiiigtower Bac. Ab. Pleas, &c. 322. v. Gardiner, 1 Barn. & Cress. 297 ; Price ' Com. Dig. Pleader, C. 87 ; 1 Saund. v. Seaman, 4 Barn. & Cre.'^s. 525. 228, n. I ; Weston v. Mason, 3 Burr. * 1 Saund. 228 a, n. 1 ; Lightfoot v 1725; Spieres v. Parker, 1 T. R. 141; Brightman, Hutt, 54, 238 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. cured by a verdict ; and where a general allegation must, in fair construction, so far require to be restricted that no judge and no jury could have properly treated it in an unrestrained sense, it may reasonably be presumed, after verdict, that it was so restrained at the trial." ^ In entire accordance with this are the observations of Mr. Sergeant Williams : " Where there is any defect, imperfection, or omission in any pleading, whether in substance or form, which would have been a fatal objection upon demurrer, yet if the issue joined be such as necessarily required, on the trial, proof of the facts so de- fectively or imperfectly stated or omitted, and without which it is not to be presumed that either the judge would direct the jury to give or the jury would have given the verdict, such defect, imperfection, or omission is cured by the verdict." ^ It is, however, only where such " fair and reasonable intend- ment " can be applied that a verdict will cure the objection ; and, therefore, if a necessary allegation be altogether omitted in the pleading, or if the pleading contain matter adverse to the right of the party by whom it is alleged, and so clearly expressed that no reasonable construction can alter its mean- ing, a verdict will not aid.^ Example : Where the plaintiff brought an action of trespass on the case, as being entitled to the reversion of a certain yard and wall, to which the declaration stated a certain injury to have been committed, but omitted to allege that the reversion was, in fact, prejudiced, or to show any grievance which, in its nature, would necessarily prejudice the reversion, the court arrested the judgment, after a verdict had been given in favor of plaintiff, and held the fault to be one which the verdict could not cure.* Lastly, it is to be observed, fhat at certain stages of the cause all objections of form are cured hy the different statutes of jeofails and amendments, the cumulative effect of which is to provide that neither after verdict or judgment by con- fession, nil dicit, or non sum informatus, can the judgment be arrested or reversed by any objection of that kind. 1 Jackson v. Pesked, 1 M. & S. 234. i;. Wallace, 3 T. R. 25 ; "Weston v. 2 1 Saund. 228, n. 1. Mason, 3 Burr. 1725. 8 Jackson v. Pesked, uhi supra ; Nerot * Jackson v. Pesked, ubi supra. RULES WHICH TEND TO THE PRODUCTION OP AN ISSUE. 239 Example : In an action of trespass, where the plaintiff omits to allege in his declaration on what certain day the trespass was committed (which is a ground of demurrer), and the defendant, instead of demurring, jjleads over to issue, and there is a verdict against him, the fault is cured by the statutes of jeofails,^ if not also by the mere effect of pleading over. (3) Considerations by which the Pleader ought to be GOVERNED, IN MAKING HIS ELECTION TO DeMUR OR TO PlEAD.^ He is first to consider whether the declaration, or other, pleading opposed to him, is sufficient in substance and in form to put him to his answer. If sufficient in both, he has no course but to plead. On the other hand, if insufficient in either, he has ground for demurrer ; but whether he should demur or not is a question of expediency, to be determined by the following considerations : If the pleading be insufficient in form, he is to consider whether it is worth while to take the objection, recollecting the indulgence which the law allows in the way of amendment; but also bearing in mind that the objection, if not taken, will be aided by pleading over, or, after pleading over, by the verdict, or by the statutes of amendments and jeofails. And, if he chooses to demur, he must take care to demur specially, lest, upon general demurrer, he should be held excluded from the objection. On the other hand, supposing an insufficiency in substance, he is to consider whether that insufficiency be in the case itself, or in the manner of statement ; for, on the latter supposition, it might be removed by an amendment, and it may, therefore, not be worth while to demur. And, whether it be such as an amendment would remove or not, a further question will arise, whether it be not expedient to pass by the objection for the present, and plead over ; for a party, by this means, often obtains the advantage of contesting with his adversary, in the first instance, by an issue in fact, and of afterwards urging 1 Bl. Com. ni. 394 * ; 1 Sannd. 228 c, the judgment against a demurrer is n. I, where Mr. Sergeant Williams cor- generally not final, hut permits the rects a mistake in the passage in Black- demurrant to plead over, the pleader stone's Commentaries. now has more freedom in making his 2 As, according to modern practice, election. 240 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. the objection in law by motion in arrest of judgment or writ of error.i This double aim, however, is not always advisable ; for, though none but formal objections are cured by the statutes of jeofails and amendments, there are some defects, of substance as well as/orm, which are aided by pleading over or by a verdict ; and therefore, unless the fault be clearly of a kind not to be so aided, a demurrer is the only mode of objec- tion that can be relied upon. The additional delay and expense of a trial is also sometimes a material reason for proceeding in the regular way by demurrer, and not waiting to move in arrest of judgment or to bring a writ of error. And a concurrent motive for adopting that course is, that costs are not allowed when the judgment is arrested,^ nor where it is reversed upon writ of error ^ (each party in these cases paying his own); but on demurrer the party succeeding obtains his costs. II. Of Pleadings. Under this head it is proposed to examine, (A) the nature and properties of traverses; (B) the nature and properties of plead- ings in confession and avoidance ; (C) the nature and properties of pleadings in general, without reference to their quality, as being by way of traverse or confession and avoidance. (A) Of the Nature and Properties of Traverses. Of traverses, there are various kinds. The most ordinary kind is that which may be called a common traverse. The Common Traverse. The common traverse consists of a tender of issue; that is, of a denial, accompanied by a formal offer of the point denied for decision ; and the denial that it makes is by way of express contradiction, in terms of the allegation traversed. ^ " When the matter in fact will leave matters in law, which always clearly serve for your client, although arise upon the matters in fact, ad ulti- your opinion is that the plaintiff hath mu7n, and never at first demur in law no cause of action, yet take heed that when, after trial of the matters in fact, you do not hazard the matter upon a the matters in law will be saved to you." demurrer, in which, upon the pleading (Lord Cromwell's Case, 4 Co. Rep. 14 a.) and otherwise, more will perhaps arise ^ 1 Sel. Pract. 497 ; Cameron i'. than you thought of ; but first take Reynolds, Cowp. 407. advantage of the matters of fact, and * 2 Tidd, 1243, 8th ed. RULES WHICH TEND TO THE PRODUCTION OP AN ISSUE. 241 These are generally expressed in the negative. That, how- ever, is not invariably the case with a common traverse ; for, if opposed to a precedent negative allegation, it will, of course, be in the affirmative. The General Issues. Besides this, the common kind, there is a class of traverses which, from its great frequency and importance in practice, requires particular notice. It is that of the general issues. \ In most of the usual actions there is an appropriate plea, ' fixed by ancient usage, as the proper method of traversing the declaration, in cases where the defendant means to deny the whole or the principal part of its allegations.^ This form of plea or traverse is called the general issue in that action ; and it appears to be so called, because the issue that it tenders, involving the whole declaration or the prin- cipal part of it, is of a more general and comprehensive kind than that usually tendered by a common traverse. From the examples of it that will be presently given, it will be found that, not only in extent or comprehensiveness, but in point of form also, it differs somewhat from a common traverse ; for though, like that, it tenders issue, yet, in several instances, it does not contradict in terms of the allegation traversed, but in a more general form of expression. In debt on bond or other specialty the general issue is called the plea of non est factum; and is as follows : — And the said C. D., by , his attorney, comes and defends the wrong and injury, when, &c., and says that the said supposed writing obligatory (or " indenttire,^' or " articles of agreement,^'' according to the subject of the action) is not his deed ; and of this he puts himself upon the country. In debt on simple contract the general issue is called the plea of nil debet ; and is thus : — And the said C. D., by , his attorney, comes and defends the wrong and injury, when, &c., and says that he does not oive the said sum of money above demanded, or any part thereof, 1 Reg. Plac. 57 ; Doct. & Stud. 272. 16 242 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. in manner and form as the said A. B. hatli above complained; and of this the said C D. puts himself upon the country.^ In covenant ^ the general issue is non est factum^ and its form is similar to that in debt on specialty. In detinue the general issue is called the plea of non deti- net ; and is as follows : — And the said C. D., by , his attorney, comes and defends the wrong and injury, when, &c., and says that he does not detain the said goods and chattels (or "deeds and writings,'^ according to the subject of the action) in the said declaration specified, or any part thereof, in manner and form as the said A. B. hath above complained ; and of this the said C. D. puts himself upon the country. In trespass the general issue is called the plea of not guilty ; and is as follows : — 1 Nil debet is the proper form of the general issue, not only in debt on simple contract, but in all other actions of debt not founded on a deed or specialty. And an action is not considered as founded on a deed or specialty, so as to require a plea of non est factum, if the deed be mentioned in the declaration only as introductory to some other main cause of action. Therefore nil debet is a good plea in debt for rent upon an inden- ture, or in debt for an escape, or in debt upon a devastavit (he has wasted). (1 Tidd, 701, 8th ed.) 2 " According to respectable authori- ties (Tidd, 593. Lawes' PI. 113. 1 Chit. PI. 482), there is, to a declaration in covenant broken, no general issue : Since the plea of non est factum, which denies the deed only, and not the breach, does not put the ichole declaration in issue. And therefore, it is said, that this plea, when used in this particular action, is to be called ' the common issue.' It must indeed be admitted, that there is a differ- ence between the effect of the plea of non est factum, in covenant broken, and in debt on specialty. A valid bond, or single bill, necessarily creates a present debt ; and the plea in question, by deny- ing the deed, necessarily and directly denies the alleged debt : Whereas a covenant does not necessarily create, in the covenantee, a right to damages ; because a breach may never occur. And though, if there be no covenant, there can be no breach ; yet a denial of the covenant denies the breach, only by consequence, and not directly. As, how- ever, non est factum is confessedly ?igood plea, in covenant broken, and also the most general form of denial, of which the action admits, there appears to be little use in distinguishing it, by the anomalous appellation of a 'common issue.' Indeed, the only peculiarity which distinguishes it in this action, from other general issues, — viz., that it does not put the whole declaration directly in issue, — would seem rather to bring it within the description of a special issue. At any rate, if it is neces- sary or proper to give this plea, in the action of covenant broken, the peculiar denomination of a common issue, it would seem equally so, to distinguish the same plea by the same name, when pleaded to a special declaration, in debt on a penal bond. For the same reason, which authorizes its peculiar designation in the former action, exists, to the same extent, in the latter." Gould's PI. 284, n. 2. RULES WHICH TEND TO THE PRODUCTION OF AN ISSUE. 243 And the said C. D., by , liis attorney, comes and defends the force and injury, when, &c., and says that he is not guilty of the said trespasses above laid to his charge, or any part thereof, in manner and form as the said A. B. hath above complained; and of this the said C. D. puts himself upon the country. In trespass on the case (in the species of assumpsit) the general issue is called the plea of non-assumpsit ; and is as follows : — And the said C. D., by , his attorney, comes and defends the wrong and injury, when, &c., and says that he did not %mder- take or promise, in manner and form as the said A. B. hath above complained : and of this the said C. D. puts himself upon the country. In trespass on the case, in general, the general issue is not guilty ; and is thus : — And the said C. D., by , his attorney, comes and defends the wrong and injury, when, &c., and says that he is not guilty of the premises above laid to his charge, in manner and form as the said A. B. hath above complained ; and of this the said C D. puts himself upon the country. In replevin the general issue is called the plea of non cepit ; and is as follows : — And the said C. D., by , his attorney, comes and defends the wrong and injury, when, &c., and says that he did not take the said cattle (or " goods and chattels,'' according to the subject of the action) in the said declaration mentioned, or any of them, in manner and form as the said A. B. hath above complained ; and of this the said C. D. puts himself upon the country. A very important effect attends the adoption of the general issue, viz., that by tendering the issue on the declaration, and thus closing the process of the pleading at so early a stage, it throws out of use, wherever it occurs, a great many rules of pleading, applying exclusively to the remoter allegations. For it is evident that, when the issue is thus tendered in the plea, the whole doctrine relating to pleadings in confession and avoidance, replications, rejoinders, etc., is superseded. 244 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. At the same time, the general issue is of very frequent occur- rence in pleading ; and it has, therefore, on the whole, the effect of narrowing, very considerably, the application of the greater and more subtle part of the science. The important character of this plea makes it material to explain distinctly in what cases it may and ought to be used ; and this is the more necessary, because an allowed relaxation in the modern practice has, in some actions, given it an application more extensive than belongs to it in principle. To obtain a clear view of this subject, we must examine the language of the different general issues, in reference to the declarations which they respectively traverse. In debt on specialty and in covenant, the general issue, non est factum, denies that the deed mentioned in the declaration is the deed of the defendant. Under this, the defendant at the trial may contend, either that he never executed such deed as alleged, or that it is absolutely void in law. Examples : He may so contend on the ground that the alleged obligor or covenantor was, at the time of execution, a married woman or a lunatic ; ^ or that since its execution, and before the commencement of the suit, it has been erased or altered by the obligee or covenantee himself, or (if in a material point) by a stranger.^ But if the defendant's case consist of anything but a denial of the execution of such deed as alleged, or some fact showing its absolute invalidity, the plea of wow est factum will be im- proper.3 And it is to be observed that, in point of pleading, 1 Com. Dig. Pleader, 2 W. 18; Yates tenor of the deed itself, the plea of non r. Boen, 2 Str. 1104 ; Collins v. Blantern, est factum will of course be as applicable 2 Wils. 347. as where no deed has been executed by 2 Henry Pigot's Case, II Co. Pep. the defendant; for in either case the 26 b. But, according to modern deed, as alleged, is not his. So, if the authority, an alteration, although instrument was delivered as an escrow. material, can not invalidate a written this is evidence under non est factum (I instrument, when made by a stranger Tidd, 701, 8th ed.), because it shows to the contract. See Parsons on Con- the invalidity of the instrument as a tracts (7th ed.), II. 716*, n. 1, where deed. But it seems that its delivery as the authorities are collected and dis- an escrow may be also specially pleaded, cussed. (Murray v. Earl of Stair, 2 Barn. & 2 If the statement of the deed in the Cress. 82.) declaration materially varies from the flULES WHICH TEND TO THE PRODUCTION OF AN ISSUE. 245 a deed is on some grounds absolutely void in law, on others voidable only. Thus, though it is void for the lunacy of the party who executes, his infancy makes it only voidable.^ And its execution under duress is also an objection of the latter kind.2 Now, the rule is, that while matters which make a deed absolutely void may be given in evidence under no7i est factum^ those which make it voidable only must be specially pleaded.^ And it seems that, generally, objections to the legality of the consideration on which a deed was founded are referable to the latter class ; for it has been decided, that where the condition of a bond is in restraint of matrimony, that ground of defence is not evidence under non est factum ; * and that where a bond is given to compound a felony, that is matter which must be specially pleaded.^ And it is a general rule that any illegality arising from the prohibition of an act of Parliament^ as in the case of usury, or gaming, is matter for special plea, and is not evidence under non est factum ; ^ a rule apparently founded on the same principle ; for its reason seems to be, that the statute is always so construed as to make the instrument not absolutely void, but voidable by special pleaj If the general issue in debt on simple contract be now examined, its effect and application will be found to be much more extensive. The declaration alleges that the defendant was indebted to the plaintiff on some consideration, e. g., for goods sold and delivered. The general issue alleges " that he does not owe the sum of money," etc. Were the allegation merely that "the goods were not sold and delivered," it would of course be applicable to no case but that where the defend- ant means to deny the sale and delivery ; but, as the allegation 1 Whelpda]e'sCase,5Co.Rep. 119 a; 6 Harmer y. Rowe, 2 Chit. Rep. 334; 2 Inst. 483 ; Darby v. Boucher. 1 Salk. s. c. 2 Stark. 36 ; and see Collins v. 279; Zouch v. Parsons, 3 Burr. 1805; Blantern, 2 Wils. 347. Gibbsj;. MerreU,3Taunt. 307; Baylisr. 6 "vvrhelpdale's Case, uhi supra. Dinely, 3 M. & S. 477 ; Keane v. Boycott, With respect to usury, it is said that, 2 H. Bl. 515. even if the condition of a bond, as set 2 2 Inst. 482, Com. Dig. Pleader, 2 forth in the pleadings, appears on tlie W. 19. face of it to be usurious, yet the d^- 8 Com. Dig. Pleader, 2 W. 18. fendant cannot demur, but must plead * Colton V. Goodridge, 2 Bl. Rep. the usury. (1 Saund. 295 a, n. 1.) 1108. '' See Whelpdale's Case, ubi supra. 246 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. is that he does not owe, it is evident that the plea is adapted tp any kind of defence that tends to deny an existing debt ; and, therefore, not only to a defence consisting in a denial of the sale and delivery, but to those of release, satisfaction, arhitra- me7it} and a multitude of others, to which a general issue of a narrower kind (for example, that of 7ion est factum) would, in its appropriate actions, be inapplicable. In short, there is hardly any matter of defence to an action of debt to which the plea of nil debet may not be applied, because almost all defences resolve themselves into a denial of the debt? In detinue, the declaration states that the defendant detains certain goods of the plaintiff ; the general issue alleges that he " does not detain the said goods in the said declaration specified," etc. This will apply either to a case where the defendant means to deny that he detains the goods mentioned, or to a case where he means to deny that the goods so de- tained are the property of the plaintiff ;.ior, if they are not the plaintiff's property, then it is true that the defendant does not detain the goods specified in the declaration ; the only goods there specified being described as the goods of the plaintiff.^ In trespass, the general issue, not guilty, evidently amounts to a denial of the trespasses alleged, and no more. Therefore, if in trespass for assault and battery the case be, that the defendant has not assaulted or beat the plaintiff, it will be proper that he should plead the general issue ; but if his case be of any other description, the plea will be inapplicable. So, in trespass quare clausum f regit, or for taking the plaintiff's goods, if the defendant did not, in fact, break and enter the ^ Anon. 5 Mod. 18 ; Paramore v. tender, nor (without notice) a set-off; Johnson, 1 Ld. Raym. 566 ; s. c. 12 Mod. nor (in an action for rent on indenture) 376. that the plaintiff had nothing in the tene- 2 It was even holden, per Holt, C. J., vients ; nor (in debt, qui tain) a former that as the plea is in the present tense, recover ij against him for the same cause the defendant may give in evidence by another person. (1 Tidd, 700, Sthed.) the statute of limitations. (Draper v. ^ Therefore he may give in evidence, Glassop", 1 Ld. Raym. 153 ; Lee v. Clarke, under non detinet, a gift from the plaio- 2 East, 3.36. Per Lawrence, J. Qu.tamen tiff; for that proves that he does not (questioning). See 1 Saund. 283, n. 2, 2 detain the plaintiff's goods ; but he Saund. 62 c, n. 6.) But under this plea, can not give in evidence that they were defendant cannot give in evidence a pawned to him. (Co. Litt. 283.) RULES WHICH TEND TO THE PRODUCTION OP AN ISSUE. 247 close ill question or take the goods, the general issue, " not guilty," will be proper. It will also be applicable if he did break and enter the close, but it was not in the possession of the plaintiff, or not lawfully in his possession, as against the letter title of the defendant} So it will be applicable if he did take the goods, but they did not belong to the plaintiff; for, as the declaration alleges the trespass to have been committed on the close or goods of the 2)laintiff^, the plea of not guilty in- volves a denial that the defendant broke and entered the close or took the goods of the plaintiff ; and is, therefore, a fit plea, if the defendant means to contend that the plaintiff had no possession of the close, or property in the goods, sufficient to entitle him to call them his own. But if the defence be of any other kind, the general issue will not apply. So far, all is consistent with the form and principle of these several pleas ; but, with respect to the two general issues that next follow, the case is somewhat different. First, with respect to that in assumpsit. The declaration in this action states that the defendant, upon a certain con- sideration therein set forth, made a certain promise to the plaintiff. The general issue, in this action, states that the defendant " did not promise and undertake in manner and form," etc. This, at first sight, would appear to put in issue merely the fact of his having made a promise such as is alleged. A much wider effect, however, belongs in practice to this plea, and was originally allowed (as it would appear), with reference to the following distinction. It has been already stated that the law will always imjjly a promise, in consideration of an existing debt or liability ; and that the action of assumpsit may be consequently founded on a promise either express or imp)lied. When the promise relied upon was of the latter kiiid, and the defendant pleaded the general issue, the plaintiff's mode of maintaining the affirmative of this issue, on the trial, was, of course, by proving that debt or liability on which the implied promise would arise ; and in such case it was evidently reasonable that the defendant also sliould, under his plea denying the promise, be at liberty to show any circumstance 1 Dodd V. Kyffin, 7 T. R. 254. 248 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. by which the debt or liability was disproved ; such, for example, as performance or a release. Accordingly, in actions on implied assumpsits, this effect was, on the principle here mentioned, allowed to the general issue. But it was at first allowed in the case of implied assumpsits only ; and, where an express promise was proved, the defendant, in conformity with the language and strict principle of his plea, was permitted, under the general issue, only to contest the fact of the promise, or at most to show that, on the ground of some illegality, it was a promise void in law.^ This practice, however, was by relaxa- tion gradually applied to actions on express promises also ; and at length, in all actions of assumpsit without distinction, the defendant was, under the general issue, permitted not only to contend that no promise was made, or to show facts impeaching the validity of the promise, but (with some few exceptions) ^ to prove any matter of defence whatever which tends to deny his debt or liability ; for example, a release or performance. This is a great deviation from principle ; for it is to be observed that many of these matters of defence are such (in the case of express promise) as ought regularly to be pleaded in confession a7id avoidance. Thus, if the defendant be charged with an express promise, and his case be, that, after mailing such promise, it was released or performed, this plainly con- fesses and avoids the declaration. To allow the defendant, therefore, to give this in evidence under the general issue, which is a plea by way of traverse, is to lose sight of the dis- tinction between the two kinds of pleading. And even where the matters of defence thus admitted in evidence are not such as would have been pleadable by way of confession and avoid- ance, but are in the nature of a traverse of the declaration, yet they are almost always inconsistent with the form and language of the general issue in this action ; which (as has been seen) consists of a denial of the promise only, and pur- 1 Fits V. Freestone, 1 Mod. 310; vent act, nor (in some cases) a defence Abbot V. -Chapman, 2 Lev. 81 ; Vin. under the court of conscience acts. Nor Ab. Evidence, Z, a. is a set-off evidence under non-assumpsit, 2 He can not give in evidence a ten- unless notice of set-off be given with the der, hankruptct/ of defendant, the statute plea. (Chit. PI. 420; 1 Tidd, 700, 8th of limitations, a discharge under the insol- ed.) EULES WHICH TEND TO THE PRODUCTION OF AN ISSUE. 249 ports to traverse no other part of the declaration. Thus, in an action which has become, of all others, the most frequent and general* in its application, the science of pleading has been, in a great measure, superseded by an innovation of practice, which enables the parties to come to issue upon the plea (the second step in the series of allegations) in a great variety of cases, which would formerly have led to much remoter or more specific issues. This important inroad on the ancient dominion of pleading has been effected for more than a century past,^ and was probably first encouraged by the judges in consequence of a prevalent opinion that the rules of this science were somewhat more strict and subtle than is consistent with the objects of justice ; and that, as the general issue tended to abbreviate its process, and proportionably to emancipate the suitors from its restrictions, it was desirable to extend, as much as possible, the use and application of that plea. Next in order is the general issue which belongs to the action of trespass on the case in general. The declaration in this action sets forth specifically the circumstances which form the subject of complaint. The general issue, not guilty^ is a mere traverse or denial of the facts so alleged ; and, therefore, on principle, should be applied only to cases in which the de- fence rests on such denial. But here a relaxation has taken place similar to that which prevails in assumpsit , for, under the plea now in question, a defendant is permitted not only to contest the truth of the declaration, but, with certain excep- tions,^ to prove any matter of defence that tends to show that the plaintiff has no right of action, though such matters be in confession and avoidance of the declaration ; as, for example, a release given or satisfaction made. This latitude was, no doubt, originally allowed for the same reasons that prompted * See Paramore v. Johnson, 12 Mod. truth of the charges, hut must plead it 377, where Holt, C. J., says : " It is in- specially; nor retaking on fresh jiursuit, dulgence to give accord with satisfaction in an action for escape ; nor in any in' evidence upon non-assumpsit pleaded, action on the case, the statute of limita- but that has crept in, and now is settled." tions. (1 Tidd, 702, 8th ed. ; Chit. 2 In an action of libel or words of PI. 436.) slander he cannot give in evidence the 250 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. the encouragement of the general issue in assumpsit. It is not, however, easy to conceive by what artifice of reasoning the relaxation was, in this case, held to be reconcilable with the principles of pleading, to which it stands in apparent variance ; and perhaps the truth is, that the practice in ques- tion was first applied to the general issue in trespass on the case in general, without regard to any principle beyond that of a forced analogy to the similar practice in trespass on the case in assumpsit} Thus, in assumpsit and trespass on the case in general, the defendant is allowed, under the general issue, to give in evi- dence matters which do not fall within the strict principles of that plea ; and, among these, matters in confession and avoid- ance. It is to be observed, however, with respect to matters of this latter description, that, though allowed, he is in no case obliged to take that course, but may still bring forward, by way of special plea in confession and avoidance, all such allegations as properly fall within the principle of such pleadings ; that is, all which confess what is adversely alleged, but repel or obviate its legal effect. Thus the defendant may, in assumpsit and other actions of trespass on the case, plead a release, though it is also competent to him to rely upon it in evidence under the general issue.^ As this course is allowable, so there are reasons of convenience which sometimes dictate its adop- tion;^ but the general issue, where capable of being applied, is much the more usual form of plea, and that which, from its generality, is commonly the most advantageous to the defendant. 1 See, however, Lord Mansfield's ex- duress, usuri/, gaming, or the statute of planation of the reason for allomng this frauds. All these, however, are e^adence practice in trespass on the case. (Bird under the general issue. V. Randall, 3 Burr. 1353.) 3 The chief advantage of pleading ^ Upon this principle the defendant specially is, that it obliges the plaintiff may plead specially, not only a release, to repUi ; in doing which, he is confined performance, payment, accord and satis- (as will be shown hereafter) to a single /action,. or other matter in (f/sc/iarge, but answer. This often puts him to great any matter also which tends to show the disadvantage, for he may have several contract void or voidable in point of law, answers to the defendant's case ; and, while it admits it to have been made in if the general issue be pleaded, may fact, such as iifancy, lunacy, coverture, avail himself of all. BULES WHICH TEND TO THE PRODUCTION OF AN ISSUE. 251 Lastly, the general issue, non cepit, in replevin, applies to the case where the defendant has not in fact taken the cattle or goods, or where he did not take them, or have them, in the place mentioned in the declaration.^ For the declaration alleges that the defendant " took certain cattle or goods of the plaintiff, in a certain place called," etc., and the general issue states that he did not take the said cattle or goods " in manner and form as alleged ; " which involves a denial both of the taking and of the place in which the taking was alleged to have been ; the place being a material point in this action. On the subject of general issues, it remains only to remark, that other pleas are ordinarily distinguished from them by the appellation of special pleas ; and, when resort is had to the latter kind, the party is said to plead specially, in opposition to pleading the general issue.^ So the issues produced upon special pleas, as being usually more specific and particular than those of not guilty, nil debet, etc., are sometimes described in the books as special issues, by way of distinction from the others, which were called general issues,^ the latter term having been afterwards applied not only to the issues themselves, but to the pleas which tendered and produced them.* . ■ r ■ The Traverse de Injuria. There is another species of traverse, which varies from the common form, and which, though confined to particular actions, and to a particular stage of the pleading, is of frequent occur- rence. It is the traverse de injuria sua propria, absque tali causa (of his own wrong without such excuse), or (as it is briefly called") the traverse de injuria. It always tenders issue ; but, on the other hand, differs, like many of the gen- 1 Chit. PI. 436. * By the Kules of Court of Hilary 2 These terms, it may be remarked, Term, 1834, 3 and 4 Wm. IV, the gen- have given rise to the popular denomi- eral issues were materially restricted, nation of the whole science to which The student is referred to the Ueport of this work relates, which, though prop- the Common Law Commissioners, and erly described as that of pkadinq, is to those rules which he will find in full generally known by the name of special in 5 Barn. & Adolph. i.-xx. As these pleadinq. rules were never in force in this country, 8 Co. Eitt. 126a; Heath's Maxims, they are only of scientific interest to the 53 ; Com. Dig. Pleader, K. 2. American student. 252 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. cral issues, from the common form of a traverse, by denying ill general__and sumniary4©i:jms, and not in the words of the alleyation traversed. This species of traverse occurs in the r eplicat ion^ in actions of trespass,^ trespass on the case,^ replevin,^ assumpsit,^ debt^^ and covenant,^ but is not used at any other stage of the pleading, 111 these actions it ia thp pr^pp.r foriP, wbp.n the, plpa. o.onsist^ merely of matter of excuse. But when it consists of or com- prises matter of title or interest in laud, etc., or the coiiunand- ment of another, or authority of lato, or authority in fact, derived from the opposite party, or matter of re cord, — in any of these cases, the replication de injuria is generally improper,' and the traverse of any of these matters should be in the common form ; that is, in the words of the allegation traversed. As the general issue allowed the defendant to deny by a brief formula the material averments of the plaintiff's decla- ration, so this species of traverse, which occurs only as a replication, gave the plaintiff a similar privilege in certain cases with respect to the defendant's plea. These cases are when, in any of the above-named actions, the defendant undertakes in his plea to excuse by a plea of confession and avoidance the act alleged against him in the declaration. An illustration will make this plain : Example : A. sues B. in trespass vi et armis for an assault and battery. B. pleads what is technically called a plea of so7i assault demesne (his own assault) ; by this plea he confesses that he did assault as charged in the declaration ; but he excuses his appar- ently wrongful act by averring that A. has not told the whole truth in his declaration, for, as B. now alleges, A. made the first assault upon him, and he only molliter manus imposuit (gently bands laid) upon A. to defend himself from A.'s assault prozit bene ei limit (as well he might), using no more force than was necessary to repel A.'s assault. 1 Crogate's Case, 8 Co. Rep. 67 a. ^ Washbourne v. Barrows, 1 Ex. 107. 2 O'Brien v. Saxon, 2 Barn. & Cress. "< Crogate's Case, tihi supra ; Doct. 908. PI. 113, 115. See the law on this sub- 8 Selby V. Bardons, 3 Barn. & ject more fully explained, and the ex- Adolph. 2. ceptions noticed. Chit. PI. 512-518; 1 4 li^aac V. Tarrer, 1 M. & W. 65. Arch. 238 ; 2 Saund. 295, n. 1 ; 1 Saund. B Cowper V. Garbett, 13 ibid. 33. 544 c, n. 7. RULES WHICH TEND TO THE PRODUCTION OP AN ISSUE. 253 Now, the student will observe that by this plea B. has offered an excuse which is made up of several elements, to wit : the prior assault by A. upon him, and his battery of A. in self-defence. Instead of being compelled to traverse specif- ically the material allegations of this plea, A. is permitted to reply generally that B. assaulted him as charged in the decla- ration of his (-S.'s) own wrong and without the excuse set out in the plea. Let us take another more complicated illustration : — Example: The plaintiff sued the defendant for maliciously, and without any reasonable or probable cause, suing out a com- mission of bankruptcy against him, the plaintiff. The defendant pleaded confessing the suing out of the commission of bankruptcy, but excusing his act by averring that the plaintiff was a trader, and as such became indebted to him and then became a bankrupt, wherefore he (defendant) sued out the said commission. To this the plaintiff replied that the defendant of his ow?i ivroriff and without the excuses in his plea alleged committed the grievance charged in the declaration.^ Here the student will notice that the defendant's plea con- tains three several material averments, to wit : the plaintiff's trading, his bankruptcy, and the petitioning creditor's debt. Yet by this form of replication the plaintiff is permitted to put them all in issue. This privilege of the plaintiff is however restrained within reasonable bounds. It may be that the defendant's plea contains matter which can not properly be put in issue in this general way. The defendant, sued for an assault, may plead that he was an officer of the law charged with the execution of a warrant for the arrest of the plaintiff, and that he com- mitted the assault in question only to enforce his arrest over the plaintiff's resistance thereto. To permit the replication de injuria sua propria absque tali causa in this case, would be to send to the jury for trial a question of record (the warrant) combined with a question of fact (the resistance of the plain- tiff to the arrest), and this the law will not do. Again, questions of title to or interest in land were con- 1 O'Brien v. Saxon, 2 Bam. & Cress 908. See also Kobinson v. Rayley, 1 Burr. 316. 254 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. sidercd too important to be tried in this general way, and a specific traverse was required to put them in issue. ^ So if the defendant claimed authority for the act alleged from the plaintiff, he was entitled to know by a specific traverse whether the plaintiff denied that authority .^ In these cases another form of this replication was, how- ever, open to the plaintiff, and this was called de injuria sua jjropria absque residuo causae (of his own wrong without the remainder of the excuse). Example : The plaintiff sues the defendant for assault and battery. The defendant confesses that he did commit the alleged assault, but only under the following circumstances : On the day in question he was an officer of the law, and as such was charged to arrest the plaintiff upon the warrant of a competent court ; he attempted to arrest the plaintiff upon this warrant, when the plaintiff assaulted him, and he was compelled to beat the plaintiff to enforce his arrest. Now it may be that, in the case supposed, the^jieiendant really was acting under a warrant, and yet did assault and beat the plaintiff without justification. In such case the plaintiff would usually protest ^ tlie warrant, and reply de injuria . . . absque residuo causoi as to the remainder of the plea, thus putting in issue the defendant's averment that he was compelled to beat the plaintiff to enforce his arrest. Thus in each case the plaintiff can waive or admit the for- bidden subject, and reply de injuria . . . absque residuo causae as to the remainder of the excuse.^ In any case he can contest the question of authority^ title^ etc., but not under this replication ; it must be hy an appropriate traverse. This replication de injuria in any form could not be used where the plea was the general issue, a specific traverse,/or a plea by way of confession and avoidance in discharge. _Nor could it be resorted to in reply to a plea of set-off, for that is a cross-demand of the defendant and is not matter in excuse.^ ^ Crogate's Case, 8 Co. Rep. 66. traverse de injuria . . . absque residtto 2 Com. Dig. Pleader, F. 22. causae, see Renno v. Bennett, 3 Gal. & 8 The subject of protestation will be Dav. 54; s. c. 3 Ad. & E. (n. s.) 768. hereafter considered. 6 Salter v. Purchell, 1 Q. B. 197. * For an example of the use of the rules which tend to the production of an issue. 255 The Special Traverse, There is still another species of traverse, which differs from the common form, and which will require distinct notice. It is called the special traverse, and is a form of pleading governed by rules which are considered intricate. Its tendency to illustrate the general spirit and character of the science justifies its consideration at length, although it has fallen into general disuse and has been abolished in the land of its birth. j^A special traverse is a pleading which sets out with a /detail of circumstances, inconsistent with those stated in the 'preceding pleading to which it purports to be an answer; it then directly denies some fact stated in that preceding plead- ing, and concludes with a verification. ^ The detail of incon- sistent circumstances, with which it commences, is termed t)iQ JMdMMwal to the traverse ; the denial is called, from its introductory words, tbPi r^h.^gup. Jmn^Uvhhnut this). Why should this special traverse be necessary in any case? In many instances, occurring in ordinary discussion, a proposition may be so stated as to require contradiction, and yet not to admit of a point-blank or, as it is called, a cate- gorical, denial. In juridical disputation the same situation is sometimes presented, and the special traverse is the form of qualified denial which the science of pleading supplies for use in that emergency. The student must recollect that the Nay ! of the common traverse was nay indeed. If the pleader used that, he had to deny in the very words of his antagonist's pleading. When it was inconvenient or impossible for him to do this, he, of necessity, resorted to the indirect or qualified denial of the special traverse. Now there were fourjjlasses of circumstances which made it desirable for the pleader to adopt this indirect form of denial : (1) The case might be one in which some principle or rule of law was opposed to a direct denial ; (2) Some fact, ordinarily immaterial but material in tlio particular case, might be falsely pleaded by the adversary, and 1 Evans' n. 31. 256 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. the purposes oi the defense would require the materiality of that fact to be made apparent on the face of the pleading ; (3) It might be desirable in the particular case to separate questions of law from those of fact ; (4) The defendant (or the party pleading the special traverse) might wish to open and conclude the cause. These several instances may be made plain by examples. (1) Employment of a special traverse because an unqualified and unexplained denial is opposed to some principle or rule of law. "' "^^^ Example : If in an action of covenant by the heir of a lessor, against the lessee of land for noji-jxii/ment of rent, the fact be that the lessor had no more than an estate for his life in the premises, so that the heir has no interest therein, and the lessee should traverse in the common form, by averring " that after the making of the said lease, the reversion of the said demised premises did not belong to the said lessor and his heirs," etc., it would expose him to the objection of violating the well-known rule of law, whereby a tenant is precluded (or in techuical phrase, estopped), to say that his lessor had no title in the premises demised. Instead, therefore, of the general assertion that the reversion did not belong to the lessor and his heirs, which would fall within this prohibition, the lessee, by means of a special traverse, says what he is permitted by law to say, to wit : that his lessor had only a particular estate, which has since expired.^ In a case, therefore, in which the declaration alleged a seisin in fee in the lessor, and the nature of the defence was, that he had a particular estate only (e. g., an estate for life), since expired, the pleader would resort to a special traverse, setting forth the lessor's limited title, by way of inducement, and traversing his seisin of the reversion in fee under the absque hoc. He thus would avoid the objection that might otherwise arise on the ground of estoppel. (2) It may be necessary to show that in the particular case certain averments of fact are material and should be truly pleaded. Example : The plaintiff in an action for false imprisonment declares that the defendant, in Montgomery County, in the 1 Blake v. Foster, 8 T. R. 487 ; Brudnell v. Roberts, 2 Wills, 143 ; Min. Inst. IV. 648. RULES WHICH TEND TO THE PRODUCTION OP AN ISSUE. 257 State of Maryland, on the 1st day of May, 1896, unlawfully arrested and detained him for two days. Now ordinarily aver- ments of time and place are immaterial, it being manifest that what is an injury at one time or place is equally so at another. But in the case supposed these averments may both be very material,^ for the truth may be that the arrest sued for was made not in Montgomery, but in Prince George's County, Maryland, by the defendant, who was at the time in question sheriff of the latter county ; it may be further true that the arrest was made not on the first but on the tenth day of May, 1896, by virtue of a competent warrant of that date which the sheriff had on that day, but which he did not have on the first day of May as charged. Here it is evident that the defendant must rely for his defence on the warrant and on the fact that he executed it within his jurisdiction. In other words, the aver- ments of time and place are, in the particular case, both material for the justification of the arrest so made by him. Now he can not deny the truth of the plaintiff's declaration, for it is true save as to the averments of time and place, which the plaintiff need not prove as alleged. He can not defend himself by pleading the warrant as a justification, because it had no existence on the first day of May, 1896, and in any event it would not protect him be- yond the limits of his own county. His only remedy, therefore, is a special traverse. In the inducement of this traverse he will state that on the tenth day of May, 1896, he was the sheriff of Prince George's County aforesaid ; that a writ had on that day been legally issued, and placed in his hands, by virtue of which he afterwards, upon that day, and in the same county, arrested the plaintiff, and that this is the same arrest complained of in the declaration. Here is a statement of facts inconsistent with that of the plaintiff, yet not directly denying any matter stated in the de- claration. This statement of inconsistent matter shows that the place and time of the arrest, although generally immate- rial, are, in this special case, material, and that it is necessary for the defendant's justification that they be averred with exactness.^ But subsequently it was permitted in such cases to plead in confession and avoidance, justifying the arrest by a statement 1 " In these transitory actions not v. Jones, 1 Saund. 300 f, n. (6) , Emer- only the place but the time may be ton v. Selby, 2 Ld. Raym. 1015. made material by the plea." Greene 2 Evans' PI. 33, 34. 17 258 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. of the true particulars thereof, and adding an averment that the circumstances so stated are the same as those complained of in the declaration.^ This, however, was a departure from the accuracy of special pleading, for a tort can not be confessed and then justified. (3) Employment of a special traverse in order to separate questions of law from those of fact. Example : In an action on the case for waste, if the defendant plead the general traverse (or issue) not guilty, the whole case upon that issue must be determined by a jury. Now suppose that the destruction or waste in question has been committed, not by iniblic enemies, but by rebels in arms. It might be very desir- able to the defendant not to submit to the jury the question of law, whether destruction so occasioned is technical waste or not, but to have it determined by the court. If that be his object, he might effect it by pleading by way of special traverse, setting forth by way of inducement that the destruction was occasioned by the overpowering violence of rebels, marshalled in arms and in warlike array, against the existing government, which vio- lence it was impossible for him to resist; and then under the absque hoc, denying the waste charged: '^without this that the said defendant was guilty of the said waste and destruction in ,the declaration mentioned." ^ To such a special traverse the plaintiff must either demur, upon the ground that destruction wrought by rebels, however irresistible, is no less loaste in law than when occasioned by a mob, or he must join issue upon the fact alleged, and insist that the waste was not brought about by rebels in arms, as stated in the plea. In the latter case, all question as to the law is waived, and the jury are charged with a mere matter of fact ; in the former, the question is one exclusively of law, which the court decides.^ (4) Employment of a special traverse in order to obtain for the party pleading the privilege of opening and concluding the cause. The defendant is allowed upon such a plea to open and conclude the cause, because the affi,rmative of the issue, and, therefore, the burden of proof , is upon him. 1 Mellor V. Walker, 2 Saund. 4, 5 a, n. (3J. ^ Min. Inst. IV. 648, 649. 2 Green v. Cole, 3 Saund. 2.52. RULES WHICH TEND TO THE PRODUCTION OF AN ISSUE. 259 Example : The plaintiffs sued the defendant in trespass for breaking their drawbridge, by carelessly " bringing a vessel, under the command of the defendant, in violent collision with it. The defendant, instead of pleading the general issue and denying that he was guilty of the wrong, undertook to do so with an inducement, by way of explanation, alleging that the plaintiffs had so obstructed the water-way between the piers of their draw, that a constant and very strong current was created just at that point, whereby vessels passing through the draw were liable, notwithstanding the utmost pains and care which those who navigated them could take, to be carried violently against one or the other of the piers, and that defendant had used due care in the management of his vessel ; without this, that he was guilty of any negligence," etc.^ It will be seen at once that this last example is not a legiti- mate special traverse ; no occasion exists for its use. A plea of the general issue would answer every proper purpose of the pleader. But this abuse of the special traverse was formerly allowed, and by means of it the pleader obtained his object and had the affirmative of the issue. A similar abuse of this traverse was practised by the plaintiff, but it requires no detailed notice. A special traverse must always consist of three parts : (1) The affirmative part, or inducement, which generally introduces new matter and constitutes the indirect or argu- mentative denial. (2) The negative part, which contains the direct denial, and, as has been seen, is called the absque hoc (without this) from the Latin words with which this part formerly began, although similar words as et non ^ (and not) might also be used. (3) The verification and prayer for judgment, with which this form of traverse originally concluded. The regular method of pleading in answer to a special traverse is to tender issue upon it, with a repetition of the allegation traversed. It will be perceived, therefore, that the effect of a special 1 Crosskeys Co. v. Eawlings, 3 Bingh. N. C. 71. 2 Bennet v. Filkins, 1 Saund. 21. 260 ^ COMMON-LAW PLEADING. traverse is to postpone the issue to one stage of the pleading later than it would be attained by a traverse in the commoa form. The ancient pleader appears to have been mainly influenced by the preceding considerations in his frequent adoption of an inducement of new affirmative matter, tending to explain or qualify the denial. But, though these considerations show the purpose of the inducement, they do not account for the two other distinctive features of the special traverse, viz. : the absque hoc and the conclusion with a verification. For, it will naturally suggest itself, the affirmative matter might, in each of the above cases, have been pleaded per se, without the addition of the absque hoc. So, whether the absque hoc were added or not, the pleading might, consistently with any of the above reasons, have tendered issue, like a common traverse, instead of concluding with a verification. These latter forms were dictated by other principles. The direct denial under the absque hoc was rendered necessary by this consideration : that the affirmative matter, taken alone, would be only an indirect (or, as it is called in pleading, argumentative) denial of the preceding statement ; and, by a rule which will be considered in its proper place hereafter, all argumentative pleading is prohibited. In order, therefore, to avoid this fault of argumen- tativeness, the course adopted was, to follow up the explanatory matter of the inducement with a direct denial.^ Thus, to allege, as in the first example, that the lessor was seised for life, would be to deny by implication, but by implication onli/y that the reversion belonged to him in fee ; and therefore, to avoid argumentativeness, a direct denial that the reversion belonged to him in fee is added, under the formula of absque hoc. With respect to the verification, this conclusion was adopted in a special traverse, in obedience to another rule, of which there will also be occasion to speak hereafter, viz. : that wherever new matter is introduced in a 'pleading it is im- proper to tender issue, and the conclusion must consequently be 1 Beeves' Hist. 11. 625; Bac. Ab. 301 ; Herring w. Blacklow, Cro. Eliz. 30 ; Pleas, &c. H. ; Courtney v. Phelps, 1 Sid. 10 Hen. VI. 7 PI. 21. RULES WHICH TEND TO THE PRODUCTION OF AN ISSUE. 261 with a verification. The inducement setting forth new matter makes a verification necessary, in conformity with that rule. Having now explained the form, the effect, and the use and object of a special traverse, it remains to show in what cases this method of pleading is or ought to be applied at the present day. First, it is to be observed that this form was at no period applicable to every case of denial, at the pleasure of the pleader. There are many cases of denial to which the scheme of special traverse has never been applied, and which have always been and still are the subjects of traverse in the common form exclusively.^ These it is not easy to enumerate or define ; they are determined by the course of precedent, and in that way become known to the practitioner. On the other hand, in many cases where the special traverse anciently occurred, it is now no longer used, especially that species of it which is illustrated by the last example. Even when the formula was most in repute, the use of that species does not appear to have been regarded as matter of necessity ; and, in cases which admit or require no allegation of new matter, we find the special and the common traverse to have been indifferently used by the pleaders of those days.^ But in modern times the special traverse, without an inducement of new matter, has been considered, not only as unnecessary^ but as frequently improper. As the taste in pleading gradually simplified and improved, the prolix and dilatory effect of a special traverse brought it into disfavor with the courts ; and they began, not only to enforce the doctrine that the common form might be substituted in cases where there was no inducement of new matter, but often intimated their preference of that form to the other.^ Afterwards tliey appear to have gone further, and to have established in favor of the common plan of traverse, in cases where there is no allegation of new matter, the following rule of distinction : That where the whole substance of the last pleading is denied, the conclusion must be to the country, or, in other words, the ^ Home V. Lewin, I Ld. Raym. 641. 2 Rast. Ent. 622 ; and see Home v. Lewin, ubi supra. 8 Robinson v. Rayley, 1 Burr. 320. 262 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. traverse must be in the common form ; hut where one of several facts only is the subject of denial, the conclusion may he either to the country or with a verification ; that is, the traverse may be either common or special, at the option of the pleader} It is not easy to trace either the original authority, or even a very satisfactory reason, for this distinction. It does not appear to coincide with the practice at a former period, which certainly allowed special traverses, though without an inducement of new matter, in many cases where the whole substance ^of the pleading was denied ; and its true origin is perhaps to be referred to the inclination of the courts to discourage this formula. From the time that the special traverse thus fell into disrepute, it has been much neglected, even in cases where permissible ; and it now rarely occurs in any instance wliere there is no inducement of new matter, although the denial relate to one out of several facts only. With respect to the other kind of special traverse, viz., that which is attended with an inducement of new matter, the case is very different. This was originally devised, as has been shown, for certain reasons of convenience or necessity ; and those reasons still occasionally apply. However, in the general decline of the method of special traverse there is felt in practice a great disinclination to adopt in any case whatever, without a clear reason for doing so, this discredited form ; and this more particularly because of the disadvantages with which it is attended. These disadvantages consist not only in prolixity and delay, but in the additional inconvenience that the inducement tends to disclose the real nature of the party's case, by giving notice to his adversary of the precise grounds on which the denial proceeds, and thus facilitates to the latter the preparation of his proofs, or otherwise guides him in his further proceedings. For these reasons the special traverse is perhaps daily becoming more rare. And even though the case be such as would admit of an inducement of new matter explanatory of the denial, the usual course is to omit any such inducement, and to make the denial in 1 See 1 Saund. 103 a, b, n. 3; Bac. Ab. Pleas, &c. 381, notes; Smith v. Dovers, 2 Doug. 430. EULES WHICH TEND TO THE PRODUCTION OP AN ISSUE. 263 an absolute form, with a tender of issue ; thus substituting the common for the special formula. The latter, howev^er, appears to be still always allowable when the case is such as admits of an inducement of new matter, except in certain instances before noticed, to which, by the course of precedent, the common form of traverse has always been exclusively applied. And, where allowable, it should still be occasionally adopted, by reason of the various grounds of necessity or convenience by which it was originally suggested. Accord- ingly, it is apprehended that in the first three examples a special traverse would be as proper at the present day as it was at the period when the precedents first occurred. It will be necessary now to advert to certain principles laid down in the books relative to this form. /The Inducement should be such as in itself Amounts \ TO A Sufficient Answer in Substance to the Last Pleading.! For, as has been shown, it is the use and object of the inducement to give an explained or qualified denial ; that is, to state such circumstances as tend to show that the last pleading is not true; t'^e ah'sque hoc being added merely to put that denial in a positive form, which had previously been made in an indirect one. Now, an indirect denial amounts^ in substance, to an answer; and it follows, therefore, that an Inducement, if properly framed, must always in itself contain, without the aid of the absque hoc, an answer in substance to the last pleading. Thus, in the first example, the allegation that the lessor was seised for life, and that his estate is since determined, is in itself, in substance, a sufficient answer, as denying, by implication, that the fee descended from the lessor to the plaintiff. ^ The Inducement must not consist of a Direct Denial. It follows, from the same consideration as to the object and use of a special traverse, that the answer given by the inducement can properly be of no other nature than that of an 1 Bac. Ab. H. 1 ; Com. Dig. Pleader, G. 20 ; Anon. 3 Salk. 353 ; Dike v. Eicks, Cro. Car. 336. 264 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. iudirect denial. Accordingly, we find it decided, in the first place, that it must not consist of a direct denial. Example : The plaintiff in an audita querela, being bound by recognizance to pay J. Bush £300 in six years, by £50 per annum, at a certain place, alleged that he was ready every day, at that place, to have paid to Bush the said £50, but that Bush was not there to receive it. To this the defendant pleaded, that J. Bush was ready at the place to receive the £50, absque hoc, that the plaintiff was there ready to have paid it. The plaintiff demurred, on the ground that the inducement, alleging Bush to have been at the place ready to receive, contained a direct denial of the plaintiff's precedent allegation that Bush was not there, and should therefore have concluded to the country, without the absque hoc ; and judgment was given accordingly for the plaintiff.^ The Inducement must not be in the Nature of a Confes- sion AND AVOIDANCE.2 Example : If the defendant makes title as assignee of a term of years of A., and the plaintiff, in answer to this, claims under a prior assignment to himself from A. of the same term, this is a confession and avoidance ; for it admits the assignment to the defendant, but avoids its effect, by showing the prior assignment. Therefore, if the plaintiff pleads such assignment to himself by way of inducement, adding under an absque hoc, a denial that A. assigned to the defendant, this special traverse is bad.^ The plaintiff should have pleaded the assignment to himself as in confession and avoidance, without the traverse. There must be no Traverse upon a Traverse. Again, it is a rule with respect to special traverses, that the opposite party has no right to traverse the inducement,* or (as the rule is more commonly expressed) that there must be no traverse upon a traverse.^ Thus, in the first example, if the plaintiff, instead of taking issue on the traverse, should traverse the inducement, either in the common or the special 1 Hughes V. Phillips, Yelv. 38 ; and * Anon. 3 Salk. 353. see 36 Hen. VI. 15. s Com. Dig. Pleader, G. 17 ; Bac. 2 Com.- Dig. Pleader, G. 3 ; Lambert Ab. Pleas, &c. H. 4; The King v. V. Cook, 1 Ld. Raym. 238 ; Helier v. Bishop of Worcester, Vaugban, 62 ; Whrtier, Cro. Eliz. 650. Digby v. Fitzharbert, Hob. 104. ^ Com. Dig. ubi supra ; Helier v. Whytier, ubi supra. RULES WHICH TEND TO THE PRODUCTION OF AN ISSUE. 265 form, denying that the lessor, at the time of making the inden- ture, was seised in his demesne as of freehold for the term of his natural life, etc., such replication would be bad, as containing a traverse upon a traverse. The reason of this rule is clear and satisfactory. By the first traverse a matter is denied by one of the parties which had been alleged by the other, and which, having once alleged it, the latter is bound to maintain mstead of prolonging the series of the pleading and retarding the issue by resorting to a new traverse. Exeeptimi : There may he a traverse ujpon a traverse when the first is pospf] to nrisp!^ PT^J judgment if he shall he received qf admitted to aver contrary to what he before did or said . (3) Where a New Assignment is Necessary. Another exception to that branch of the general rule, which requires the pleader either to traverse, or confess and avoid, arises in the case of what is called a new assignment. It has been seen that the declarations are conceived in very general terms ; a quality which they derive from their adhe- rence to the tenor of those simple and abstract formuloe, the original writs. The effect of this is, that, in some cases, the defendant 'is not sufficiently guided by the declaration to the real cause of complaint, and is, therefore, led to apply his plea to a different matter from that which the plaintiff has in view. A new assignm entis a method of pleading to which the plajn- tiff in such cases is obliged to resort m his replication, for the purpose of setting the defendanl; right. 284 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. Example: In an action for assault and battery, a case may occur in which the plaintiff has been twice assaulted by the de- fendant ; and one of these assaults may have been justifiable, being committed in self-defence, while the other may have been committed without legal excuse. Supposing the plaintiff to bring his action for the latter, it will be found, by referring to the ex- ample formerly given, of declaration for assault and battery, that the statement is so general as not to indicate to which of the two assaults the plaintiff means to refer.^ The defendant may, there- fore, suppose, or affect to suppose, that the first is the assault intended, and will plead son assault demesne. This plea the plaintiff can not safely traverse ; because, as an assault was in fact committed by the defendant under the circumstances of ex- cuse here alleged, the defendant would have a right, under the issue joined upon such traverse, to prove those circumstances, and to presume that such assault, and no other, is the cause of action. And it is evidently reasonable that he should have this right ; for if the plaintiff were, at the trial of the issue, to be allowed to set up a different assault, the defendant might suffer, by a mistake into which he had been led by the generality of the plaintiff's declaration. The plaintiff, therefore, in the case sup- posed, not being able safely to traverse, and having no ground either for demurrer or for pleading in confession and avoidance, has no course but, by a new pleading, to correct the mistake oc- casioned by the generality of the declaration, and to declare that he brought his action, not for the first, but for the second assault ; and this is called a new assignment.^ The mistake being thus set right by the new assignment, it remains for the defendant to plead such matter as he may have in answer to the assault last mentioned, the first being now out of the question. By way of further example, may be mentioned a case that arises in trespass quare clausum fregit, and was formerly of very 1 As for the day and place alleged ^ jje may guard himself, by antici- in the declaration (which may be sup- pation, against this necessity, in the posed sufficient, in general, to identify particular case supposed, by charging the assault referred to), it will be shown the defendant in the declaration with hereafter that they are not considered both the assaults, which (in the form of as generally material to be proved in different counts) is allowable. If both such a case, and are consequently assaults are thus charged, the defendant alleged without much regard to the of course must answer both in his plea, true state of fact. and the reason for the new assignment fails. RULES WHICH TEND TO THE PRODUCTION OP AN ISSUE. 285 frequent and ordinary occurrence. In this action, if the plaintiff declares for breaking his close in a certain parish, without naming or otherwise describing the close (a course which in point of pleading is allowable),^ if the defendant happen to have any free- hold land in the same parish, he may be supposed to mistake the close in question for his own, and may therefore plead what is called the common bar,^ viz., that the close in which the trespass was committed is his own freehold.^ And then, upon the principle already explained, it will be necessary for the plaintiff to new-assign, alleging that he brought his action in respect of a different close from that claimed by the defendant as his freehold.^ New Assignment Extra Yiam. The examples that have been given consist of cases where the defendant in his plea wholly mistakes the subject of com- plaint. But it may also happen that the plea correctly applies to part of the injuries, while, owing to a misapprehension occasioned by the generality of the statement in the declara- tion, it fails to cover the whole. 1 Martini?. Kesterton, 2 W.Bla. 1089. 2 " It was anciently the most usual practice in trespass quare clausum f regit, to declare generally of breaking the plaintiff's close at A. This general mode of declaring put the defendant under a difficulty of knowing in what part of the vill of A. the trespass which the plaintiff meant by his declaration was committed. The defendant was therefore permitted to plead that the close was his freehold, which he might do without giving it a name, because as the plaintiff was general in his count, the defendant might be as general in his plea. And if the plaintiff traversed it — as he unquestionably might (6 Mod. 119) — he ran a great risk; for if the defendant had any part of his land in tliat vill, the verdict would be for him on that issue. This turned the difficulty upon the plaintiff, and therefore he was almost always driven to a new assign- ment, in which he ascertained the place with proper exactness. . . . This general plea of freehold is usually called the com- mon bar, and sometimes the general issue." Greene v. Jones, 1 Saund. 299 b, 297 c, n. 6. 3 In the common bar, it seems that the defendant is not bound to name his close. (1 Saund. 299 b, n. 5 ; Elwis V. Lombe, 6 Mod. 117; s. c. Salk. 453, sed. q u.? ( but it is doubtful ). SeeCocker V. Crompton, 1 Barn. & Cress. 489 ; and Martin v. Kesterton, ubi supra. * See examples, Baldwin's Case, 2 Co. Rep. 18. But if the plaintiff has named his close in the declaration, the plea of freehold does not drive him to new- assign, though the defendant may have another close of the same name in the same parish ; unless, at least, the de- fendant, in his plea, describes his close by its abuttals. (Cocker v. Crompton, ubi supra ; and see Lethbridge v. Winter, 2 Bing. 49.) And on the subject of the common bar generally, see 1 Saund. 299 b, n. 5 ; Martin v. Kesterton, ubi supra ; Ilawke v. Bacon, 2 Taunt. 1 56. N. B. — In order to avoid the prolixity of the common bar and new assignment, it is now usual to name the close in the declaration. 286 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. Exaviple : In trespass quare clausum f regit, for repeated tres- passes, the declaration usually states, that the defendant, on divers days and times before the commencement of the suit, broke and entered the plaintiff's close, and trod down the soil, &c.. without setting forth, more specifically, in what parts of the close or on what occasions the defendant trespassed.-^ Now, the case may be, that the defendant claims a right of way over a certain part of the close, and, in exercise of that right, has repeatedly entered and walked over it ; but has also entered and trod down the soil, &c., on other occasions, and in parts out of the supposed line of way ; and the plaintiff, not admitting the right claimed, may have intended to point his action both to the one set of trespasses and to the other. But, from the generality of the declaration, the defendant is entitled to suppose that it refers only to his entering and walking in the line of way. He may, therefore, in his plea allege, as a complete answer to the whole complaint, that he has a right of way by grant, &c., over the said close ; and if he does this, and the plaintiff confines himself in his replication to a traverse of that plea, and the defendant at the trial proves a right of way as alleged, the plaintiff would be precluded (upon the principle already explained) from giving evidence of any trespasses committed out of the line or track in which the defendant should thus appear entitled to pass. Tbp^jilaintifF'H fQu rse of pleading in such a case, tbere- ' fore, is , both Jo traverse the plea and also to new-assign, by alleging that he bro ught his act ion not on ly for those tres- passes supp osed by the defendant, but for others, committe d on o ther occasio ns a nd in other parts of the close, out of the su pposed way, which is usually c a lled a new assignment ext ra v iam r ont of th pway) ; or, if he means to admit the right of WM-, b e may new -assign si mply, without the traverse.^ As the object of a new assignment is to correct a mistake occasioned by the generality of the declaration, it always occ urs in answ er to a plea, and is therefore in the nature of a repli- eatimi. It is not used in any other part of the pleading because the statements subsequent to the declaration are not, in their nature, such, when properly framed, as to give rise to the kiiid of mistake which requires to be corrected by a new assignment. ^ See an example, 9 Went. 97. 2 gge examples of a new assignment extra viam, 9 Went. 323, 396. RULES WHICH TEND TO THE PRODUCTION OF AN ISSUE. 287 A new assignment chiefly occurs in an action of trespass ^ but it seems to be g^enerally allowed in all actions i n which the form of declaration makes the reason of the practice equally applicab le.^ Several new assignments may occur in the course of the same series of pleading. Thus, in the first of the above examples, if it be supposed ih^it. three different assaults had been committed, two of which were justifiable, the defendant might plead, as above, to the declaration, and then, by way of plea to the new assignment, he might again justify, in the same manner, another assault ; upon which it would become necessary for the plaintiff to new-assign a third, and this upon the same principle by which the first new assignment was required.^ A new assignment is said to b e in the nature of a new declaration .^ It seems, however, to be more properly con- sidered as a repetition of the declaration, differing onl^ in this, that it distinguishes the true ground of complaint as being different from that which is covered by the plea. Being in the nature of a new or repeated declaration, it is conse- quen tly to be fram ed with as much certainty or specification oj^cjrcui nstances as the declaration itself. In some cases, indeed, it should be even more particular, so as to avoid the necessity of another new assignment. Thus, if the plaintiff declares in trespass quare clausum /regit without naming the close, and the defendant pleads the common bar, which, as we have seen, obliges the plaintiff to new-assign, he must, in his new assignment, either give his close its name or otherwise sufficiently describe it,^ though such name or de- scription was not required in the declaration.^ 1 Chit. PI. 543; Vin. Ab. Novel Hunt, 11 East. 451 ; Cheasleyr. Barnes, Assignment, 4, 5 ; 3 "Went. 151 ; Batt 10 Ea.st. 73; Taylor v. .Smith, 7 Taunt. V. Bradley, Cro. Jac. 141. 156; Taylor v. Cole, 3 T. E. 292 ; Lam- 2 Chit. PI. 544 ; I Saund. 299 c. bert v. Prince, 1 Biug. 317 ; Phillijjs v. 3 Bac. Ab. Trespass (1), 4, 2 ; 1 Howgate, 5 Barn. & Aid. 220. Some of Saund. 299 c. these cases will be found to involve nice * Semh. (it seems) T)y. 264 a ; Com. distinctions as to the necessity, in par- Dig. Pleader, 3 M. 34. (See an example, ticular instances, of a new assignment. 9 Went. 187.) See specially, Huddart v. Rigby, 5 L. ^ On the subject of new assignment, K. Q. B. 139, and Ellison v. Isles, 11 see 1 Saund. 299 a, n. 6 ; Barnes v. Ad. & E. 665. 28» COMMON-LAW PLEADING. The rule under consideration and its exceptions^ being now discussed, the last point of remark relates to an inference or deduction to which it gives rise. It is implied in this rule, that as the proceeding must he hy demurrer^ traverse, or confessioti and avoidance, so any OF THESE FORMS OF OPPOSITION TO THE LAST PLEADING IS IN ITSELF SUFFICIENT. ^ There is, however, an exception to this in a case which the books consider as anomalous and solitary. It is as follows : If in debt on a bond, conditioned for the performance of an award, the defendant pleads that no award was made, and the plaintiff, in reply, alleges that an award was made, setting it forth, it is held that he must also proceed to state a breach of the award, and that without stating such breach the repli- cation is insufficient.^ " The reason was, because an award may be good in one part, and void in another ; and therefore it is incumbent upon the plaintiff to show a breach thereof, that the court may judge whether he has well conceived his action or not ; for perhaps he has brought his action for a breach of that part of the award which is void in itself, and consequently has not any cause of action." ^ This, as has been observed, is an anomaly ; for, as by alleging and setting forth the- award he fully traverses the plea which denied the existence of an award, the replication 1 There are also certain specific pleas bar, as they give an answer in point of .which present the anomaly of being fact, and upon the merits ; but they are neither by way of traverse nor of con- in the nature of confession only, without fession and avoidance, and which there- avoidance, for they admit the right of fore deserve notice in this place. These action to exist. (Stephen, 5th English are the pleas of Tender and of Paifinent ed. 331.) into Court. By the first of these, the de- ^ 1 Saund. 103, n. 1 ; Meredith v. Al- feudant alleges that he has been always leyn, 1 Salk. 138 ; s. c. Carth. 116 ; Nich- ready to pay the debt demanded, and olson v. Simpson, Str. 299. Though this before the commencement of the action is considered as a solitary case, it may be tendered it to the plaintiff, and now observed that another analogous one is to brings it into Court ready to be paid to be found (Gayle v. Betts, 1 ilod. 227). him. By the second of these pleas, the 3 Hayman v. Gerrard, 1 Saund. 103 ; defendant alleges simply that he brings Jones, arguendo (in argument), quoting a sum of money into Court ready to be Holt, C. J., in Meredith v. AUeyn, ubi paid to the plaintiff, and that the latter supra. This reason is not satisfactory has no claim to any larger amount, to Mr. Stephen. They are both in the nature of pleas in RULES WHICH TEND TO THE PRODUCTION OF AN ISSUE. 289 would seem, according to the general rule under consideration, to be sufficient without the specification of any breach. And in accordance with that rule it is expressly laid down, that in all other cases, " if the defendant pleads a special matter that admits and excuses a non-'performance, the plaintiff need only answer and falsify the special matter alleged; for he that excuses a non-performance supposes it, and the plaintiff need not show that which the defendant hath supposed and admitted." i Rule II. Upon a Traverse, Issue must be Tendered. V In the account already given of traverses, it was shown that, with the exception of a special traverse, the different forms all involve a tender of issue. The rule under consideration prescribes this as a necessary incident to them ; and estab- lishes it as a general principle, that wherever a traverse takes place, or, in other words, wherever a denial or contradiction of fact occurs in pleading, issue ought, at the same time, to be tendered on the fact denied. The reason is, that as by , the contr adiction it sufficiently appears what is the issue or ■ matte r m dispute between the parties, it is time that the plead - j ing should now close., and that the method of deciding this issue should be adjusted. The formulce of tendering the issue in fact vary, of course, according to the mode of trial proposed. i The tender of an issue to Vtp ^t-i'pyI hy y^/y>.y jg ]\y ^, formnlp / called iXyd Mnclusion to the country ^ This conclusion is in the following words, when the issue is tendered by the defendant : " And of this the said C. D. puts himself upon the country." When it is tendered by the plaintiffs the formula is as follows : "And this the said -4. B. prays may he inquired 0/ by the country." 2 It is held, however, that there is no material difference between these two modes of expression, and that if ponit se be substituted for petit quod inquiratur, or vice versa^ the mistake is unimportant.^ 1 Per Holt, C. J., Meredith i». Alleyn, Glover, 10 Mod. 166; Bract. 57; Ry. 1 Salk. 138. Plac. Pari. 146. " Heath's Maxims, 68 ; Weltale v. ^ Weltale v. Glover, ubi supra. 19 290 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. With respect to the extraordinary methods of trial, their occurrence is too rare to have given rise to any illustration of the rule in question. It refers chiefly to traverses of such matters of fact as are triable by the country ; and, therefore, we find it propounded in the books most frequently in the following form : Tliat upon a negative and ajfirmative the pleading shall conclude to the country, hut otherwise with a verification} Exception. To the rule, in whatever form expressed, there is the follow- ing exception ; That when new matter is introduced^ the pleading should^ al ways conclude with a verification? To this exception belongs the case, formerly noticed, of s pecial traverses . These, as already explained, never tender issue, but always conclude with a verification; and the reason .seems to be, that in such of them as contain new matter in ..the inducement, the introduction of that new matter will give the opposite party a right to be heard in answer to it if the absque hoc be immaterial, and consequently makes a tender of V^issue premature. And, on the other hand, with respect to such special traverses as contain no new matter in the inducement, they seem in this respect to follow the analogy of those first mentioned, though they are not within the same reason. Not only in the case of special traverses, but in other instances also, to which that form does not apply, a traverse may sometimes involve the allegation of new matter ; and in all such instances, as well as upon a special traverse, and for a similar reason, the conclusion must be with a verification, and not to the country. Examples : (1) Where the action is in debt on a bond con- ditioned for performance of covenants, if the defendant pleads generally performance of the covenants, and the plaintiff, in his replication, relies on a breach of them, he must show specially in what that breach consists ; for to reply generally that the defendant 1 Com. Dig. Pleader, E. 32 ; 1 Saund. Stile, 401 ; Comwallis v. Sarery, 2 103, n. 1. Burr. 772; Vere v. Smith, 2 Lev. 5; 2 1 Saund. 103, n. 1, and the authori- s. c. Vent. 121 ; Sayre v. Minns, Cowp. ties there cited ; "Whitehead v. Buckland, 575 ; Henderson v. Withy, 2 T. K. 576. RULES WHICH TEND TO THE PRODUCTION OF AN ISSUE. 291 did not perform them would be too vague and uncertain.^ His replication, therefore, setting forth, as it necessarily does, the circumstances of the breach, discloses new matter; and conse- quently, though it is a direct denial or traverse of the plea, it must not tender issue, but must conclude with a verification.^ (2) In an action of debt on bond conditioned to indemnify the plaintiff against the consequences of a certain act, if the defendant pleads non damnificatus (not damaged), and the plain- tiff replies, alleging a damnification, he must, on the principle just explained, set forth the circumstances, and the new matter thus introduced will make a verification necessary.* (3) The plaintiff declared in debt, on a bond conditioned for the performance of certain covenants by the defendant in his capacity of clerk to the plaintiff, one of which covenants was to account for all the money that he should receive. The defendant pleaded performance. The plaintiff replied, that on such a day such a sum came to his hands, which he had not accounted for. The defendant rejoined that he did account, and in the following manner : that thieves broke into the counting-house and stole the money, and that he acquainted the plaintiff with the fact ; and he concluded with a verification. The court held, that though there was an express affirmative that he did account, in contradiction to the statement in the replication that he did not account, yet that the conclusion with a verification was right ; for that, new matter being alleged in the rejoinder, the plaintiff ought to have liberty to come in with a surrejoinder, and answer it by traversing the robbery.* The application, however, to particular cases, of this excep- tion, as to the introduction of new matter, is occasionally nice and doubtful ; and it becomes difficult sometimes to say whether there is any such introduction of new matter as to make the tender of issue improper. Example : In debt on a bond conditioned to render a full ac- count to the plaintiff of all such sums of money and goods as were belonging to W. N. at the time of his death, the defendant pleaded that 7io goods or sums of money came to his hands. The plaintiff replied, that a silver bowl, which belonged to the said W. N. at the time of his death, came to the hands of the defendant, ^ This results from a rule wliich wiU * gee an example in Richards v. be discussed hereafter. Hodges, 2 Saund. 82. 2 See an example in Gainsford v. * Vere v. Smith, 2 Lev. 5 ; s. c. Vent Griffith, 1 Saund. 54. 121. 292 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. viz., on such a day and year ; " and this he is ready to verify," &c. On demurrer, it was contended that the replication ought to have concluded to the country, there being a complete negative and affirmative ; but the court thought it well concluded, as new matter was introduced. However, the learned judge who reports the case thinks it clear that the replication was bad ; and Mr. Ser- jeant Williams expresses the same opinion, holding that there was no introduction of new matter, such as to render a verification proper.^ \ EuLE III. Issue, when well Tendered, must be Accepted.^ If issue be well tendered, both in point of substance and in point of form, nothing remains for the opposite party but to accept or join in it, and he can neither demur, traverse, nor plead in confession and avoidance ; hut he may plead in estoppel. The acceptance of the issue, in case of a conclusion to the country, i. e., of trial by jury, may, as already explained, either be added in making up the issue or paper-book, or may be filed or delivered before that transcript is made up. It is in both cases called the similiter, and in the latter case a special similiter. The form of a special similiter is thus: "And the said A. 5." for " C. i)."j, "as to the plea" (or "replication," etc.), "of the said C. i>." for "^. B:'J, " whereof he hath put himself upon the country " for whereof he hath prayed it may be " inquired by the country "), " doth the like." The similiter, when added in making up the issue or paper-book, is simply this : " And the said A. B." for " a Drj, " doth the like." As the party has no option in accepting the issue, when well tendered, and as the similiter may in that case be added for him, the acceptance of the issue, when well tendered, may be considered as a mere matter of form. It is a form, how- ever, which should be invariably observed ; and its omission 1 Hayman v. Gerrard, 1 Saund. 101. "Wilson v. Kemp, 2 M. & S. 549. "In But see Cornwallis v. Savery, Burr. 772 ; all pleadings, wherever a traverse was first Sayre v. Minns, Cowp. 575. properly taken, the issue closed." (Gilb., 2 Bac. Ab. Pleas, &c. 363 ; 5th C. P. 66.) ed.; Digby v. Fitzharbert, Hob. 104; RULES WHICH TEND TO THE PRODUCTION OP AN ISSUE. 293 has sometimes proved a ground of successful objection, even after verdict.^ The rule expresses that the i ssue must be accepted only when it is well tendered. For i f the opposite party thinks the traverse bad^ in substance or in form , or objects to th e Tn ode of _t rial proposed, i n either case he_J8^ot_obliged_to_ add the similiter^, but may demur^ and, if it has been added for him, may strike it out and demur. The s imiliter^ therefore, s erves to mark the acceptance both of the qu estion itself and the mode of trial proposed . It seems originally, however, to have been introduced with a view to the latter point only. As has been already explained, the resort to a jury, in ancient times, could generally be had only by the mutual consent of each party. It appears to have been with the object of expressing such consent that the similiter was in those times added in drawing up the record ; and from the record it afterward found its way into the written pleadings. Accordingly, no similiter or other acceptance of issue is necessary when recourse is had to any of the other modes of trial ; and the rule in question does not extend to these. Thus, when issue isj ^ ndered to bejtri ed by the record , th e plaintiff is entitled to consider the issue a s complete upon such tender,^ and no acceptance of it, on t he other side, is essential. The rule in question extends to an issue in law, as well as an issue in fact ; for, by analogy (as it would seem) to the similiter, the party whose pleading is opposed by a demurrer is required formally to accept the issue in law which it tenders by the formula called a joinder in demurrer. However, it 1 GriflBth v. Crockford, 3 Brod. & with an absque hoc). So it is said, per Bing. 1. But see Saund. 319, n. 6; and Holt, C. J., that pleading over, when Tidd 956, 8th ed. issue is offered, is a discontinuance. 2 But he can not plead over, as we (Campbell v. St. John, 1 Salk. 219.) have seen he may do in case of an im- ^ And the replication may, therefore, material traverse with an absque hoc. conclude with an entry that a day is Whitehead v. Buckland, Stile, 402 ; given to inspect the record. (Tipping where Roll, C. J., says the plaintiff v. .Johnson, 2 Bos. & Pul. 302 ; Jackson " must either demur or join issue with v. Wickes, 2 Marsh. 354 ; s. c. 7 Taunt, you ; and I have not heard of passing 30 ; Pitt v. Knight, 1 Saund. 96 a, Tidd, over in this case, as may be done in the 800, 801, 8th ed.) case of a traverse" (meaning a traverse 294 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. differs in this respect from the similiter, that, whether the issue in law be well or ill tendered — that is, whether the demurrer be in proper form or not — the opposite party is equally bound to join in demurrer. For it is a rule, that there can be no demurrer upon a demurrer,^ because the first is sufficient, not- withstanding any inaccuracy in its form, to bring the record before the court for their adjudication ; and as for traverse or pleading in confession and avoidance, there is of course no ground for them while the last pleading still remains unan- swered, and there is nothing to oppose but an exception in point of law. 1 Bac. Ab. Pleas, &c. N. 2. Demurrer upon demurrer is a discontinuance. Campbell v. St. John, 1 Salk. 219. CHAPTER X. OF RULES WHICH TEND TO SECURE THE MATERIALITY OF THE ISSUE. In order to secure the materiality of the issue, it is of course necessary that at each step of the series of pleadings , by which it is to be produced, t here should be s ome pertinen t and material allegat ion o r denial of fact. On this subject, therefore, a general rule may be propounded in the following form : — Rule. All Pleadings must contain Matter Pertinent AND Material. Examples : (1) If to an action of assiimpsit against an adminis- tratrix, laying promises by the intestate, she pleads that she, the defendant (instead of the intestate), did not promise, the plea is obviously immaterial and bad.^ (2) So where, in replevin for taking cattle, the defendant avowed taking them in the close in which, etc., for rent in arrear, and the plaintiff pleaded in bar to the avowry that the cattle were not levant (rising) and couchant (lying down) on the close in which, etc., the plea was holden bad on demurrer ; for it is a general rule, that all things upon the premises are distrainable for rent in arrear, and the levancy and couchancy of the cattle is imma- terial, unless under special circumstances, such as did not appear by the plea in bar to have existed in this case.'' With respect to traverses in particular, this general doc- trine is illustrated in the books by subordinate rules of a more Rjiecial kind. Thus it is laid down: — (1) That traverse must not he taken on an immaterial oint.^ 1 Anon., 2 Vent. 196. 8 Com. Dig. rieader, R. 8, G. 10; 2 Jones V. Powell, 5 Barn. & Cress. 647. Bac. Ab. Pleas, &c. H. 5. 296 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. j This ru le prohibits, first, t he taking ^3, traverse on a point TM/ffmmmaierial. ' Example: "Where, to an action of trespass for assault and battery, the defendant pleaded that a judgment was recovered, and execution issued thereupon against a third person, and that the plaintiff, to rescue that person's goods from the execution, assaulted the bailiffs, and that in aid of the bailiffs, and by their covimand, the defendant vioUlter manus imjjosuit upon the plain- tiff, to prevent his rescue of the goods, it was holden that a traverse of the command of the bailiffs was bad ; for even without their command the defendant might lawfully interfere to prevent a rescue, which is a breach of the peace.^ . So, by this rulej^a traverse is not^goo d when taken on matter I th£_allegatim]^qf which was premature^ jbhough in itself not im- ' material to the case. Example : If in debt on bond the plaintiff should declare that, at the time of sealing and delivery, the defendant was of full age, the defendant should not traverse this, because it was not neces- sary to allege it in the declaration ; though if in fact he was a minor, this would be a good subject for a plea of infancy, to which the plaintiff might then well reply the same matter, viz., that he was of age.^ / Again, t his rule prohibits the taJcinp of a traverse on matte r - of. agg ra vatiorii , ; that is, matter which only tends to i ncrease I t he amount of damages , , and does not concern the right of ' ajfition itself. Example : In trespass for chasing sheep, per quod (through which) the sheep died, the dying of the sheep, being aggravation only, is not traversable.^ So it is laid down that, in general, traverse is not t o_Ji£. taken on matte r of in ducementj that is, matter brought fox - wa rd only by way of explanatory introduction to the main allftgntions. 1 Bridgewater v. Bythway, 3 Lev. traversable. (Britton v. Cole, 3 Salk. 113. AUter (otherwise), if not done to 409.) prevent a rescue ; for in a case where ^ Sir Ralph Bovy's Case, 1 Vent, defendant justifies merely as assistant 217; Ricketts v. Loftus, 14 Q. B. 482. to, and by command of, a person exe- ^ Leech v. Widsley, 1 Vent. 54 ; s. C. cuting legal process, the command is Lev. 283. RULES TO SECURE THE MATERIALITY OP THE ISSUE. 297 But this is open to many exceptions , for it often happens that introductory matter is in itself esse ntial, and of the sub - stance ojjhe^casej^and^ such instances, though in the natur e of induce ment, it may nevertheless be traversed .^ While it is thus the rule, that traverse must not be taken on an immaterial point, it is, on the other hand, to be ob- served tJiat, where there are several material alhaationa. it is in the option of the pleader to tra.versp. whinh he pleases? Examples: (1) If, in trespass, the defendant pleads that A. was seised and demised to him, the plaintiff may traverse either the seisin or the demise.* (2) Again, in trespass, the defendant pleads that A. was seised, and enfeoffed B., who enfeoffed C, who enfeoffed D., whose estate the defendant hath : in this case the plaintiff may traverse which of the feoffments he pleases.* The principle of this rule is sufficiently clear ; for it is evident that where the case of any party is built upon sev- eral allegations, each of which is essential to its support, it is as effectually destroyed by the demolition of any one of these parts as of another. It is also laid down — ^ (2) That a traverse must not he too large, nor, on the other hand, too narrow.^ As a traverse must not be taken on an immaterial allega- tion, so, when applied to an allegation that is material, it ought, generally, to tajke in no more and no less of t lrat nllo^ a ation tha,n is mMeriaL If it involves more, the traverse is said to be too large ; if less, too narrow. Traverses too Large. A traverse may be too In rgf^ V>y involvina; in the issue / quantity, time, place^ or other circu iriat^np.PH^ wbi(;;,h^ thnnp;h 1 Com. Dig. Pleader, G. 14; Kin- Ruddle, Salk. 627 ; Bac. Ab. Pleas, &c. nersley v. Cooper, Cro. Eliz. 168; H. 5, 392, 5th ed. Carvick v. Blagrave, 1 Brod. & Bing. » Com. Dig. Pleader, G. 10 ; Moor v. 531. Pudsey, Hardr. 317. '^ Com. Dig. Pleader, G. 10; Read's * Doct. PI. 365. Case, 6 Co. Kep. 24; Doct. PI. 354, ^ i Sauud. 268, n. 1, 269, n. 2 ; Com. 365 ; Baker v. Blackman, Cro. Jac. 682 ; Dig. Pleader, G. 15, G. 16. Young V. Iludd, Carth. 347 ; Young v. 298 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. j forming part of t he allega tion traversed, ar e immaterial to the I mei'its of the cause. Examples : (1) In an action of debt on bond conditioned for the payment of £1,550, the defendant pleaded that part of the sum mentioned in the condition, to wit, £1,500, was won by gaming, contrary to the statute in such case made and provided, and that the bond was consequently void. The plaintiff replied that the bond was given for a just debt, and traversed that the £1,500 was won by gaming, in manner and form as alleged. On demurrer, it was objected that the replication was ill, because it made the precise sum parcel of the issue, and tended to oblige the defendant to prove that the whole sum of £1,500 was won by gaming ; whereas the statute avoids the bond if any part of the consideration be on that account. The court was of opinion that there was no color to maintain the replication, for that the ma- terial part of the plea was that part of the money for which the bond was given was won by gaming ; and that the words " to wit, £1,500," were only form, of which the replication ought not to have taken any notice.^ (2) Where the condition of a bond was that the obligor should serve the obligee half a year, and, in an action of debt on the bond, the defendant pleaded that he had served him half a year at D., in the county of K., and the plaintiff replied that he had not served him half a year at D., in the county of K., this was adjudged to be a bad traverse, as involving the place, which was immaterial.^ (3) Where the plaintiff pleaded that the queen, at a manor court, held on such a day, by I. S., her steward, and by copy of court-roll, etc., granted certain land to the plaintiff's lessor, and the defendant rejoined, traversing that the queen, at a manor court, held such a day, by I. S., her steward, granted the land to the lessor, the court held that the traverse was ill, " for the jury are thereby bound to find a copy on such a day, and by such a steward, which ought not to be." The traverse, it seems, ought to have been, that the queen did not grant, iii manner and form as alleged,^ words which, as already observed, bring into issue only the substance of the allegation. (4) Where, in an action on the case for stopping three lights (windows), the defendant traversed that he stopjyed the said three lights, it was held bad, for if he stopped any of them, the action lay.* 1 Colborne t;. Stockdale, Str, 493; 3 Lane t;. Alexander, Yelv. 122. 8. c. 8 Mod. 58. * Com. Dig. Pleader, G. 15; Newhall 2 Doct. PI. 360. V. Barnard, Yelv. 225. RULES TO SECURE THE MATERIALITY OF THE ISSUE. 299 Again, a traverse may be too large, by being taken in the conjunctive, instead of the disjunctive, where it is not material that the allegation traversed should be proved conjunctively. Example : In an action of assumpsit, the plaintiff declared on a policy of insurance, and averred " that the ship insured did not arrive in safety ; but that the said ship, tackle, apparel, ordnance, munition, artillery, boat, and other furniture, were sunk and de- stroyed in the said voyage." The defendant pleaded with a traverse, " Without this, that the said ship, tackle, apparel, ord- nance, munition, artillery, boat, and other furniture, were sunk and destroyed in the voyage, in manner and form as alleged." Upon demurrer, this traverse was adjudged to be bad; and it was held that the defendant ought to have denied, disjunctively, that the ship o?- tackle, etc., was sunk or destroyed, because, in this action for damages, the plaintiff would be entitled to recover compensation for any part of that which was the subject of insur- ance, and had been lost ; whereas (it was said), if issue had been taken in the conjunctive form, in which the plea was pleaded, "and the defendant should prove that only a cable or anchor arrived in safety, he would be acquitted of the whole." ^ On the other hand, however, a parti/ may, generally, traverse a material allegation of title or estate, to the extent to which it is alleged, though it need not have been alleged to that extent ; and such traverse will not be considered as too large.^ Examples : (1) In an action of replevin, the defendant avowed the taking of the cattle, as damage feasant, in the place in which, etc. ; the same being the freehold of Sir F. L. To this the plain- tiff pleaded that he was seised in his demesne as of fee of B. close, adjoining to the place in which, etc. ; that Sir F. L. was bound to repair the fence between B. close and the place in which, etc. ; and that the cattle escaped through a defect of that fence. The defendant traversed, that the plaintiff was seised in his dernesne as of fee of B. close ; and on demurrer the court was of opinion that it was a good traverse, for though a less estate than a seisin in fee would have been sufficient to sustain the plaintiff's case, yet, as the plaintiff, who should best know 1 Goram v. Sweeting, 2 Saund. 205. Blagrave, 1 Brod. &Bing. 531. Palmer 2 Com. Dig. Pleader, G. 16; Sir y. Ekins, 2 Str. 818, is apparently contra, Francis Leke's Case, Dy. 365 ; 2 Saund. but, from the report of the same case 207, n. 24 ; Wood v. Budden, Hob. 119 ; (2 Ld. Raym. 1550), it may be reconciled Tatem v. Perient, Yelv. 195 ; Carvick v. with the other authorities. 300 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. what estate he had, had pleaded a seisin in fee, his adversary- was entitled to traverse the title so laid.^ (2) Again, in an action of trespass, for trespasses committed in a close of pasture, containing eight acres, in the town of Tol- lard Royal, the defendant pleaded that W., Earl of Salisbury, was seised in fee and of right of an ancient chase of deer, called Cran- born, and that the said chase did extend itself, as well in and through the said eight acres of pasture as in and through the said town of Tollard Royal 5 and justified the trespasses as com- mitted in using the said chase. The plaintiff traversed, that the said chase extended itself as tvell to the eight acres as to the whole toivn ; and, issue being taken thereon, it was tried and found for the plaintiff. It was then moved, in arrest of judgment, " that this issue and verdict were faulty, because, if the chase did ex- tend to the eight acres only, it was enough for the defendant ; and therefore the finding of the jury, that it did not extend as well to the whole town as to the eight acres, did not conclude against the defendant's right in the eight acres, which was only in question. But it was answered by the court, that there was no fault in the issue, much less in the verdict (which was accord- ing to the issue), but the fault was in the defendant's plea; for he puts in his plea more than he needed, viz., the whole town, which, being to his own disadvantage and to the advantage of the plaintiff, there was no reason for him to demur upon it, but rather to admit it, as he did, and so to put it in issue. And so judgment was given for the plaintiff." ^ Traverses too Narrow. A traverse is too narrow when it fails to answer fully the whole of the adversary's allegation, wliich it proposes to answer.^ Examples : (1) If to an action on the case for slander, charging the words to have been spoken at S., on a day named, the defend- ant plead that he spoke the words imputed to him at W., as counsel in a judicial proceeding, absque hoe " that he spoke the words at S. before or after the day mentioned in the declaration," by which he excluded the day itself, and answered not to it, the traverse is too narrow^ and for that reason is bad.-* (2) In an action of assicmj^sit, to recover a recompense for service from March 21, 1647, to November 1, 1664, the defendant ' Sir Francis Leke'a Case, Dy. 365 ; 3 Min. ingt. IV. 930. 2 Saund. 206 a, n. 22. 4 Cora. Dig. Pleader, G. 16 ; Burkley 2 Wood V. Budden, Hob. U9. v. Wood, 4 Co. Kep. 14 b. EULES TO SECUEE THE MATERIALITY OP THE ISSUE. 301 pleaded that the plaintiff left the service on December 31, 1658 ; without this that th.e plaintiff served until November 1, 1664; it was held to be too narrow a traverse, because the plaintiff was entitled to recover in proportion to the time he served. In another aspect it was also too large, because it put in issue the whole time of service, thus calling upon the plaintiff to prove more than he was obliged to in order to recover.^ (3) In an action of trespass for breaking open the outer doors of the plaintiff^s dwelling-house, the defendants pleaded that they were sheriff's officers, and that an execution of fieri facias upon the plaintiff's goods came to their hands as such officers, by virtue of which they entered the house. The court held the plea bad, because it did not answer the breaking, and therefore tended to raise an immaterial issue.^ This case illustrates the principle under consideration, although, being a plea by way of confession and avoidance, it is not an example of too narrow a traverse. Many similar cases can be found in the books. (4) In an action of trover for the value of cattle and goods of the plaintiff, to wit, beasts of the plough, implements of hus- bandry, books, bedsteads, etc., the defendant by his plea justified the seizure as for distress, for rent in arrear. The plaintiff re- plied that he was an husbandman, and that the goods mentioned in the count were beasts of the plough and implements of hus- bandry, there being then on the premises other available distress. This replication was held bad as being too narrow, not traversing the legality of the distress as to the books and bedsteads, although it professed to answer the whole plea.^ (5) In an action of trespass quare clausum fregit for breaking plaintiff's close, the plea of the defendant stated that the plaintiff was his lessee of the locus in quo (place in which), and that in the lease was, amongst others, a condition that the lessee should not assign in any way, notwithstanding which the lessee had as- signed in a particular manner which was specified. The plaintiff replied that he had not assigned in that manner. This replication was held to be bad, because it limited the denial to the specific mode of assignment stated in the plea.^ So, a traverse may be too narrow by being applied to part only of an allegation, which the law considers as in its 1 Com. Dig. Pleader, G. 16 ; Osborne ^ Davies v. Aston, 1 Man. Gr. & Scott, V. Kogers, 1 Saund. 268, n. 1, 269 a, b, 746. and n. 2. * Hammond «. Colls, ihid. 916. 2 Buckingham v. Francis, II Moore, 40. 302 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. nature indivisible and entire, such as that of a prescription or grant. Example : In an action of trespass for breaking and entering the plaintiff's close, called S. C, and digging stones therein, the defendant pleaded that there are certain wastes lying open to one another, one, the close called S. C, and the other called S. G., and so proceeded to prescribe for the liberty of digging stones in both closes, and justified the trespasses under that prescription. The replication traversed the prescriptive right in S. C. onl^, dropping S. G. ; but the court held that the traverse could not be so confined, and must be taken on the whole prescription as laid.i The principle, which forbids too narrow a traverse, is the same as that which requires that everi/ pleading shall really answer so much of the adversary^ s pleading as it professes and undertakes to answer. 1 Morewood v. Wood, 4 T. E. 157; Bradburn v. Kennerdale, Carth. 164; 1 and see Doct. PI. 351, 352, 370 ; Priddle Saund. 268, n. 1. and Napper's Case, 11 Co. Rep. 10 b; CHAPTER XL OF RULES WHICH TEND TO PRODUCE SINGLENESS OR UNITY IN THE ISSUE. The following rules enforce singleness in the method of pleading or allegation, and, by consequence, tend to produce a single issue. Rule I. Pleadings must not be Double.^ This rule applies both to the declaration and to subsequent pleadings. Its meaning, with respect to the former, is that the declaration must not, in su pport of a single demand, allege several distinct matters^ hy any one of which that demand is sufficiently/ sup,ported . With respect to th eZsubsequent plead:L ings^the meaning is that none of them is to co7itai7i severa l distinct answers to that which preceded^ it, and the reason of the i rule in each case is, that such pleading tends to several issues concerning a single claim. The rule in its terms points to douhleness only, as if it pro- hibited only the use of two allegations or answers of this description ; but its meaning, of course, equally extends to the case of more than two, the term douhleness, or duplicity, being applied, though with some inaccuracy, to either case. Of this rule, as applied to the declaration, the following are Examples: (1) The plaintiff declared in debt on a peual bill,*^ by which the defendant was to pay ten shillings on the 11th of June, and ten shillings upon the 10th of July next following, and ten shillings every three weeks after, till a certain total sum were 1 Com. Dig. Pleader, C. 33, E. 2, F. in use, having been superseded by bonds 16; Bac.Ab. Pleas, ^«. K. ; Humphreys with conditions. The example in the V. Bethily, 2 Vent. 198, 222; Doct. PI. text would, therefore, not occur in 135. modern practice, but serves equally well 2 Bills penal are instruments not now the purpose of illustration. 304 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. satisfied by such several payments, and by the said bill the de- fendant bound himself for the true payment of the said several sums in the penal sum of seven pounds, and the plaintiff alleged that the defendant did not pay the said total sum, or any -part thereof, upon the several days aforesaid ; whereby an action had accrued to him to demand the said penalty of seven pounds. This was held bad for duplicity. For, if the defendant had failed in payment of any one of the sums, such failure would alone be a breach of the condition, and sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to the penalty he claimed ; and the plaintiff ought, therefore, to have confined himself to the allegation of the non-payment of one of those sums only.^ (2) Where the plaintiff declared in assumpsit, that the de- fendant was indebted to him in_siuih-a-aiUIi»\for nourishing one E. L., at the request of the defendant, which the latter, promise d t o pay , and also that the defendant promised t -.n pgy him so much as_he reasonabl y deserved to have for nourishing the said K _Iu_ during the same time ; this was bad for duplicity, and, indeed, also for repugnancy (another fault in pleading that will be here- after considered), as the two promises — to pay a sum certain, and to pay quantum meruit — were inconsistent, and could not stand together.^ Of duplicity in pleadings, subsequent to the declaration, the following instance occurs in a plea in abatement : Example : The defendant pleaded, in disability of the person of the plaintiff, ten^ different outlawries adjudged against him, and it was held that the plea was ill for duplicity ; because the plaintiff was disabled as well by one outlawry as by the whole ten.^ The following is an instance of duplicity in a plea in bar : Example : In trespass for breaking a close and depasturing the herbage with cattle, if the defendant pleads that A. had a right of common, and B. also a right of common, in the close, and that the defendant, as their servant and by their command, entered and turned in the cattle, in exercise of their rights of common, the plea is bad for duplicity; ^ because the title of either one or other 1 Humphreys v. Bethily, 2 Vent. Cornwallis v. Savery, 2 Burr. 773 ; Man- 198, 222. ser's Case, 2 Co. Rep. 4. '^ Hart V. Longfield, 7 Mod. 148. As » Trevilian i". Seccomb, Carth. 8. to duplicity in the declaration, see also * Vin. Ab. tit. Double Pleas, A. 114, cites 15 Henry VII. 10. EULES TO PRODUCE SINGLENESS OR UNITY IN THE ISSUE. 305 of the commoners, and the authority derived as his servant, would have alone constituted a sufficient answer to the declaration. An instance of duplicity in the replication is the following Example : The plaintiff declared in trespass for breaking and entering his stable, cutting asunder a beam, and throwing down the tiles of the roof. The defendant justified, as servant to Sir H. G., and pleaded that Sir H. G. was seised of a wall in his demesne as of fee, and because the beam was placed in the wall of the said Sir H. G. without his consent, the defendant, as his servant, in order to remove this nuisance, did enter the stable and cut the beam as near to the wall as he could, doing as little dam- age as possible, and thereby the tiles were thrown down. The plaintiff replied, traversing that the wall was Sir H. G .'s ; and then, with a protestation that f-.hp. wall wag nnt his^ f nrt;ViPr pleaded that the rJefenrlantj of his nwn^xvroT|g^ did throw down the tiles, for the cutting the beam as aforesaid . The court held that, the first traverse being a complete answer to the whole, the second made the replication double.^ -i The gbjSfiLof this rule is to enforce n. sing-lp issno upon a single subject j)f claim or defence ; the rule is, accord ingly, carried no further than is necessary to secure this object. The declaration, therefore, may, in stuppnrt of Rp.vf.ral do.. mands, allege as many d istinrt 'mnttoni'n nly applicable to each. Example : Let one of the examples above given, with respect to the declaration, be so far varied as to substitute, for the case of an action in debt on a penal bill for the penalty accrued in consequence of non-payment of a sum by several instalments, the case of an action of covenant, on a covenant to pay that sum by similar instalments. In this latter case the plaintiff might, with- out duplicity, declare that the defendant " did not pay the said total sum, or any part thereof, upon the several days aforesaid." For he does not, as in the action upon the penal bill, found upon such non-payments a single claim, viz., the claim to the penalty of seven pounds ; there being no penalty in question, his claims are multiplied in proportion to the number of non-payments; that is, he is entitled to ten shillings in respect of the first default, and ten shillings more upon each of the rest ; the allegation of several 1 Humphreys e;. Churchman, Rep. temp. Hard. 289. 20 306 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. defaults is, therefore, in this case, the allegation of so many dis- tinct demands, and consequently allowable.'^ So thevlea, though it must not contain severa l answers t o t he whole of the declaration, may neverthele ss^ make distipQt / ans wers^o such parts ^f it as relate to different matters sd I claim or complaint.^ Example : Thus, in the preceding example of duplicity in a plea in bar, if the case were a little varied, and the defendant, being charged with putting five beasts on the common, had pleaded that A. and B. had respectively rights of common there, and that he, as the servant of A., put in two of the beasts in respect of his common right, and, as the servant of B., put in three in respect of his common right, there would no longer be duplicity ; for he pleads the several titles, not as several answers to the same subject of claim or complaint, but as distinct answers to different matters of complaint, arising in respect of different cattle.^ So, in the replication and other subsequent parts of the series, a severance of pleading may take place in respect of .several subjects of claim or complaint. Example : If an action be brought for trespasses in closes A. and B., and the defendant pleads a single matter of defence applying to both closes, the plaintiff is still at liberty, in his re- plication, to give one answer as to so much of the plea as applies to close A., and another answer as to so much of the plea as applies to close B.* The power, however, of alleging in a plea distinct matters, in answer to such parts of the declaration as relate to differ- ent claims, seems to be subject to this restriction : that neither of the matters so alleged be such as would alone be a sufficient answer to the whole. Example : If an action be brought on two bonds, though the defendant may plead, as to one, payment, and as to the other, duress ; yet if he pleads as to one a release of all actions, and as to the other duress, it will be double ; for the release is alone a sufficient answer to both bonds. ^ 1 See Bac. Ab. Pleas, &c. 446, 5th ed. * See Johns v. Whitley, 3 Wils. 2 Com. Dig. Pleader, E. 2 ; Co. Litt. 132. 304 a. B Doct. PI. 13C ; Vin. Ab. tit. Double 8 Vin. Ab. tit. Double Pleas, A. 115. Pleas, D. In Vmer, however, some RULES TO PRODUCE SINGLENESS OR UNITY IN THE ISSUE. 307 Again, if there he acvp.rnl rfj>fpnrlnnts^ jIp t-ifjf (laainst rhiph'.nit i f is not carried Sofarjl ^ to fr>nrpel on fly gf thvm. tn mnhe tlo o'^imf answer to the dedaratioti. E ach .defendant is at, liberty to use such plea as he may think p roper_ for his own defenc e, and they may either join in the same plea or sever, at their discretion,^ But if the_^ defendants have once united in the plea, the y can not afterward sever at the rejoinder or other later sta^e of the pleading;.^ Where, as to several subjects or several defendants, a severance has thus taken place in the pleading, this may, of course, lead to a corresponding severance in the whole subse- quent series, and, as the ultimate effect, to the production of several issues. And where there are several issues, they may, respectively, be decided in favor of different parties, and the judgment will follow the same division. Such being the nature of duplicity, the following rules will tend to its further illustration. (1^ (A pleading will be double that contains several answers, \ tvhatever be the class or quality of the answer.J Example : It will be double by containing s everal matters in abatement or several matters in_bar .^ or by containing one matte r in abatement and another in b ar.^ So a pleading will be double by containing several matters in confession and avoidance, or_ several answers by way oftrav er^e, or by combining a traverse with a matter in confession and avoidance.^ (2) Matter may suffice to make a pleading double, though it be ill pleaded. Example : In trespass for assault and battery, the defendant pleaded that he committed the trespasses in the moderate correc- cases are cited which show that this a rejoinder by all the defendants was restriction has not been uniformly adjudged to be bad. (Morrow y. Belcher, observed, or is at least open to several 4 Barn. & Cress. 704.) exceptions. ^ Com. Dig. Pleader, E. 2 ; and see 1 Co. Litt. 303 a ; Essington v. the cases already cited on the subject of Boucher, Ilob. 245. It is said, how- duplicity. ever, arfjuendo, in the case cited, that ♦ Semb. Com. Dig. Pleader, E. 2; they cannot sever in dilatory pleas. Bleke v. Grove, 1 Sid. 176. Sed qn.? (See Cuppledick v. Terwhit, 5 Com. Dig. Pleader, E. 2; Bac. Ab. Hob. 2.50.) Pleas, &c. K. ; and seethe cases already 2 And see a case where, upon a cited, replication to a plea by one defendant, / 308 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. tion of the plaintiff as his servant, and further pleaded, that since that time the plaintiff had discharged and released to him the said trespasses, without alleging, as he ought to have done, a release under seal. The court held that this plea was double, the moderate correction and the release being each a matter of defence ; and, though the release was insufficiently pleaded, yet, as it was a matter that a material issue might have been taken upon, it sufficed to make the plea double.-^ On the other hand, it seems that (3) Matter immaterial can not operate to make a pleading double."^ Example : In an action by the executors of J. G. on a bond conditioned that the defendant should warrant to J. G. a certain meadow, the defendant pleaded that the said meadow was copy- hold of a certain manor, and that there is a custom within the manor, that if the customary tenants fail in payment of their rents and services, or commit waste, then the lord for the time being may enter for forfeiture ; and that the said J. G., during his life, peaceably enjoyed the meadow ; which descended after his death to one B., his son and heir; who, of his own wrong, entered without the admission of the lord, against the custom of the manor ; and because three shillings of rent were in arrear on such a day, the lord entered into the meadow, as into lands for- feited. On demurrer, it was objected (among other things) that the plea was double ; because, in showing the forfeiture to have accrued by the heir's own wrongful act, two several matters are alleged : first, that he entered without admission, against the custom; secondly, that three shillings of rent were in arrear. But the judges held, that the only sufficient cause of forfeiture was the non-payment of rent ; that, there being no custom alleged for forfeiture in respect of entry without admission, the averment of such entry was mere surplusage, and could not, therefore, avail to make the plea double.^ It is, however, to be observed, that the plea in this last case seems to rely on the non-payment of the rent as the only 1 Bac. Ab. Pleas, &c. K. 2 ; Bleke double, though only one of the matters i;. Grove, 1 Sid. 175. be material. (Calfer. Nevil, Poph. 186.) 2 Bac. Ab. iihi supra ; 1 Hen. VII. But the weight of the authorities, aud 16 ; Coimtess of Northumberland's Case, the reason of the thing, are opposed to 5 Co. Rep. 98 a; Case of the Execu- this opinion. tors of Grenelefe, Dy. 42 b ; Doct. ^ Case of the Executors of Grenelefe, PI. 138. There is, however, a dictum ubi supra. of Doddridge, J., that a plea may be RULES TO PRODUCE SINGLENESS OR UNITY IN THE ISSUE. 309 ground of forfeiture ; for it alleges that, " because three shil- lings of the rent were in arrear, the lord entered ; " and the court noticed this circumstance. The case, therefore, does not explicitly decide, that where two several matters are not only pleaded, but relied upon, the immateriality of one of them shall prevent duplicity ; but the manner in which the judges express themselves seems to show that the doctrine goes to that extent ; and there are other authorities the same way.^ This doctrine, that a plea m ay,.b e rendered double by ma tter! illpleaded, but not by immaterial matten. quite accords with the object of the rule against duplicity, as formerly explained. That object is the avoidance of several issues. Now, whether a matter be well or ill pleaded, yet if it be sufficient in sub- stance, so that the opposite party may go to issue upon it, if he chooses to plead over, without taking the formal objection, such matter tends to the production of a separate issue, and is on that ground held to make the pleading double. On the other hand, if the matter be immaterial, no issue can properly be taken upon it ; it does not tend, therefore, to a separate issue, nor, consequently, fall within the rule against duplicity. (4) No matter will operate to make a pleading double that is pleade d only as necessary inducement to ano ther allegation. Example : It may be pleaded without duplicity that, after the cause of action accrued, the plaintiff (a woman) took husband, and that the husband afterwards released the defendant ; for, though the coverture is itself a defence, as well as the release, yet the averment of the coverture is a necessary introduction to that of the release.^ This exception to the general rule is prescribed by an evi- dent principle of justice ; for the party has a right to rely on any single matter that he pleases in preference to another ; as in this instance, on the release, in preference to the cover- ture ; but if a necessary inducement to the matter on which he relies, when itself amounting to a defence, were held to make his pleading double, the effect would be to exclude him from this right, and compel him to rely on the inducement only. 1 Bac. Ab. Pleas, &c. K. 2. 2 Bac. Ab. Pleas, &c. K. 2 ; Com. Dig. Pleader, E. 2 ; 24 E. III. 75 b. 310 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. (5) No matters, however multifarious, will operate to make a j pleading double that together constitute hut one connected propo-X ; sitio7i or entire point. Example : To an action for assault and imprisonment, if the defendant plead that he arrested the plaintiff on suspicion of felony, he may set forth any number of circumstances of sus- picion, though each circumstance alone may be sufficient to justify the arrest; for all of them taken together do but amount to one connected cause of suspicion.^ Cumulative Traverses. / This qualification of the rule against duplicity applies not f only to pleadings in confession and avoidance, but to traverses also ; so that a man may deny as well as affirm, in pleading, any number of circumstances that together form but a single point or proposition. Example : In an action of trespass for breaking the plaintiff's close and depasturing it with cattle, the defendant pleaded a right of common in the close for the said cattle, being his own com- monable cattle, levant and couchant, upon the premises. The plaintiff, in the replication, traversed, " that the cattle were the defendant's own cattle, and that they were levant and couchant upon the premises, and commonable cattle." On demurrer for duplicity, it was objected that there were three distinct facts put in issue by this replication, any one of which would be sufficient by itself ; but the court held that the point of the defence was, that the cattle in question were entitled to common ; that this point was single, though it involved the three several facts, that the cattle were the defendant's own, that they were levant and couchant, and that they were commonable cattle ; that the repli- cation traversing these facts, in effect, therefore, only traversed the single point, whether the cattle were entitled to common ; and was, consequently, not open to the objection of duplicity.^ 1 Vin. Ab. Double Pleas, A. 7, cites were fixed) is destructive of the funda- 2 Ed. IV. 8. mental aim of common-law pleading, 2 Eobinson v. Rayley, 1 Burr. 316. that of bringing the parties to issue on Upon this case Mr. Williston, in a note a single narrow point. Robinson v, to the fifth edition of Stephen on Plead- Rayley is the leading case for the allow- ing, comments as follows : " It should ance of such traverses, and the distinc- be observed that the allowance of cumu- tiou there laid down by Lord Mansfield is lative traverses (other than de injuria, 'that you mu.st take issue upon a single for the use of which special boundaries point ; but it is not necessary that this RULES TO PRODUCE SINGLENESS OR UNITY IN THE ISSUE, oil The most frequent instance of this cumulative traverse, as it may be called, occurs in the case of the replication, de injuria absque tali causa. This replication (it will be recollected) al- leges that the defendant did the act (the subject of complaint) of his own wrong, and " without the cause alleged ; " and this cause frequently consists of several connected circumstances. It is, however (as was formerly stated), a restriction in the use of this replication, that it can not be applied so as to include in the traverse any matter alleged on the other side in the nature of title., interest., commandment., authority., or matter of record. If, therefore, any such matter be contained in the plea, and the plaintiff wishes to deny it, such matter must be traversed separately ; or, if he chooses not to point the denial to this, but to other matters in the plea, these other matters must separately form the subject of traverse. In the former case, the denial is in the words of the allegation ; in the latter, the usual form is to plead with a protestation, and a traverse de injuria absque residuo causce, thus : — "Protesting that the said C. D. is not seised, etc. For repli- cation, nevertheless, in this behalf, the said A. B. says that tlie said C. D., of his own wrong, and without the residue of the cause in his said plea alleged, brolie and entered the said close, etc." ^ This restriction, by which matter of title, intprcst^ cmn- mandment., authority, or record is r pgnirpd to bn sp parately traversed, is not to be taken as applicable merely to the use of the replication de injuria^ but extends (it is conceived) in its principle to all cases of cumulative traverse, so that it may be said to be generally true, that where any such matter is alleged in connection with other circumstances, it is not a case in which it is competent to the other party single point should consist only of a gether. This consequence was never single fact. Here the point is, the admitted, nor was Robinson v. Raley cattle being entitled to common ; this overruled, but, though followed in some is the single point of the defence.' But recent cases, it was not followed in any good affirmative plea contains but a others, and, though distinctions were single point of defence. If it contains attempted, the cases in fact seem india- more, it is double, and the only logical tinguishable. DeWolf v. Bevan, 13 M. consequence of Robinson v. Raley is & W. 160; Bonzi u. Stewart, 7 M. & G. that all the material facts of a preceding 740." pleading may always be traversed to- i See the precedent, 9 Went. 327. 312 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. to traverse cumulatively ; ^ and that, if he include all these circumstances in the same traverse, his pleading will be double. In some cases the general issues appear to partake of the nature of these cumulative traverses. For some of them are so framed as to convey a denial, not of any particular fact, but generally of the whole matter alleged, as not guilty in trespass or trespass on the case, and nil debet in debt. And in assumjjsit the case is the same in effect, according to a relaxation of practice formerly explained, by which the de- fendant is permitted, under the general issue, in that action, to avail himself, with some few exceptions, of any matter tending to disprove his liability. The consequence is, that under these general issues the defendant has the advantage of disputing, and therefore of putting the plaintiff to the proof of every averment in the declaration. Thus, by pleading not guilty, in trespass quare clausum f regit, he is enabled to deny, at the trial, both that the land was the plaintiff's and that he committed upon it the trespasses in question, and the plaintiff must establish both these points in evidence. Indeed, besides this advantage of double denial, the defendant obtains, under the general issue, in assumpsit and other actions of trespass on the case, the advantage of double lAeading in confession and avoidance. For, upon the principles formerly explained, he is allowed, in these actions, to bring forward, upon the general issue, almost any matters (though in the nature of confession and avoidance), which tend to disprove his debt or liability ; so he is not limited (as he would be in special pleading), to a reliance on any single matter of this description, but may set up any number of these defences. While such is the effect of many of the general issues in mitigating or evading the rule against duplicity, the remark does not apply to all. Thus, the general issue of 7ion est factum raises only a single ques- tion, namely, whether the defendant executed a valid and genuine deed, such as is alleged in the declaration. The defendant may, under this plea, insist that the deed was not executed by him, or that it was executed under circumstances 1 See BuU. N. P. 93. RULES TO PRODUCE SINGLENESS OR UNITY IN THE ISSUE. 313 which absolutely annul its effect as a deed, but can set up no other kind of defence. . (6) A protestation will not make the pleading double} j A protestation (as already explained) does not tend to issue in the action, but is made merely to reserve to the party the right of denying or alleging the same matter in a future suit. It consequently can not fall within the object of the rule against duplicity, which is, to avoid a plurality of issues. The Use op Several Counts. Having explained the rule against duplicity in pleading, it is necessary, in the next place, to advert to certain modes of practice by which the effect of that rule is materially qualified and evaded. These are, the use of several counts and the allowance of several pleas^ the former being grounded on ancient practice, the latter on the statute 4 Ann. c. 16. First shall be considered the subject of several counts. Where a plaintiff has several distinct causes of action, he is allowed to pursue them cumulatively in the same original writ, subject to certain rules which the law prescribes, as to joining such demands only as are of similar quality or character.^ Examples : He may join a claim of debt on bond with a claim of debt on simple contract, and pursue his remedy for both by the same original writ in debt. So, if several distinct trespasses have been committed, these may all form the subject of one original writ in trespass ; but, on the other hand, a plaintiff can not join in the same suit a claim of debt on bond and a complaint of trespass, these being dissimilar in kind. Where a plaintiff thus makes several demands by the same writ, his course of proceeding in debt, covenant, and detinue, and the real and mixed actions, where the writs are in a simple and general form, is merely to enlarge his claim in point of sums and quantities ; but in trespass, and trespass on the case, where the form is more special, the original writ separately specifies each subject of claim or complaint. 1 Bl. Com. III. 311*. 2 xTpon this subject, see Bac. Ab Actions, C. ^ 314 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. Examples : If tlie action be brought in trespass for two assaults and batteries, the original writ, after setting forth one, proceeds to detail the other. And, when the time for the declaration arrives, the plaintiff, in all forms of action, sets forth in the declaration, separately, each different subject of claim or com- plaint thus put together in the same writ. So, in the case of proceeding by hill, the different claims or complaints are sepa- rately brought forward in the bill or declaration, care, however, being taken to join only such as might have been jointly claimed by the same original. Such different claims or complaints constitute different parts or sections of the declaration, and are known in plead- ing by the description of several counts. "When several counts are thus used, the defendant may, according to the nature of his defence, demur to the whole ; or plead a single plea applying to the whole ; or may demur to one count and plead to another ; or plead a several plea to each count ; and in the two latter cases the result may be a corresponding severance in the subsequent pleadings, and the production of several issues. But, whether one or more issues be produced, if the decision, whether in law or fact, be in the plaintiff's favor, as to any one or more counts, he is entitled to judgment 2^^^ taiito (for so much), though he fail as to the remainder.! The use of several counts, when applied to distinct causes of action, is quite consistent with the rule against duplicity ; for the object of that rule, as formerly explained, is to prevent several issues in respect to the same demand only ; there being no objection to several issues where the demands are several. But it happens more frequently than otherwise that, when various counts are introduced, they do not really relate to dis- tinct claims, but are adopted merely as so many different forms of propounding the same cause of action, and are there- fore a mere evasion of the rule against duplicity. This is a relaxation of very ancient date, and has long since passed, by continual sufferance, into allowable and regular practice. It 1 See Phillips v. Howgate, 5 Barn. & Aid. 220. RULES TO PRODUCE SINGLENESS OR UNITY IN THE ISSUE. 315 takes place when the pleader, in drawing the declaration or bill in any action, or in preparing the prcBcipe for an orio-inal writ in trespass, or trespass on the case, after having set forth his case in one aspect, feels doubtful whether, as so stated, it may not be insufficient in point of law, or incapable of proof in point of fact; and at the same time perceives another mode of statement, by which the apprehended difficulty may probably be avoided. Not choosing to rely on either view of the case exclusively, he takes the course of adopting both; and accordingly inserts the second form of statement in the shape of a second count, in the same manner as if he were proceeding for a separate cause of action. If, upon the same principle, he wishes to vary still further the method of allega- tion, he may find it necessary to add many other succeeding counts besides the second ; and thus, in practice, a great variety of counts often occurs in respect to the same cause of action ; the law not having set any limits to the discre- tion of the pleader, in this respect, if fairly and rationally exercised.' The Object of using Several Counts. \ It may be desirable, however, to explain more particularly in what case, and with what objects, resort is had to several counts for the same cause of action. This may happen either (1) Where the state of facts to which each count refers is really different, or (2) Where the same state of facts is differently repre-^ sented. (1) An instance of the first case is the following Example : In an action of debt on a penal bill, whereby the defendant engaged to pay £7, as penalty, in the event of non- payment of 10s. on the 11th of June, and 10s. more on the 10th of July, and 10s. every three weeks after, till a certain sura was satisfied, let it be supposed that the plaintiff complains of a fail- ure in payment both on the 11th June and 10th July. Either failure entitles him to the penal sum for which he brings the 1 See Meeke v. Oxlade, 1 N. R. 289 ; Brindloy v. Deniiet, 2 liiug. 184 ; Nelson Gabell v. Shaw, 2 Chit. Rep. 299; v. Griffiths, ibid. 412; 1 Tidd, 667, Thomas v. Hanscoinbe, 1 Bing. 281 ; 8th ed. 316 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. action ; but, if he states them both in the same count, the decla- ration, as we have seen, will be double. The case, however, may be such as to make it convenient to rely on both defaults; for there may be a doubt whether one or other of the payments were not made, though it may be certain that there was at least one default ; and if, under these circumstances, the plaintiff should set forth one of the defaults, and the defendant should take issue upon it, he might defeat the action by proving payment on the day alleged, though he would have been unable to prove the other payment. To meet this difficulty, the pleader might resort to two counts. The first of these would set forth the penal bill, alleging a default of payment on the 11th of June ; the second would again set forth the same bill, describing it as " a certain other bill," etc., and would allege a default on the 10th of July. The effect of this would be, that the plaintiff, at the trial, might rely on either default, as he might then find convenient. lu this instance, the several counts are each founded on a different state of facts (viz., a different default in payment), though in support of the same dem^d. (2) But it more frequently happens that it is the same state of facts dfferently represented which forms the subject of different counts. Example: Where a man has ordered goods of another, and an action is brought against him for the price, the circumstances may be conceived to be such as to raise a doubt whether the transaction ought to be described as one of goods sold and delivered, or of ivork and labor done ; and, in this case, there would be two counts, setting forth the claim both ways, in order to secure a verdict, at all events, upon one of them. Common Monet-Counts. It may be useful to observe here that, upon this principle, the counts for money lent and advanced^ money paid, money had and received, and money due on account stated (commonly called the money counts), are, some or all of them, generally inserted, as a matter of course, in every prcecipe, declaration, or bill in assumpsit, though the cause of action be also stated in a more special form in other counts. This is done because it often happens that, when the special counts are found I I EULES TO PRODUCE SINGLENESS OR UNITY IN THE ISSUE. 317 incapable of proof at the trial, the cause of action will resolve itself into one of these general pecuniary forms of demand, and thus the plaintiff may obtain a verdict on one of these money counts, though he fail as to all the rest. Again, the same state of facts may be varied, by omitting, in one count, some matter stated in another. In such a case the more special count is used, lest the omission of this matter should render the other insufficient in point of law. The more general count is adopted, because, if good in point of law, it will relieve the plaintiff from the necessity of proving such omitted matter in point of fact. If the defendant demur to the latter count as insufficient, and take issue in fact on the former, the plaintiff has the chance of proving the matter alleged, and also the chance of succeeding on the demurrer. If, on the other hand, the defendant do not think proper to demur, but take issue in fact on both, the plaintiff will have no occasion at the trial to rely at all upon the former count, but will succeed by merely proving the latter. Whether the subjects ^ several counts be really distinct or identical, they must always purport to be founded on dis- tinct causes of action, and not to refer to the same matter ; and this is effected by the insertion of such words as " other" " the further sum" etc. This is evidently rendered neces- sary by the rule against duplicity, which, though evaded, as to the declaration, by the use of several counts, in the man- ner here described, is not to be directly violated.'^ The Use op Several Pleas. It has been already stated that the rule against duplicity does not prevent a defendant from giving distinct answers to different claims or complaints on the part of the plaintiff. To several counts, or to distinct parts of the same count, he may, therefore, plead several pleas, viz., one to each.^ Example : In an actiou of trespass for two assaults and bat- teries, he may plead, as to the first count, not guilty ; and as to 1 Hart V. Longfield, 7 Mod. 148 ; i^ Or he may plead to one count, and West V. Troles, 1 Salk. 213 ; Bac. Ab. demur to another. And it seems that, Pleas, &c. B. in pleading different pleas to different 318 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. the second, the statute of limitations, viz., that he was not guilty tvithin four years. But it may also happen that a defendant may have several distinct answers to give to the same claim or complaint. Example : To an action of trespass for two assaults and bat- teries, he may have ground to deny both the trespasses, and also to allege that they were neither of them committed within four years. Anterior, however, to the regulation which will be presently mentioned, it was not competent to him to plead these several answers to both trespasses, as that would have been an in- fringement of the rule against duplicity. The defendant was, therefore, obliged to elect between his different defences, where more than one thus happened to present themselves, and to rely, on that which, in point of law and fact, he might deem strongest. But as a mistake in that selection might occasion the loss of the cause, contrary to the real merits of the case, this restriction against the use of several pleas to the same matter, after being for ages observed in its origi- nal severity, was at length considered contrary to the true principles of justice, and was accordingly relaxed by legisla- tive enactment. The statute 4 Ann. c. 16, s. 4, provides that " it shall be lawful for any defendant or ten ant, in any action or suit, or for any plaintiff in replevin, in any court of record, with leave of the fi ou rt^ to plead as many several matters thereto as he shall think necessary for bis d efence.^' Since this act the course has been for the defendant, if he wishes to plead sev- eral matters to the same subject of demand or complaint, to apply previously for a rule of court permitting him to do so ; and, upon this, a rule is accordingly drawn up for that purpose.^ When several pleas are pleaded, either to different matters, or (by virtue of the statute of Anne) to the same matter, the parts of the declaration, the defendant (2 Saund. 209 e, n. 1.) And see Her- is not confined to pleas of the same ries v. Jamieson, 5 T. R. 553. hind. Thus, it is laid down that he ^ But the court have a discretion, may plead in abatement to part, and either to permit or refuse, according demur or plead in bar to the residue, to the nature of the matters proposed RULES TO PRODUCE SINGLENESS OR UNITY IN THE ISSUE. 319 plaintiff may, according to the nature of his case, either demur to the whole, or demur to one plea and reply to the other, or make a several replication to each plea ; and, in the two latter cases, the result may be a corresponding severance in the sub- sequent pleadings, and the production of several issues. But, whether one or more issues be produced, if the decision, whether in law or fact, be in the defendant's favor, as to any one or more pleas, he is entitled to judgment, though he fail as to the remainder, — i. e., he is entitled to judgment in respect of that subject of demand or complaint to which the successful plea relates ; and, if it were pleaded to the whole declaration, to judgment generally, though the plaintiff should succeed as to all the other pleas. Use of Several Pleas similar to that of Several Counts. By a relaxation similar to that which has obtained with respect to several counts, the use of several pleas (though' presumably intended by the statute to be allowed only in a case where there are really several grounds of defence) ^ is, in practice, carried much further. For it was soon found that, when there was a matter of defence by way of special plea, it was generally expedient to plead that matter in company with the general issue, whether there were any real ground for denying the declaration or not ; because the effect of this is to put the plaintiff to the proof of his declaration before it can become necessary for the defendant to establish his special plea ; and thus the defendant has the chance of succeeding, not only on the strength of his own case, but by the failure of the plaintiff's proof. Again, as the plaintiff, in the case of several counts, finds it convenient to vary the mode of stating the same subject of claim, so, for similar reasons, defendants were led, under color of pleading distinct matters of defence, testate variously, in various pleas, the same defence, and this, either by presenting it in an entirely new aspect, or by omitting in one plea some circumstances alleged in another. To this to be pleaded. (Jenkins v. Edwards, ^ See Lord Clinton v. Morton, 2 Str. 5 T. R. 97.) 1000. 320 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. extent, therefore, is the use of several pleas now carried. Some efforts, however, were at one time made to restrain this apparent abuse of the indulgence given by the statute. For that leave of the court which the statute requires was formerly often refused where the proposed subjects of plea appeared to be inco7isistent ; and on this ground leave has been refused to plead to the same trespass not guilty and accord and satisfac- tion, or nan est factum and 'payment to the same demand.^ In modern practice, however, such pleas, notwithstanding the ap- parent repugnancy between them, are permitted ; ^ and the only pleas, perhaps, which have been uniformly disallowed, on the mere ground of inconsistency, are those of the general issue and a tender? Statute 4 Ann. c. 16, s. 4, does not extend to Replications OR Subsequent Pleadings. On the subject of several pleas it is to be further observed, that the statute extends to the case of pleas only, and not to replications or subsequent pleadings. These remain subject to the full operation of the common law against duplicity, so that, though to each plea there may, as already stated, be a separate replication, yet there can not be offered to the same plea more than a single replication, nor to the same replication more than one rejoinder ; and so to the end of the series. The legislative provision allowing several matters of plea was confined to that case, under the impression, probably, that it was in that part of the pleading that the hardship of the rule against duplicity was most seriously and frequently felt, and that the multiplicity of issues (which would be occasioned by a further extension of the enactment) would have been attended with expense and inconvenience more than equivalent to the advantage. The effect, however, of this state of law is somewhat remarkable. 1 Com. Dig. Pleader, E. 2. ment ; (2) that the judgment was ob- 2 Vide 1 Sell. Pract. 299. See Rama tained by fraud; (3) that the warrant Chittj V. Hume, 13 East, 255. of attorney on which judgment was ^ But the Court of Common Pleas entered was obtained by fraud. (Shaw refused to allow the defendant in scire v. Lord Alvanley, 2 Bing. 325.) facias, on a judgment, to plead, (I ) pay- RULES TO PRODUCE SINGLENESS OR UNITY IN THE ISSUE. 321 Examples : It empowers a defendant to plead to a declaration in asstcmpsit, for goods sold and delivered, (1) the general issue ; (2) that the cause of action did not accrue within six years ; (3) that he was an infant at the time of the contract. On the first plea the plaintilf has only to join issue, but with respect to each of the two last he may have several answers to give. The case may be such as to afford either of these replications to the statute of limitations, viz., that the cause of action did accrue within six years, or that at the time the cause of action accrued he was beyond sea, and that he commenced his suit within six years after his return. So, to the plea of infancy, he may have ground for replying, either that the defendant was not an infant, or that the goods for which the action is brought were necessaries suitable to the defendant's condition in life. Yet, though the defendant had the advantage of his three pleas cumulatively, the plaintiff is obliged to make his election between these several answers, and can reply but one of them to each plea. Statute does not apply to Dilatory Pleas. It is also to be observed, that the power of pleading several matters extends to pleas in bar only, and not to those of a dila- tory class, with respect to which the leave of the court will not be granted.^ Again, it is to be remarked, that the statute does not operate as a total abrogation, even with respect to pleas in bar, of the rule against duplicity. For, first, it is necessary (as we have seen) to obtain the leave of the court to make use of several matters of defence ; and then the several matters are pleaded formally, with the words " by leave of the court for this purpose first had and obtained." The several defences must also each be pleaded as a new qv further plea, with a formal commence- ment and conclusion as such ; so that, notwithstanding the statute, and the leave of the court obtained in pursuance of it to plead several matters, it would still be improper to incor- porate several matters in one plea in any case in which the plea would be thereby rendered double at common law. Effect of Pleading Over. Such are the nature and extent of the rule against double pleading, and of the modifications to which, in practice, it is 1 See I Sell. Pract. 275. 21 322 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. subject. Under this rule, it remains only to observe that, if, instead of demurring for duplicity, the opposite party passes the fault by, and j9?eac?s over, he is, in that case, hound to an- swer each matter alleged ; and has no right, on the ground of the duplicity, to confine himself to any single part of the adverse statement.^ Rule II. It is not allowable both to plead and to J^ DEMUR TO the SaME MaTTER.^ This rule depends on exactly the same principles as the last. As it is not allowable to plead double, lest several issues in fact in respect of the same matter should arise, so it is not permitted both to plead and demur to the same matter, lest an issue in fact and an issue in law, in respect of a single subject, should be produced. The party must, therefore, make his election. The rule, however, it will be observed, only prohibits the pleading and demurring to the same matter. It does not forbid this course as applicable to distinct statements. Thus, a man may plead to one count, or one plea, and demur to an- other. The reason of this distinction is sufficiently explained by the remarks already made on the subject of duplicity in pleading. Lastly, it is to be remarked, that the statute of Anne, which authorizes the pleading of several pleas, gives no authority for demurring and pleading to the same matter. The rule now in question, therefore, is not affected by that provision, but remains as it was at common law.^ 1 Bolton V. Cannon, 1 Vent. 272. * Haiton v. Jeffreys, 10 Mod. 280. 2 Bac. Ab. Pleas, &c. K. 1. ^ CHAPTER XII. OF EULES WHICH TEND TO PRODUCE CERTAINTY OR PARTICULARITY IN THE ISSUE. The rules tending to certainty in the pleadings, and, by con- sequence, certainty in the issue, are very numerous, and in their nature do not easily admit of methodical arrangement ; but an enumeration shall here be attempted of such of them as appear to be of principal importance. Rule I. The Pleadings must have Certainty of Place.i Venue. It has been explained that the nature of the trial by jury, while conducted in the form which first belonged to that insti- tution, was such as to render particularity of place absolutely essential in all issues which a jury was to decide. Consisting, as the jurors formerly did, of witnesses, or persons in some measure cognizant of their own knowledge of the matter in dispute, they were of course, as a rule, to be summoned from the particular place or neighborhood where the fact happened,^ and, in order to know into what county the venire facias for summoning them should issue, as well as to enable the sheriff to execute that writ, it was necessary that the issue, and there- fore the pleadings out of which it arose, should show particu- larly what that place or neighborhood was.^ Such place or 1 fcom. Dig. Pleader, C. 20 ; Ibid, therefore the written contracts bore Abatement, H. 13; Co. Litt. 125 a. date at a certain place." (Gilb. Hist. 2 Co. Litt. by Harg. 125 a, n. 1. C. P. 84.) "The venire was to bring up the pares ^ Ilderton v. Ilderton, 2 H. Bl. 161 ; (equals, peers) of the place where the per Lord Mansfield, Mostyn r. Fabrigas, fact was laid, in order to try the issue ; Cowp. 176 ; Co. Litt. 125 a, b. See 2 and originally every fact was laid in the Hen. VII. 4. place where it waa really done; and 324 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. neighborhood was called the venue, or visne (from vicinetum)^ and the statement of it in the pleadings obtained the same name ; to allege the place being, in the language of pleading, to lay the venue. The Venue of the Action. The present law of venue may be stated as follows : — The original writ ^^■\^^Rt hp. rlirp ctef] to the sheriff o f some count y ; and in that county t h.Q action is said to hp hrovrjM or la id. Each affirmative traversable allegation in the w rit is to be laid with a venue or place, comprising not only t he co unty in which the fact occurre d, but the pari sh ., town? qv hamlet within the county ; ^ but in a mere deni al, of course, rio_v enue is to be used^ nor is any required in respect of facts not traversable ; for example, matter of inducement or aggra- vation.* The pleader has his election to lay either the parish, the town, or the hamlet ; but a more extensive division than a parish (for example, a hundred) is not a sufficient venue; that having apparently been considered, in ancient times, as too large an allegation of place to instruct the sheriff properly as to the summoning of the jurors.^ Of the different facts alleged in the writ, it is necessary that some principal one, at least, should be laid in some parish, town, or hamlet, within the county in which the action is brought, in order to justify the bringing of the action in that county ,6 and 1 Bac. Ab. Visne or Venue, A.; Bl. comitatus (from the body of the Com. m. 294*. county). 2 A town is, in pleading, otherwise * Com. Dig. Pleader, C. 20, cites called vill (Bl. Com. L 114*.) See PI. Com. 190 b. Curwen v. Salkeld, 3 East, 5.38, 5 Co. Litt. by Harg. 125, n. 1. If 3 Co. Litt. 125 a; Com. Dig. Abate- the fact happened out of any parish, ment, H. 13; ibid. Pleader, C. 20; town, or hamlet, but in some other Braddish v. Bishop, Cro. Eliz. 260 ; known place, such as a forest, or the The King v. Holland, per Buller, J., 5 like, such knoicn place may be laid for T. R. 620; Amory v. Brodrick, 5 Barn. ve7iue. (Co. Litt. 125 a, b; Bac. Ab. &Ald. 712. But in Ware v. Boydell, Visne, E. in marg.) And if it happened 3 M. &-S. 148 (which was an action on out of any parish, town, hamlet, or a promissory note), the court held it Z;"0!m p/ace, the (.-eH!*? may be laid in the sufficient to allege a county for i-emte, county generally. (Bac.Ab. ibid.) in the declaration, without a parish, e pee The King v. Burdett, 4 Barn, because the jury now come de corpore & Aid. 175, 176. Cah-in's Case, 7 Co. Eep. 1 ; Scott v. Brest, 2 T. R. 238. RULES TO PRODUCE CERTAINTY IN THE ISSUE. 325 such county, and the particular place so laid within it, are called the venue in the action or the venue where the action is laid. Venue op the Traversable Allegations. As the declaration conforms to the writ in other particulars, so it adheres of necessity to the same venue. The county where the action is laid is placed at the commencement, in the margin of the declaration ; and all the different afhrmative traversable allegations are to be laid with a venue of parish, town, or hamlet, as well as county, in the same manner as above explained with regard to the writ, and in accordance with that instrument. In proceedings by bill, the law of venue is exactly the same as that already described, subject only to the difference neces- sarily introduced by the absence of the original writ, the only effect of which is, that the declaration, instead of the original, first determines where the action is laid, and, as in proceed- ings by original the action is said to be brought or laid in the county into which the writ issues, so, in proceedings by bill, it is said to be brought or laid in the county named in the margin of the declaration. Again, as in proceedings by original, the county into which the writ issues, and the place within that county at which the principal fact is laid, are called the venue in the action, so, in proceedings by bill, the same term applies to the county in the margin of the declaration, and the place within that county laid to the principal fact. Whether the action be by original or by bill, the plea, repli- cation, and subsequent pleadings lay a venue to each affirma- tive traversable allegation, according to the principles already stated, until issue joined. It having been stated that the original object of thus laying a venue was to determine the place from which the venire facias should direct the jurors to be summoned, in case the parties should put themselves upon the country, it will be proper now to consider how far the same use is made of the venue in modern practice. And, in order to explain clearly the existing law on this subject, it will be convenient to take a short retrospect of its former state and progress. 326 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. Ancient Use op the Venue. The most ancient practice, as established at the period when juries were composed of persons cognizant of their own knowl- edge of the fact in dispute, was, of course, to summon the jury from that venue which had been laid to the particular fact in issue, and from the venue of parish, toion, or hamlet, as well as county .1 Examples : (1) In an action of debt on bond, if the declaration alleged the contract to have been made at Westminster, in the County of Middlesex, and the defendant, in his plea, denied the bond, issue being joined on this plea, it would be tried by a jury from Westminster. (2) If he pleaded an affirmative matter, as, for example, a release, he would lay this new traversable allegation with a venue ; and, if this venue happened to differ from that in the declaration, being laid, for example, at Oxford, in the County of Oxford, and issue were taken on the plea, such issue would be tried by a jury from Oxford, and not from Westminster.'* And it may here be incidentally observed, that as the place or neighborhood in which the fact arose and also the allega- tion of that place in the pleadings were called the venue, so the term was often applied to the jury summoned from thence. Thus, it would be said in the case last supposed that the venue was to come from Oxford. With respect to the form of the venire at this period, it was as follows: venire facias duodecim liberos et legates homines, de vicineto de W. for O.J, (i. e., the parish, town, or hamlet), per quos rei Veritas melius sciri poterit, etc. (you shall cause to come twelve free and legal men, from the neighborhood of W.. through whom the truth of the matter may be the better known).^ 1 Co. Litt. 125 a; Bac. Ab. Visne or of Bracton) per quos rei Veritas melius Venue, E. ; and see an illustrative case, sciri poterit, &c. Bract. 309 b, 310 a, 43 Ed. III. 1. 396 b, 397 a. In the statute 27 Eliz. c. 2 Ctaft V. Boite, 1 Saund. 246 b ; 6, sec. 1, the form is, 12 liberos et legales Com. Dig. Action, N. 12; 8 Ed. III. 8 homines de vicineto tie B., per quos rei pi. 20 ; 45 Ed. III. 16. Veritas, &c. ; and see Litt. sec. 234. 8 De vicineto tali (is the expression rules to produce certainty in the issue. 327 Changes in Practice as to Venue. While such appears to have been the most ancient state of practice, it soon sustained very considerable changes. When the jury began to be summoned no longer as witnesses, but as judges, and, instead of being cognizant of the fact on their own knowledge, learned the fact from the testimony of others judicially examined before them, the reason for summoning them from the immediate neighborhood ceased to apply, and it was considered as sufficient if, by way of partial conformity with the original principle, a certain number of the jury came from tlie same hundred in which the place laid for venue was situate, though their companions should be of the county only, and neither of the venue nor even of the hundred. This change in the manner of executing the venire did not, how- ever, occasion any alteration in its form^ which still directed the sheriff, as in former times, to summon the whole jury from the particular venue} The number of hundredors which it was necessary to summon was different at different periods ; in later times no more than two hundredors were required in a personal action.^ Changes in Law op Venue. In this state of the law was passed the statute 16 and 17 Car. II. c. 8. By this act (which is one of the statutes of jeofails) it is provided, " that after verdict judgment shall not be stayed or reversed, for that there is no right venue, so as the cause were tried by a jury of the proper county or place where the action is laid.^' This provision was held to apply to the case (among others) where issue had been taken on a fact laid with a different ve7iue from that in the action, but where the venire had improperly directed a jury to be summoned from the venue in the action, instead of the venue laid to the fact in issue? This had formerly been matter of error, and, therefore, ground for arresting or reversing the judgment ; * 1 27 Eliz. c. 6, s. 1 ; Litt. sec. 234. n. 3 ; Bowyer's Case, Cro. Eliz. 468 ; 2 27 p:iiz. c. 6, s. 5. Eden's Case, 6 Co. Rep. 15 b; Co, Litt. 3 Craft V. Boite, 1 Saund. 247. by Harg, 125 a, u. 1. * 1 Saund. 247, n. 1 ; 2 Saund. 5, 328 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. but by this act (passed with a view of removing what had become a merely formal objection) the error was cured, and the staying or reversal of the judgment disallowed. While such was its direct operation, it has had a further effect, not contemplated, perhaps, by those who devised the enactment. For what the statute only purported to cure as an error, it has virtually established as regular and uniform practice ; and issues taken on facts laid with a different venue from that iii the action have, for a long time past, been con- stantly tried, not by a jury of the venue laid to the fact in issue, but by a jury of the venue in the action} Another change was introduced by the statute 4 Ann. c. 16, sec. 6. This act provides that " every venire facias for the trial of any issue shall be awarded of the body of the proper county where such issue is triable," instead of being (as in the ancient form) awarded from the particular venue of parish, town, or hamlet. From this time, therefore, the form of the venire has been changed, and directs the sheriff to summon twelve good and lawful men, etc, '■'•from the body of his county;^'* and they are accordingly, in fact, all summoned from the body of the county only, and no part of them neces- sarily from the hundred in which the particular place laid for venue is situate.^ MoDEEN Rule as to Venue. On the whole, then, by the joint effect of these two statutes, the venire^ instead of directing the jury to be summoned from that venue which had been laid to the fact in issue, and from the venue oi jJarish, town, or hamlet, as well as county, now directs them, in all cases, to be summoned from the body of the county in ivhich the action is laid, whether that be the county laid to the fact in issue or not, and without regard to the parish, town, or hamlet. 1 2 Savind. 5, n. 3. any particular venue, within the county, 2 And even in criminal proceedings and that the want of hundredors shall it is now expressly enacted, that no be no cause of challenge. (6 Geo. IV. jurors shall be required to be returned c. 50, sec. 13.) from any hundred or hundreds, or from rules to produce certainty in the issue. 329 When Venue must be truly laid. What has been hitherto said on the subject of venue relates only to the form in which the venue is laid and its effect as to the venire. There is, however, another very important point still remaining to be considered, viz., how far it is necessary to lay the venue truly. Before the change in the constitution of juries above men- tioned, the venue was of course always to be laid in the true place where the fact arose, for so the reason of the law of venue evidently required. But when, in consequence of that change, this reason ceased to operate, the law began to dis- tinguish between cases in which the truth of the venue was material, or of the substance of the issue, and cases in which it was not so. A difference began now to be recognized between local and transitory matters. The former consisted of such facts as carried with them the idea of some certain place, comprising all matters relating to the realty, and hardly any others ; the latter consisted of such facts as might be supposed to have happened anywhere ; and, therefore, com- prised debts, contracts, and generally all matters relating to the person or personal property. With respect to the former, it was held, that if any local fact were laid in pleading at a certain place, and issue were taken on that fact, the place formed part of the substance of the issue, and must, there- fore, be proved as laid, or the party would fail as for want of proof. But as to transitory facts, the rule was, that they might be laid as having happened at one place, and might be proved on the trial to have occurred at another.^ The present state of the law, with respect to the necessitv of laying the true venue, is accordingly as follows : — Local and Transitory Actions. Actions are either local or transitory. An action is local, if all the principal facts on which it is' founded be local. An action is transitory, if any principal fact be of the transitory kind. 1 Vin. Ab. Trial, M. f ; Co. Litt. 282 a. 330 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. In a local action, the plaintiff must lay the venue in the action trull/. In a transitory one, he may lay it in any county, and any parish, town, or hamlet within the county, that he pleases. Facts arising out of the Realm. From this state of the law, it follows, first, that if an action be local, and the facts arose out of the realm, such action can not be maintained in the English courts ; ^ for, as the venue in the action is to be laid truly, there is no county into which, consistently with that rule, the original writ can be directed. But, on the other hand, if the action be transitory, then, though all the facts arose abroad, the action may be main- tained in England ; because the ve^iiie in the action may be laid in any English county, at the option of the plaintiff. Change op Yenue. The same state of law also leads to the following inference : that, in a transitory action, the plaintiff may have the action tried in any county that he pleases ; for (as we have seen) he may lay the venue in the action in any county, and upon issue joined the venire issues into the county where the venue in the action is laid. And such, accordingly, is the rule, subject only to a check interposed by another regulation, viz., that which relates to the changing of the venue. The courts established, about the reign (as it is said) of James I.,^ a practice, by which defendants were enabled to protect themselves from any in- convenience they might apprehend from the venue being laid contrary to the fact, and to enforce, if they pleased, a compli- ance with the stricter and more ancient system. By this prac- tice, when the plaintiff in a transitory action laysa/aZse venue, the defendant is entitled to move the court to have the venue changed, i. e., altered to the right place ; and the court, upon affidavit that the cause of action arose wholly in the county to which it is proposed to change the venue, will in most cases grant the application, and oblige the plaintiff to amend his declaration in this particular, unless he, on the other hand, 1 Per Buller, J., Doulson v. Mat- 2 Knight v. Farnaby, 2 Salk. 670. thews, 4 T. R. 503. EULES TO PRODUCE CERTAINTY IN THE ISSUE. 331 will undertake to give, at the trial, some material evidence arising in the county where the venue was laid. Venue of Local Facts must be truly laid. Whether the action be local or transitory, every local fact' alleged in the writ and declaration must still be laid with itsj true venue, on peril of a variance, if the fact should be brought', in issue ; but transitory facts may be laid with any venue, at the choice of the plaintiff ; though it is the usual and most proper course to lay all these with the venue in the action. As in the writ and declaration, so in the plea and subsequent pleadings, every local fact must be laid with its true venue, under peril of variance. Transitory Facts must be laid with the Venue of the Action. With respect to transitory facts, the rule is, that they must be laid with the venue in the action ; ^ and even to lay the true place is, in this case, not allowable, if it differ from that venue. Example : In the case of an action ou a bond, where the action is laid in Middlesex, if the defendant should plead a release at Oxford, this departure from the venue in the action, would be bad,^ though the release should really have been executed there. For as the plaintiff may, for a transitory matter, choose any venue that he likes, in his writ and declaration, so, upon the same prin- ciple, it would have followed, that the defendant might also, for a transitory matter, have chosen any venue in his plea ; and thus, who ever happened to make the last affirmative allegation, and, therefore, to lay the last venue, would have been able (prior to the alteration of practice introduced by the statute of Charles II.), to draw the venire facias and the trial to any place that he pleased. But it was thought more reasonable and convenient that this option should rest with the plaintiff, who, having in the first instance chosen a venue, ought not to be removed from it without cause. The defendant, therefore, is obliged to follow the venue that the plaintiff has laid ; and, in consequence of the estab- 1 Wright V. Ramscot, 1 Saund. 85 ; 2 Co. Litt. 282 b. 2 Sauud, 5, n. 3. 832 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. lishment of this rule, it seems now to be held that, to transitory matters, no venue need now be laid in pleadings subsequent to the declaration, because, with respect to every matter of this description, the original venue will be taken to be implied.^ In practice, however, it is usual to lay a venue in these as well as in the declaration ; and, perhaps, in point of strict form, it is the better course. Allegations under a Videlicet. Another point to be noticed on this subject of the true alle- gation of venue, is, that when transitory matters are alleged out of their true place, it seems to be necessary that they should be laid, as the phrase is, under a videlicet, i. e., with the prior intervention of the words " to wit," or " that is to 8ai/." The effect and object of the videlicet are to mark that the party does not undertake to prove the precise place. And, accordingly, there is some doubt whether the omission of a videlicet does not occasion a necessity, in the event of a traverse even of a transitory matter, of proving the place alleged. ^ On the other hand, however, it is clear, that where the place is material, or, in other words, where the matter is local, the use of a videlicet will not prevent the necessity of proving the venue laid. This doctrine as to a videlicet, it will be observed, is not peculiar to venue, but applies (as will afterward appear) to many other of the points on which certainty is required in pleading. how to allege local matter occurring out of the Realm. The last point of remark that occurs on this subject, relates to the case where a local matter, occurring out of the realm, is alleged in the course of the pleading. This was formerly considered as a case of difficulty : for, on the one hand, all local facts are to be alleged (as has been shown) in the true 1 Chit. PL 248. 68; Arnfield v. Bate, 3 M. & S. 173; 2 Mr. Chitty inclines to consider the 2 Saund. 291 c, n. 1 ; Bray r. Freemen, omission as immaterial. (See Chit. PI. 2 J. B. Moore, 114; Corporation of 276, n. g. ) Opposed, however, to the Arundel v. Bowman, ibid. 93 ; Crispin authorities on which the learned author v. Williamson, 8 Taunt. 107; Draper v. relies, ai-e Symmons v. Knox, 3 T. R. Garratt, 2 Barn. & Cress. 2. RULES TO PRODUCE CERTAINTY IN THE ISSUE. 333 place, and, on the other hand, if a place out of the realm be laid for venue, and issue be joined on the fact, it was, at one time, supposed that the issue could not be tried, because no jury could be summoned from the place ; and prior to the statute of Charles, it was, by the general rule, essential (as already stated) that the jury should be summoned from the venue laid to the fact in issue.^ It was, however, early decided, that notwithstanding that general rule, such matter might be tried by a jury from the venue in the action? And, by way of more effectually preventing the objection, a form has long been in use, which satisfies the double object of conforming to the true place, and, at the same time, laying a venue within the realm; the venue of a fact arising abroad being often alleged with a videlicet, under the following form of expression : " In parts heyojid the seas, at Fort St. George, in the East Indies " (the real place), " to wit, at Westminster, in the County of Middlesex " (the venue in the action).^ With respect to this method, indeed, of laying the true place, with the addition of the venue in the action, under a videlicet, we may take occasion to observe, that it is usually applied, not only to local facts arising out of the realm, but to those aris- ing in England also, if they happened at a different venue from that in the action. Descriptive Allegations of Place. ^ Where place is alleged as matter of description, and not as venue, it must, in all cases, be stated truly and according to the fact, under peril of variance, if the matter should be brought into issue.^ Defects in laying Yenue. If no venue be laid in the declaration, the defendant may delhur or plead the defect in abatement. Even in local and 1 See a curious instance of the difR- Carth. 265 ; Nichols v. Pawlett, ibid. culty formerl}' found in such cases, cited 302 ; Holding v. Haling, 3 Keb. 150. per Abbott, C. J., The King v. Burdett, ^ Dowdale's Case, ubi supra; Calvin's 4 Barn. & Aid. 172; and another in- Case, 7 Co. Rep. 27 a. stance, cited in Dowdale's Case, 6 Co. ^ Com. Dig. Action, n. 7. Rep. 47 b; and see Broddecku. Briggs, * Steph. PI. (5th ed.) 292. 334 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. penal actions the only modes of objecting to the venue are by demurrer, or at the trial as a ground of nonsuit.^ Rule II. The Pleadings must have Certainty of Time.^ In personal actions, the pleadings must allege the time ; that is, the day, month, and year when each traversable fact occurred ; and, when there is occasion to mention a continuous act, the period of its duration ought to be shown.^ The necessity of laying a time, like that of laying a venue, extends to traversable facts only, and therefore no time need be alleged to matter of inducement or aggravation. The courts, indeed, are in the habit of considering the allegations of place and time as connected together ; and have laid down this general principle, that wherever it is necessary to lay a venue, it is also necessary to mention time.* As the place, in transitory matters, is considered as form- ing no material part of the issue, so that one place may be alleged and another proved, the same law has obtained with respect to time, in all matters generally.^ The pleader, there- fore, as a rule, assigns any time that he pleases to a given fact. This option, however, is subject to certain restrictions : (1) He should lay the time under a videlicet, if he does not wish to be held to prove it strictly. (2) He should not lay a time that is intrinsically impossible, or hiconsistent with the fact to which it relates. A time so laid would, generally, be sufficient ground for de- murrer. But, on the other hand, there is no ground for demur- rer, where such time is laid to a fact not traversable, or where, for any other reason, the allegation of time was unnecessarily made ; for an unnecessary statement of time, though impossible or inconsistent, will do no harm, upon the principle that utile, per inutile, non vitiatur (the useful is not hurt by the useless).^ 1 Chit. PI. 253, 254. of Chester, 2 Salk. 561 ; Cooke v. Birt, 2 Cora. Dig. Pleader, C 19 ; Halsey 5 Taunt. 765. V. Carpenter, Cro. Jac. 359; Denison v. ^ This appears to be a correct general Richardson, 14 East, 291. statement of the law with respect to de- ^ Ibid. murrer for an impossible or inconsistent * Per Buller, J., The King u. Holland, date; but the current of authorities is 5 T. R. 620. not quite clear and uniform on this 6 Co. Litt. 283 a; The King u. Bishop subject. (See Com. Dig. Pleader, C. RULES TO PRODUCE CERTAINTY IN THE ISSUE. 335 When Averments of Time are Material. Again, there are some instances in which time happens to form a material point in the'merits of the case ; and, in these instances, if a traverse be taken, the time laid is of the sub- stance of the issue, and must be strictly proved ; just as in local matters it is necessary to prove the alleged venue. The pleader, therefore, with respect to all facts of this description, must state the time truly, at the peril of failure, as for a vari- ance. And here, as in the case of a local fact, the insertion of a videlicet will give no help. Examples : (1) Where the declaration stated a usurious con- tract, made on the 21st day of December, 1774, for giving day of payment of a certain sum to the 23d day of December, 1776, and the proof was that the contract was on the 23d December, 1774, giving day of payment for two years, it was held that the verdict must be for the defendant ; the principle of this decision being, that the time given for payment being of the substance of a usurious contract, such time must be proved as laid.^ (2) Where the declaration stated a usurious agreement on the 14th of the month, to forbear and give day of payment for a certain period, but it was proved that the money was not advanced till the 16th, the plaintiff was nonsuited ; ^ it being held by Lord Mansfield at the trial, and afterwards by the court in banc, that the day from whence the forbearance took place was material, though laid under a videlicet.^ When not Material. Where the time needs not to be truly stated (as is generally the case), it is subject to a rule of the same nature with one 19; 2 Saund. 291 c, n. 1 ; ibid. 171 a, he usually takes the course of avoiding n. 1.) N. B. The objection is often a verdict, by voluntarily submitting to aided, after verdict, or cured by the judgment of nonsuit ; aud for that pur- statutes of jeofails. pose he is supposed to absent himself 1 Carlisle v. Trears, Cowp. 671. from the court. The reason is, that 2 The nature of judgment of nonsuit such judgment does not prevent liis has been stated. It will be proper to bringing another action, but by a verdict explain here, however, that when, on he is barred forever. (See Bl. Com. account of a variance, or any other III. 377 *.) matter of form, the plaintiff under- » Johnson v. Picket, cited Grimwood stands that the judge is going to direct v. Barritt, 6 T. R. 483 ; see also Hardy the jury to find a verdict against him, v. Cathcart, 5 Taunt. 2. 336 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. that applies to venue in transitory matters, viz., that the plea and subsequent pleadings should follow the day alleged in the writ and declaration,^ and if, in these cases, no time at all be laid, the omission is aided, after verdict, or judgment by con- fession or default, by the operation of the statute of jeofails.^ But where, in the plea or subsequent pleadings, the time happens to be material, it must be alleged ; and there (as in the case of a venue to a local fact) the pleader may be obliged to depart from the day in the writ and declaration. Exception to Rule. Certainty of time is said to be required in personal actions only ; it being held that in real and mixed actions it is gen- erally not necessary to allege the day, month, and year, and that it is sufficient to show in what king's reign the matter arose.^ Rule III. The Pleadings must specify Quality, Quan- tity, AND Value.* Averments of Quality, Quantity, and Value. It is, generally, necessary, where the declaration alleges any injury to goods and chattels, or any contract relating to them, that their quality/, quantify/, and value or price, should be stated. In any action brought for the recovery of real property, its quality should be shown, as, whether it consists of houses, lands, or other hereditaments, and, as a rule, it should be stated whether the lands are meadow, pasture, or arable, etc. And the quantity of the lands or other real estate must *lso be specified. So, in an action brought for injuries to real property, the quality should be shown, as, whether it consists of houses, lands, or other hereditaments. I 1 2 Saund. 5, n. 3 ; Ha we v. Planner, designate the thing that he seeks, to I 1 Saund. 14. wit: its quality, «&c., and also the quan- 2 Higgins V. Highfield, 13 East, 407. tity, &c.). Bract. 431 a; Harpur's Case, 3 Com. Dig. Pleader, C. iO; The 11 Co. Eep. 25 b; Doct. PI. 85, 86; King V. Bishop of Chester, 2 Salk. 561 ; Knight v. Svmms, Carth. 204; Doe i-. Skin. 660; 9 Henry VI. 115, 116. Ploughman,' 1 East, 441 ; Goodtitle v. * Oportet quod petens rem designet, Otway, 8 East, 357 ; Andrew v. White- quam petit, videlicet, qualitatem, &c., head, 13 East, 102; 1 Saund. 333, n. 7 ; item quantitatem, &c. (the plaintiff must 2 Saund. 74, n. 1. RULES TO PEODUCE CERTAINTY IN THE ISSUE. 337 Examples : (1) In an action of trespass, for breaking the plain- tiff's close and taking away his fish, without showing the number or nature of the fish, it was, after verdict, objected, in arrest of judgment, first, " that it did not appear by the declaration of what nature the fish were : pikes, tenches, breams, etc. ; " and, secondly, that "the certain number of them did not appear." And the objection was allowed by the whole court.'' (2) Where, in an action of trespass, the declaration charged the taking of cattle, the declaration was held to be bad, because it did not show of what species the cattle were.^ (3) In an action of trespass, where the plaintiff declared for taking goods generally, without specifying the particulars, a ver- dict being found for the plaintiff, the court arrested the judgment for the uncertainty of the declaration.^ (4) In a modern case, where, in an action of replevin, the plaintiff declared that the defendant, " in a certain dwelling-house, took divers goods and chattels of the plaintiff," without stating what the goods were, the court arrested the judgment for the un- certainty of the declaration, after judgment by default and a writ of inquiry executed.* (5) In an action of dower, where blanks were left in the count for the number of acres claimed, the judgment was reversed after verdict.^ (6) In ejectment, the plaintiff declared for five closes of land, arable and pasture, called Long Furlongs, containing ten acres ; upon not guilty pleaded the plaintiff had a verdict, and it was moved in arrest of judgment, that the declaration was ill, be- cause the quantity and quality of the lands were not distin- guished and ascertained, so as to show how many acres of arable there were and how many of pasture. And for this reason the declaration was held ill, and the judgment arrested.® With respect to value, it is to be observed, that it should be specified with reference to the current coin of the realm, thus : " divers, to wit, three tables of great value, to wit, the value 1 Playter's Case, 5 Co. Rep. 34 b. 74, n. 1.) And see ChamberLain v. N. B. — Sergeant Williams observes, Greenfield, 3 Wils. 292. that in this case the omission would, 2 j^^le v. Pliillipson, 2 Lutw. 1374. perhaps, now be held to be aided, after 3 Bertie v. Pickering, 4 Burr. 24.55 ; verdict, or cured, by the statutes of Wiat v. Essington, 2 Ld. Rayra. 1410, jeofails ; and as the action was not S. P. merely for taking fish, but also for * Pope v. Tillman, 7 Taunt. 642. breaking the close, he doubts if the ^ Lawley v. Gattacre, Cro. Jac. 498. declaration would now be held bad, ^ Knight v. Symms, Garth. 204. even on special demurrer. (2 Saund. 22 338 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. of twenty pounds, of lawful money of Great Britain." With respect to quantity, it should be specified by the ordinary measures of extent, weight, or capacity, thus : " divers, to wit, fifty acres of arable land," " divers, to wit, three bushels of wheat." Exceptions to Rule. The rule in question, however, is not so strictly construed, but that it sometimes admits the specification of quality and quantity in a loose and general way. Examples : (1) A declaration in trover, for t^o packs of flax and two packs of hemp, without setting out the weight or quantity of a pack, is good after verdict, and, as it seems, even upon special demurrer.^ (2) A declaration in trover, for a library of books, has been -allowed, without expressing what they were. (3) Where the plaintiff declared in trespass for entering his house, and taking several keys for the opening of the doors of his said house, it was objected, after verdict, that the kind and number ought to be ascertained. But it was answered and re- solved, that the keys are sufficiently ascertained by reference to the house. ^ > (4) It was held, upon special demurrer, that it was suffi- cient to declare, in trespass for breaking and entering a house, damaging the goods and chattels, and wrenching and forcing open the doors, without specifying the goods and chattels, or the number of doors forced open ; because the essential matter of the action was the breaking and entering of the house, and the rest merely aggravation,^ There are also some kinds of actions, to which the rule requiring specification of quality, quantity, and value, does not apply in modern practice. Thus, in actions of debt and indebitatus assumjjsit (where a more general form of declara- tion obtains than in most other actions), if the debt is claimed in respect of goods sold, etc., the quality, quantity, or value of the goods sold is never specified. The amount of the debt, or sum of money due upon such sale, must, however, be shown. 1 2 Saund. 74 b, n. L 3 Chamberlain i;. Greenfield, 3 Wila 2 Layton v. Grindall, 2 Salk. 643 ; 292. and see many other instances, 2 Saund. 74 b, n. 1. eules to produce certainty in the issue, 339 Averments op Quantity and Value generally Immaterial. As with respect to place and time, so, with respect to quan- tity and value, it is not necessary, when these matters are brought into issue, that the proof should correspond with the averment. The pleader may, generally, allege any quantity and value that he pleases (at least if it be laid under a vzc?g- Zicg^), without risk from the variance, in the event of a different amount being proved.^ But it is to be observed, that a verdict can not generally he obtained for a larger quantity or value than is alleged. The pleader, therefore, takes care to lay them to an extent large enough to cover the utmost case that can be proved. It is also to be observed, that, as with respect to place or time, so with respect to quantity or value, there may be in- stances in which they form part of the substance of the issue ; and there they must be strictly proved as laid. Exani2ole : To a declaration in assumpsit for £10 4s., and other sums, the defendant pleaded, as to all but £4 7s. 6d., the general issue ; and, as to the £4 7s. 6d., a tender. The plaintiff replied that, after the cause of action accrued, and before the tender, the plaintiff demanded the said sum of £4 7s. 6d., which the defendant refused to pay; and on issue joined, it was proved that the plaintiff had demanded not £4 7s. 6d., but the whole £10 4s, This proof was held not to support the issue.^ Averments of Quality Material. With respect to the allegation of quality, this generally requires to he strictly proved as laid. Rule IV. The Pleadings must specify the Names of j Persons.3 (1) This rule apptlies to the parties to the suit. The original writ and the declaration must both set forth ncmirntpl y ihp. names nf botli p nrties^ The plaintiff must be 1 Crispin v. Williamson, 8 Taunt. 19, F. 17, F. 18; /inZ, Pleader, C. 18; 107. Bract. 301 b. 2 Rivers v. Griffith, 5 Barrt. & Aid. * Com. Dig. ubi supra ; Bract, ubi 630. supra. But in Queen v. Dale, 17 Q. 8 Com. Dig. Abatement, E. 18, E. B. 64 (proceedings in scire facias on / 340 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. described by his Christi an name and surname : and, if either bf , i pistaken or j)mitted, i t is ^ron T]fl for pTpn. jq n.hn.tpmpnt. The case is the same with respect to the defendant. If either party have a name of dignity, such as earl, etc., he must be described accordingly ; and an omission or mistake in such description has the same effect as in the Christian name and surname of an ordinary person.^ 4 (2) The rule also relates to persons not parties to the suit, wf whom meyition is made in the pleading. The names of such persons, viz., the Christian name an d surnaroe, or name of dign ity, must generally be given ; b ut, if not within the knowledge of the party pleading, an a llegatio n to that effect should be made, and such allegation will excuse the omission of name.^ Consequences of a Mistake. A mistake in the name of a party to the suit is ground_ for plea in abatement only, and can not be objected as a varianc e at the trial ; but the name of a person not a partj , is a point on whic h the proof must correspond with the avermen t, under peril of a_ fatal varia nce, for it is matter of description . Examples: (1) Where a bill of exchange drawn by John Couch was declared upon as drawn by John Crouch, and the defendant pleaded the general issue, the plaintiff was nonsuited.^ (2) Where the declaration stated that the defendant went be- fore Richard Cavendish, Baron Waterpark, of Waterfork, one of the justices, etc., for the County of Stafford, and falsely charged the plaintiff with felony, etc., and, upon the general issue, it appeared in evidence that the charge was made before Richard Cavendish, Baron Waterpark, of Waterpark — this was held a fatal variance in the name of dignity.* a recognizance), the declaration stated ^ Com Dig. Abatement, E. 20, F. that the recognizance had been ac- 19. knowledged before "J. H. Harper." - Bucldey v. Rice Thomas, Plowd, A demurrer was overruled, the court 128 a; Rowe v. Roach, 1 M. & S. 304. saying that " J " may have been the ^ Whitwell i'. Bennett, 3 Bos. & Pull, full Christian name of the person, and 559. See also Bowditch v. Mawley, I adding, "There is no doubt that a Camp. 195; Hutchinson v. Piper, 4 vowel may be a good Christian name, Taunt. 810. why not a consonant ? " * Walters v. Mace, 2 Barn. & Aid. 756. \x rules to produce certainty in the issue. 341 Rule Y. The Pleadings must show Title.i 1 ' When, in pleading, any ri^ht or authority is s e t up in re - / spect of property, personal or real, some title to that property / must o f course be alleged in t he party , or jn some other per - son fro m whom he derives his authority. So, i f^ party be charged with any liahili tii^ in respect of properjty, personal or real, his title to that property must b e alleged. It is proposed to consider : — I. The case of a party's alleging title in himself, or in another whose authority he pleads ; II. That of his alleging it in his adversary. I. Of the Case where a Party alleges a Title in Him- self, OR IN Another whose Authority he pleads. (A) It is often sufficient to allege a Title of Posses- sion only. The form of laying a title of possession, in respect of goods and chattels, is either to allege that they were the ^'■£oods_cmd dLOJtelsjyf the plami^" or that he was " lawfully possessed of them as of his own property.'' ^ With respect to corporeal hereditaments, the form is, either to allege that the close, etc., was the " close of " the plaintifP, or that he was " lawfull y possessed of a certain clos e J^ etc. With respect to incorporeal hereditaments, a title of posses- sion is generally laid by alleging that the plaintiff was pos- sessed of the corporeal thing, in respect of which the right is claimed, and by reason thereof was entitled to the right at the time in question ; for example, that he " was possessed of a certain messuage, etc., and hy reason thereof, during all the time aforesaid, of right ought to have had common of pasture, ^^ etc. A title of possession is applicable, that is, will be sufficiently sustained by the proof, in all cases where the interest is of a present and immediate kind. Thus, when a title of possession is alleged with respect to goods and chattels, the statement will be supported by proof of any kind of present interest in 1 Com. Dig. Pleader, 3 M. 9 ; Bract. 372 b, 373 b. 342 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. them, whether that interest be temporary and special, or abso- lute in its nature ; as, for example, whether it be that of a carrier or finder only, or that of an owner and proprietor.^ So, where a title in possession is alleged in respect of corporeal or incorporeal hereditaments, it will be sufficiently maintained by proving any kind of estate in p)ossession, whether fee simple, fee tail, for life, for term of years, or otherwise. On the other hand, with respect to any kind of property, a title of posses- sion would not be sustained in evidence by proof of an interest in remainder or reversion only ; and, therefore, when the inter- est is of that description, the preceding forms are inapplicable, and title must be laid in remainder or reversion, according to the fact, and upon the principles that will be afterwards stated on the subject of alleging title in its full and precise extent. Where a title of possession is aj^plicahle, the allegation of it is, in many cases, sufficient, in pleading, without showing title of a superior kind. The rule on this subject is as follows : ; It is sufficient to allege possession as against a wrong-doer? In other words, it is enough to lay a title of possession against a person who is stated to have committed an injury 'to such possession, having, as far as it appears, no title himself. Examples : (1) If the plaintiflf declares in trespass, for breaking and entering his close, or in trespass on the case, for obstructing his right of way, it is enough to allege in the declaration, in the first case, that it is the ^^ close of the plaintiffi,^^ in the second case, that " Ae was possessed of a certahi messuage, etc., and, by reason of such possession, of right ought to have had a certain way^'' etc. For, if the case was that the plaintiff being possessed of the close, the defendant, having himself no title, broke and entered it, or, that the plaintiff being possessed of a messuage and right of way, the defendant, being without title, obstructed it, then, whatever was the nature and extent of the plaintiff's title, in either case, the law will give him damages for the injury to his 1 2 Saund. 47 a, n. 1. how v. Esley, "Willes, 619; Waring v. 2 Com. Dig. Pleader, C. 39, C. 41 ; Griffiths, 1 Burr. 440 ; Langford v. Taylor v. Eastwood, 1 East, 212 ; Grim- Webber, 3 Mod. 132. stead V. Marlowe, 4 T. R. 717; Green- RULES TO PRODUCE CERTAINTY IN THE ISSUE. 343 possession; and it is the possession, therefore, only that needs to be stated. It is true that it does not yet appear tliat the defend- ant had no title, and, by his plea, he may possibly set up one superior to that of the plaintiff ; but as, on the other hand, it does not yet appear that he had title, the effect is the same, and till he pleads he must be considered as a mere tvrong-doer, that is, he must be taken to have committed an injury to the plaintiff's possession, without having any right himself. (2) In an action of trespass for assault and battery, if the defendant justifies, on the ground that the plaintiff wrongfully entered his house and was making a disturbance there, and that the defendant gently removed him, the form of the plea is, that " the defendant was laivfully 2->ossessed of a certain dwelling- house, etc., and, being so possessed, the said plaintiff was unlaw- fully in the said divelling-house,'^ etc. ; and it is not necessary for the defendant to show any title to the house beyond this of mere possession.^ For the j^l^^^ntiff has, at present, set up no title at all to the house ; and, on the face of the plea, he has com- mitted an injury to the defendant's possession, without having any right himself. (3) In an action of trespass for seizing cattle, if the defendant justifies, on the ground that the cattle were damage- feasant on his close, it is not necessary for him to show any title to his close, except that of mere possession.*^ Exceptions : It is to be observed, however, with respect to this rule, as to alleging possession against a wrong-doer, that it seems not to hold in replevin. For, in that action, it is held not to be sufficient to state a title of possession, even in a case where it would be allowable in trespass, by virtue of the rule above mentioned. Example : In replevin, if the defendant, by way of avowry, pleads that he was possessed of a messuage, and entitled to common of pasture, as appurtenant thereto, and that he took the cattle damage- feasant, it seems that this pleading is bad, and that 1 Skevill V. Avery, Cro. Car. 138. N. B. — It is sometimes said, that the 2 1 Saund. 221, n. 1, 346 e, n. 2 ; 2 reason why it is suflScieut to lay a Rannd. 28.5, n. 3 ; Anon. 2 Salk. 643 ; possessory title in sucli cases is, that Searl v. Bunnion, 2 Mod. 70 ; Osway v. the title is matter of Inducement only Bristow, 10 Mod. 37; 2 Bos. & Pull, to the main subject of the plea. But 361, n. a; Langford v. Webber, 3 Mod. this doctrine, if well examined, resolves 132; but see s. c. Carth. 9; 3 Salk. itself into the l)roader and more satis- 356. factory rule given in the text. 344 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. it is not sufficient to lay such mere title of possession in this action.^ It is to be observed, too, that this rule has little or no appli- cation in real or mixed actions ; for, in these, an injury to the possession is seldom alleged ; the question in dispute being, for the most part, on the right of possession, or the right of projyertg. V (B) Where Superior Title must be shown. Whe re this rule as to alleging possession against a wrong - doer tZogs *^^i_^i^5 there, though the interest be present or possessory, it_i^ generally^ not sufficient to state a title of possession^ bu t some sup erior title must be shown. Examples : (1) In trespass for breaking the plaintiff's close, if the defendant's justification is that the close was his own copyhold estate of inheritance, Ms plea, as it does not make the plaintiff a wrong-doer, but, on the contrary, admits his possessory title in the close, and pleads in confession and avoidance of it, must allege not merely a possession, but a seisin in fee of the copyhold. (2) In a similar action, if the defendant relies on a right of way over the plaintiff's close, it will not be sufficient to plead that he, the defendant, was lawfully 2^ossessed of another close, and, by reason of such possession, was entitled to a right of way over the plaintiff's, but he must set forth some superior title to his close and right of way ; as, for example, that of seisin in fee of the close, and a prescription in a que estate ^ to the right of way. The manner of stating a superior title to that of possession will be shown under the following head, relative to the alle- gation of title in its fiill and precise extent. 1 Hawkins v. Eckles, 2 Bos. & Pull, of common, it is required to allege a 359, 361, n. a; per Buller, J. Dovaston seisin in fee of the close or other cor- V. Payne, 1 H. Bl. 530 ; 1 Saund. 346 e, jjoreal hereditament in respect of which n. 2 ; 2 Saund. 295, n. 3 ; Saunders v. the right is claimed, and then to prescribe Hussey, 2 Lutw. 1231; s. C. Carth. for that right, in a que estate; i.e., to 9 ; 1 Ld. Raym. 333 ; but see Adams v. allege that the person so seised, and all Cross,! Vent. 181. those w^ose c.^to^e he has in the premises, 2 Where a prescriptive right is have, from time immemorial, exercised claimed to an easement, or to any profit the right in question. Min. Inst. IV. or benefit taken or arising out of land, 968 ; Bl. Com. II. 264*; 1 Saand. 346, such as a prescriptive right of way or n. 3. EULES TO PRODUCE CERTAINTY IN THE ISSUE. 345 (C) Where a Title op Possession is either not Applica- ble, OR NOT Sufficient, the Title should, generally, be stated in its Full and Precise Extent.^ Upon this head, two subjects of remark present themselves : (a) The Allegation op the Title itself, (5) The Statement of its Derivation. (a) The Allegation of the Title itself. With respect to the allegation of the title itself, there are ""v" certain forms used in pleading, appropriate to each different kind of title, according to all the different distinctions as to tenure, quantity/ of estate, time of enjoyment, and number of owners. These forms are too various to be here stated, and it will be sufficient to refer the student to the copious stores in the printed precedents.^ (5) The Derivation of the Title. With respect to the derivation of the title, there are certain rules of which it will be necessary to give some account. There is a leading d istinctio n, on this subject, between estates in fe e simple and p articular estates . (1) Generally, it is suffici ent to state a seisin in fee simple per se. In this case jjLi5_fiI?j!2^^g;h Rimply ^^ g^ntp (according to the usual form of alleging that title), thq ^t_thg_ pn rf.y -lygs, " seised in hh ilemciou' as of fee of and in a certain messiuigel^ etc., witho ut sbuwino- the derivatio n., ql (as it is expressed mplead- ing), the commencement o f the estate.^ For, if it were requisite \ v^ to show from whom the present tenant derived his title, it ,/ might be required, on the same principle, to show from whom f that person derived his, and so ad infinitum. Besides, as mere seisin will be sufficient to give an estate in fee simple, the estate may, for anything that appears, have had no other com- 1 Therefore, to allege mere seisin, Wentworth's Pleading, and the 2d and without showing whether in fee, in tail, 3d volumes of any edition prior to 1834 or for life, is, generally, not sufficient, of Chitty's Pleading. (Saunders v. Hussey, Carth. 9 ; s. c. 2 ^ Qq Ljtt. 303 b ; Scavage v. Haw- Lutw. 1231 ; 1 Ld. ilaym. 333.) kins, Cro, Car. 571. 2 The best books of precedents are 346 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. mencement than the seisin itself which is alleged. So, though the fee b e conditiona l or determinabl e on a cev ^r]]^ pvpnt., ypt, u seisin in f ee may be alleged, without showing the commen ce- ment of the estate^ (2) However, it is som etimes nec ess ary to show the de riva- ition of the feje; viz., where, in the pleading, the seisin ha s I alrea dy been alleged in an ot her person , f rom whom the present I party claims. i In such case it must, of course, be shown how it passed from one of these persons to the other. Examples : (1) In debt or covenant brought on an indenture of lease by the heir of the lessor, the plaintiff, having alleged that his ancestor was seised in fee and made the lease, must proceed to show how the fee passed to himself, viz., by descent. (2) If, in trespass, the defendant plead that E. F., being seised in fee, demised to G. H., under whose command the de- fendant justifies the trespass on the land (giving color), and the plaintiff, in his replication, admits E. F.'s seisin, but sets up a subsequent title in himself to the same land, in fee simple, prior to the alleged demise, he must show the derivation of the fee from E. F. to himself, by conveyance antecedent to the lease under which G. H. claims.^ (3) With respect to 'particular estates, the general rule is, 't hat the commencement of particular estates must h e shown.^ If,^therefore, a party sets up in his own favor an estate tail. an^state_for_life, a term of year s, or a tenancy at_ will. he must. show_ihe.. de rivation of that t itl e from its commence- ffifiEt^ that is, from the last seisin in fee simple ; and, if derived by alie nation or conveyance, the substance and effed; of such conveyances should be p recisely f ^et fort;h . For examples of the manner of thus showing the com- mencement of particular estates, under all the different kinds of conveyances, and other media of title, the student must again have recourse to the books of precedents. 1 Doct. PI. 287. Bunnion, 2 Mod. 70; Johns v. Whitley, 2 See Upper Bench Precedents, 196, 3 Wils. 72 ; Hendy r. Stephenson, 10 cited 9 Went., Index, xl, xli. East, 60 ; East. Ent. 656 ; and the case 3 Co. Litt. 303 b ; Scilly v. Dally, 2 of title derived from the king is no Salk. 562; s. c. Carth. 444; Searl v. exception. (1 Saund. 186 d, n. 1.) RULES TO PRODUCE CERTAINTY IN THE ISSUE. 347 Under this rule, that the commencement of particular estates must he shown, it is necessary to show the comm encement of a copyh old, even though it be copyhold of inheritance} This is on t he ground that a c opyhold , even in fee, is in t he nature of a particular estate^, in respect oftlie freehold inhe ritance in the lord . And the difficulty that would arise, if the title were to be deduced from the earliest or original grantee, is obviated by the practice of going back to the admittance of the last heir or surrenderee only ; which admittance is considered as in the nature of a grant from the lord, and is so pleaded.^ It is in this manner that the commencement of a copyhold estate is, generally, alleged, namely, by stating it as a grant from the lord.^ But, where an estate has been already laid in another copyholder, from whom the present party claims, and it becomes necessary, therefore, to show how the estate passed from one to the other, the conveyances between the copyhold tenants, by surrender, and the admittance by the lord, etc., must then be set forth according to the fact. Exception : To the rule that the commencement of particu- lar estates must he shown, there is this exception, that i _t need, not be shown where the title is alleged by way of inducement Example : If an action of debt or covenant be brought on an indenture of lease by the executor or assignee of a lessor, who had been entitled for a term of years, it is necessary, in the decla- ration, to state the title of the lessor, in order to show that the plaintiff is entitled to maintain the action, as his representative or assignee. But as the title is, in that case, alleged by way of inducement only (the action being mainly founded on the lease itself), and therefore it is probable that the title may not come ^ Pyster v. Hemling, Cro. Jac. 103; v. Vernon, 5 East, 51 ; Burrell v. Dodd, Shepheard's Case, Cro. Car. 190; Rob- 3 Bos. & Pull. 378. iuson V. Smith, 4 Mod. 346. * Com. Di'^'^^^^^; ^e mu st^ generally^ show how he i s heir, ^ and if he claims hij mediat e, not imme- diate, descent, he must show the pedigre e. If he claims by inheritance, he must show how he is heir, whether as son or otherwise ; if h e claims as nephew , he must sho w how he,is..nfiphpwj (5) Where a party claims hy conveyance or alienation, the nature of the__eonve yance or alienation mu st, generall y, he stated. It must be shown whether it is by devi se, feoffment^ etc.^ (6) The 7iature of the conveyance or alienation should he stated ac cording to its legal effect , rat her than its form of words. This depends on a more general rule, which we shall have occasion to consider in another place, viz., " that t hings are to be plea ded according to their legal effect or operatio n."^ For the present, the doctrine, as applicable to conveyances, may be thus illustrated. In pleading a conveyance for life, with livery of seisin, the proper form is to allege it as a " demise " for life,* for such is its effect in proper legal description. So, a conveyance in tail, with livery, is always pleaded, on the same principle, as a " gift " in tail,^ and a conveyance of the fee, with livery, is described by the term "enfeoffed."^ And such would be the form of pleading, whatever might be the words of donation used in the instru- ment itself ; which, in all the three cases, are often the same, 1 Denham v. Stephenson, 1 Salk. conveyance in fee ; and yet, sometimes 355 ; The Duke of Newcastle v. Wright, improperly, it is called a feoffment, 1 Lev. 1 90 ; 1 Ld. Raym. 202. when an estate of freehold only doth 2 Dumsday v. Hughes, 3 Bos. & passe." (Co. Litt. 9 a.) Feoffare di- PuU. 453 ; Blackborough v. Davis, 12 citur, qui feodum simplex feoffatorio Mod. 619; and see Roe v. Lord, 2 confert; donare, qui feodum talhatura. Bl. Rep. 1099, and the cases there (He is said to enfeoff, who confers a fee cited. . simple on a feoffee ; to donate, who confers 3 See Com. Dig. Pleader, E. 23, E. a fee tail.) (Spelm. Gloss, verbo/eo/- 24. fare.) And Lord Coke, in another * Rast. Ent. 647 a, 11 d. place, makes the distinction laid down 5 See Co. Ent. tit. Eormedon, &c., &c. in the text between feoffment, gift, and 6 "Feoffment properly betokeneth a demise. (Vynior's Case, 8 Co. Rep. 82 b.) RULES TO PRODUCE CERTAINTY IN THE ISSUE. 349 viz., those of " give " and " grant." ^ So, in a conveyanc e by lease and r elease, t hougli the words of the deed of relea se be_" grant, bargain, sell, alien, release, and confirm ," yet it . should be pleaded as a release only, for that is the lega l _effect.2 So, a surrender (whatever words are used in the instrument) should^be plead ed with surs um reddidit (again he rendered), whicli_alone, in pleading, d escribe the operation of a_convey ance as a surrender. *^ (7) Where the nature of the conveyance is such that it ivould, at common law, be valid without deed or writing, there no deed or ivriting need he alleged in the pleading, though such document may in fact exist; hut ivhere th^jnMure^qf th^_con- veyance requires, at co mmon law , a deed , or other written inst rument , such instrument must he alleged.^ Therefore, a conveyance, with livery of seisin, either in fee, tail, or for life, is pleaded without alleging any charter, or other writing of feoffment, gift, or demise, whether such instrument, in fact, accompanied the conveyance or not. For such conveyance might, at common law, be made by parol only,^ and though, by the statute of frauds, 29 Car. II. c. 3, s. 1, it will not now be valid unless made in writing, yet the form of pleading remains the same as before the act of Par- liament.^ On the other hand, a devise of lands (which, at common law, was not valid, and authorized only by the stat- utes 32 Hen. YIII. c. 1, and 34 Hen. VIII. c. 5), must be flilptrpfl fn linvf^ hp pn mndrritr^vvriting .'^ w hich is the only form in_whi ch the stat' ifiP"' ""^'"' ej4ge-4t to be made. So, if a con- veyance by way of grant be plead ed, a deed must be alleged,^ for matters that " lie in grant " (according to the legal phrase) can pass by deed only.^ 1 "Z)o (I give) or rferfi (I have given) by statute do not alter the form of is the aptest word of feoffment." (Co. pleading at common law. This rule Litt. 9 a.) will be noticed hereafter, in its proper '^ 1 Arch. 127 ; 3 Went. 483, 515. place. » 1 Saund. 235 b, n. 9. M Saund. 276 a, n. 2. * Vin. Ab. Faits or Deeds, M. a, 11. ^ Porter v. Gray, Cro. Eliz. 245; 1 6 Vin. Ab. Feoffment, Y. ; Co. Litt. Saund. 234, n. 3 ; Lathbury v. Arnold, 121 b. I Bing. 217. " This depends upon a more general ^ Vin. Ab. tit. Grants, G. a. rule, viz., that regulations introduced 350 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. Exception: There is one case, however, in which a deed is usually alleged in pleading, though not necessary, at com- mon law, to the conveyance, and which, therefore, in practice at least, forms an exception to the above rule. For, in makin g title u nder a lease for years, by indenture , i t is usual to plead the indenture , thou gh the lease was good at common law bv parol, and needs to be in writing only where the term is of more than three years' duration, and then only by the statute of frauds. On the other hand, in the case w here a demise by husband and wife is ple aded , it seems that it is not necessary to show that it was by deed ; and yet the lease, if without deed, is at common law void as to the wife, after the death of the hus- band, and is not within the statute 32 Hen. VIII. c. 28, s. 1, which gives efficacy to leases by persons having an estate in right of their wives, etc., only where such leases are " by writing indented, under seal." The reason seems to be that a lease by husband and wife, though without deed , i s_ good during the life of the husband.^ Thus far with respect to the allegation of title, in li^full and precise extent. Another mode, however, of laying title, still remains to be considered. Allegation of General Freehold Title. Where a title of possession is inapplicable or insufficient, it is not always necessary to allege the title in its full and pre- cise extent ; for in lieu of this, it is occasionally sufficient to allege what may be called a general freehold title. In a plea in trespass quare clausum f regit ^ or an avowry in replevin,^ if the defendant claim an estate of freehold in the locus in quo, he is allowed to plead generally that the place is his " close, soil, and freehold.^' This is called the plea or avowry of liherum tenementum (free-holding). This allegation of a general freehold title will be sustained by proof of any estate of freehold, whether in fee, in tail, or 12 Saund. 180 a, n. 9; Wiscot'a Allen, Cro. Eliz. 438 ; Childes y. West- Case, 2 Co. Kep. 61 b ; Bateman v. cot, ibid. 482 ; Dy. 91 b. 2 1 Saund. 347 d, n. 6. RULES TO PRODUCE CERTAINTY IN THE ISSUE. 351 for life only, and whether in possession or expectant on the determination of a term of years.^ But it does not apply to the case of a freehold estate in remainder or reversion, expectant on a particular estate of freehold, nor to copyhold tenure. Tha p1^n '^'^ o^r^xur'Y ni ]ihf^rum, Unp.m.p.ntMW, is the only case of_usual occurrence in modern practice in which the allega tion of a peneral freehold title, in lieu of a precise alleviation of titl^ i s sufficient.^ In alleging a general freehold title . ^ it is not necessary (as appears by the above example) to show its commenceme nt. II. Where a Party alleges Title in his Adversary. The rule generally applicable upon this subject is the following : — It is not necessary to allege Title more Precisely than IS sufficient to show a Liability in the Party charged or TO defeat his Present Claim. E xcejpt as far as these objects may require , a party is no t compellable to show the precise estate which his adversar y holds, even in a case where, if the same person were pleading his own title, such precise allegation would be necessary. The reason of this difference is, that a party must be pre - sumed to be ignorant of the particulars of his adversary'^ tiil£, though he is bound to know his own.^ When sufficient to allege a Title op Possession. To answer the purpose of showing a liability in the party charged, according to the rule here given, it is. in most case s, sufQcient to allege a title of possession^ the forms of which are 1 See 5 Henry VII. 10 a, pi. 2, which general freehold title. (Doct. PI. 289.) shows, that where there is a lease for It occurs also in the count on a writ of years it must be replied in confession entry siir disseizin (on a disseisin) and avoidance, and is no ground for brought by tenant for life or in tail, traversing the plea of liberum tene- (Booth, 177; 33 Hen. VI. 14 b; Care- mentum. swell v. Vaughan, 2 Saund. 30.) 2 See 1 Saund. 347 d, n. 6. This » Rider v. Smith, 3 T. R. 766; form of allegation occurred, however, Derisley v. Custance, 4 T. R. 77 ; The in the now disused actions of assize, the Attorney-General v. Meller, Hardr. 459, count or plaint in which lays only a 352 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. similar to those in which the same kind of title is alleged in favor of the party pleading. A title of possession, however , can not be sustained in evi- dence, except by proving some present interest in chatt els, qt actual posses^ i^v ^^ 1^"*^ If, therefore, t he interest be bv way of reversion_ or remai nder, it must be laid accordingly . and the title of possession is inapplicable. So, there are cases in which to charge a party with mere possession would not be sufficient to show his liability. Example : In declaring against a party in debt for rent, as assignee of a term of years, it would not be sufficient to show that he was possessed, but it must be shown that he was possessed as assignee of the term. Where Superior Title must be shown. Where a title of possession is thus inapplicable or insuffi- cient, and some other or superior title must be shown, it is yet not necessary to allege the title of an adversary with as much precision as in the case where a party is stating his own ; ^ and it seems sufficient that it be laid fully enough to show the liability charged. Therefore, though it is the rule, with respect to a man's own title, that the commencement of particular estates should he shotvn, unless alleged by way of inducement, yet, in pleading the title of an adversary, it seems that this is, generally, not necessary .^ So, in_cases_ where it.bp.p pi^ns to be requisite to show whence the adver - sary derived his title , this mny bpi flnnf> with less precision than wherR n man alleges his own . And, generally, it is sufficient to plead such title by a que estate ; that is, to allege that the opposite party has the same estate, or that the same estate is vested in him, as has been precedently laid in some other person, without showing in what manner the estate passed from the one to the other.^ Example : In debt, where the defendant is charged for rent, as assignee of the term, after several mesne assignments, it is 1 Com. Dig. Pleader, C. 42 ; Hill v. see the Attorney-General v. Meller, Saunders, 4 Barn. & Cress. 536. Hardr. 459 ; Doct. PI. 302 ; Com. Dig. 2 Blake v. Foster, 8 T. R. 487. Pleader, E. 23, E. 24 ; Co. Litt. 121 a. * As to making title by a que estate. RULES TO PRODUCE CERTAINTY IN THE ISSUE. 353 sufficient, after stating the original demise, to allege that, " after making the said indenture, and during the term thereby granted, to xoit, on the day of , m the year , at , all the estate and interest of the said E. -F." (the original lessee) " of and in the said demised premises, by assignment, came to and vested in the said C. D. ; " without further showing the nature of the mesne assignments.^ But, if the case be reversed, that is, if the plaintiff, claim- ing as assignee of the reversion, sue the lessee for rent, he must precisely show the conveyances, or other media of title, by which he became entitled to the reversion ; and to say, generally, that it came by assignment, will not, in this case, be sufficient, without circumstantially alleging all the mesne assignments.^ Upon the same principle, if title be laid in an adversary by descent, as, for example, where an action of debt is brought against an heir on the bond of his ancestor, it is sufficient to charge him as heir, without showing how he is heir, viz., as son, or otherwise ;^ but if a party entitle himself by inheritance, we have seen that the mode of descent must be alleged. Averments of Title must be Strictly Proved. The manner of showing title, both where it is laid in the party himself, or the person whose authority he pleads, and where it is laid in his adversary, having been now considered, it may next be observed, that the title so shown must gen- erally, when issue is taken upon it, be strictly proved. With respect to the allegations of place, time, quantity, and value, it has been seen, that when issue is taken upon them, they, in most cases, do not require to be proved as laid — at least, if laid under a videlicet. But with respect to title, it is, ordi- narily, of the substance of the issue; and, therefore, under the doctrine of variance requires to be maintained accurately by the proof. 1 1 Saund. 112, n. 1 ; The Attorney- ^ 1 Saund. uhi supra ; Pitt v. Russell,, General v. Meller, Hardr. 459 ; The Duke 3 Lev. 19. of Newcastle v. Wright, 1 Lev. 190; ^ Denham v. Stephenson, 1 Salk. 355. Derisley v. Custance, 4 T. R. 77. 23 354 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. Example : In an action on the case, the plaintiff alleged, in his declaration, that he demised a house to the defendant for seven years, and that, during the term, the defendant so negli- gently kept his fire, that the house was burned down ; and the defendant having pleaded non demisit modo et forma (he did not demise in manner and form), it appeared in evidence, that the plaintiff had demised to the defendant several tenements, of which the house in question was one ; but that, with respect to this house, it was, by an exception in the lease, demised at will only. The court held, that, though the plaintiff might have declared against the defendant as tenant at will only, and the action would have lain, yet, having stated a demise for seven years, the proof of a lease at will was a variance, and that in sub- stance, not in form only ; and, on the ground of such variance, judgment was given for the defendant.^ Exceptions to Rule Y. The rule which requires that title should be shown having been now explained, it will be proper to notice certain excep- tions to which it is subject. (1) Estoppel. No title need be shown where the opposite party is estopped from denying the title. Examples : (1) In an action for goods sold and delivered, it is unnecessary, in addition to the allegation that the plaintiff sold and delivered them to the defendant, to state that they were the goods of the plaintiff ; ^ for a buyer who has accepted and enjoyed the goods cannot dispute the title of the seller. (2) In debt or covenant, brought by the lessor against the lessee, on the covenants of the lease, the plaintiff need allege no title to the premises demised; because a tenant is estopped from denying his landlord's title. On the other hand, however, a tenant is not bound to admit title to any extent greater than might authorize the lease ; and, therefore, if the action be brought not by the lessor him- self, but by his heir, executor, or other representative or assignee, the title of the former must be alleged, in order to show that the reversion is now legally vested in the plaintiff, in the character in which he sues. Thus, if he sue as heir, 1 Cudlip V. Bundle, Carth. 202. a Bull. N. P. 139. RULES TO PRODUCE CERTAINTY IN THE ISSUE. 355 he must allege that the lessor was seised in fee ; for the tenant is not bound to admit that he was seised in fee ; and, unless he was so, the plaintiff can not claim as heir. (2) Avowries and Cognizances. "7 * Another exception to the general rule, requiring title to be shown, has been introduced by statute, and is as follows : In making avowry or cognizance in replevin, upon distresses for rent, quit-rents, reliefs, heriots, or other services, the de- fendant is enabled, by the provision of the act 11 Geo. IT. c. 19, s. 22, " to avow or make cognizance generally that the plaintiff in re- plevin, or other tenant of the lands and tenements whereon such distress was made, enjoyed the same, under a grant or demise, at such a certain rent, during the time wherein the rent distrained for accrued, which rent was then and still remains due, or that the place where the distress was taken was parcel of such certain tenements held of such honor, lordship, or manor, for which tenements the rent, relief, heriot, or other service distrained for, was, at the time of such distress, and still remains, due, without further setting forth the grant, tenure, demise, or title of such landlord or landlords, lessor or lessors, owner or owners of such manor, any law or usage to the contrary notwithstanding." ^ Rule VI. The Pleadings must show Authority.^ When a party has occasion to justify under a writ, war- rant, precept, 0£jany other authority whatever, he must, as a rule, set it forth particularly in his pleading. And he ought also to show that he has substantially pursued such authority. Example : In trespass for taking a mare, the defendant pleaded that Sir J. S. was seised in fee of the manor of B., and that he, and all those whose estate he had in the said manor,^ had always held a lawful court twice a year, to which the tenants of the manor used to resort; that such as had right of common were appointed by the steward to be of the jury ; that by-laws were 1 See remarks on this enactment and 283 a ; ibid. 303 b ; Com. Dig. Pleader, on the previous state of the law, 2 Saiind. E. 17; 1 Sauud. 298, n. 1; Lamb v. 284 c, n. 3. Mills, 4 Mod. 377 ; Matthews v. Gary, 3 2 " Kegnlarly, whensoever a man Mod. 137 ; s. c. Carth. 73 ; Collet v. Lord doth anything by force of a warrant or Keith, 2 East, 260 ; Solw. N. P. 826.) authority, he must plead it." (Co. Litt. ^ instance of pleading a. que estate. 356 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. accustomed to "be made there, and that such as had right of common obeyed those laws or paid a forfeiture of a reasonable sum to be imposed on them ; that at one of these courts a jury- was sworn and a law made, that every person who had common should pay forty shillings for depasturing his cattle on any place where corn was standing; that the plaintiff had right of common, and permitted his sheep to depasture on certain ground on which corn was standing ; that such offence was presented at the next court ; and that the defendant, being bailiff of the lord of the said manor, did take the mare for the forfeiture, etc. Upon demurrer, the court held the plea bad ; " for the bailiff can not take a for- feiture ex officio. There must be a precept directed to him for that purpose, which he must show in pleading," etc. Aad judg- ment was given for the plaintiff.^ So, in all cases where the defendant justifies under judicial process, he must set it forth particularly in his plea, and it is not suffiei-ent to allege fien eralty that he committed the act in question by virtue of a certain writ or warrant directed to him.2 But on this subject tliere are some important distinc- tions as to the degree of particularity which the rules of pleading in different cases require : — (1) It is not necessary that any person, justifying under judicial process, should set forth the cause of action in the original suit in which that process issued.^ (2) If the justification be by the officer executing the writ, he is required to plead such writ only, and not the judgment on which it was founded, for his duty obliged him to execute the former, without inquiring about the validity or existence of the latter. But, if the justification be by a party to the suit, or by any stranger, except an officer, the judgment, as well as the writ, must be set forth. ^ (3) Where it is an officer who justifies, he must sliQajJikat the writ was returned., if it was such as it was his duty to 1 Lamb v. Mills, 4 Mod. 377. 3 Lev. 20 ; per De Grev, C. J., Barker v. 2 1 Saund. 298, n. 1 ; Co. Litt. 303 b. Braham, 3 Wils. 368." But in Britton 8 Rowland v. Veale, Cowp. 18; Belk v. Cole, 1 Salk. 408, it is said that the V. Broadbent, 3 T. R. 183 ; 1 Saund. court " seemed to hold that, if one 92, n. 2. comes in aid of the officer at his re- * Per Holt, C. J., Britton v. Cole, quest, he may justify as the officer may Carth. 443 ; s. c. 1 Salk. 408 ; Turner do." (See Morse v. James, Willes, V. Felgate, 1 Lev. 95 ; Cotes v. Michill, 122.) RULES TO PRODUCE CERTAINTY IN THE ISSUE. 357 return, and all mesne process is of that description. But, as a rule, a writ of execution need not be returned, and there- fore no return of it need generally be alleged.^ However, it is said that, " if any ulterior process in execution is to be resorted to to complete the justification, there it may be neces- sary to show to the court the return of the prior writ, in order to warrant the issuing of the other." 2 Again, there is a dis- tinction as to this point between a principal and a subordinate officer : " The former shall not justify under the process, unless he has obeyed the order of the court in returning it ; otherwise it is of one who has not the power to procure a return to be made." ^ (4) Where it is necessary to plead the judgment, that may be done (if it was a judgment of a superior court) without setting forth any of the previous proceedings in the suit.* (5) Where the justification is founded on process issuing out of an inferior English court, or (as it seems) a court of foreign jurisdiction, the nature and extent of the jurisdiction of such court ought to be set forth, and it ought to be shown that the cause of action arose within that jurisdiction, though a justification founded on process of any of the superior courts need not contain such allegations.^ And, in pleading a judgment of inferior courts, the previous proceedings are, in some measure, stated. But it is allowable to set them forth with a taliter processum est (such pi'oceedings were had) ; thus, that A. B., at a certain court, etc., held at, etc., levied his plaint against C. D., in a certain plea of trespass on the case, or debt, etc. (as the case may be), for a cause of action arising within the jurisdiction, and thereupon such proceed- ings were had, that afterwards, etc., it was considered by the said court that the said A. B. should recover against the said C. D., etc.6 1 Middleton y. Price, Str. 1184; s.c. 1 Ld. Raym. 633; s. c. 1 Salk. 409; 1 "Wils. 17; Cheasley v. Barnes, 10 Moore n. Taylor, 5 Tauut. 69. East, 73 ; Rowland v. Veale, Cowp. 18; * See the precedents, 9 Went. 22, Hoe's Case, 5 Co. Rep. 90; 1 Saund. 92, 53, 120, 3.51. n. 2. 5 Collet v. Lord Keith, 2 Ea.st, 274 ; 2 Cheasley v. Barnes, uhi supra. Moravia v. Sloper, Wille-s, 30. 8 Per Holt, C. J., Freemen v. Blewett, 6 1 Saund. 92, n. 2 ; Rowland u 358 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. Exception to Rule. Notwithstanding the general rule under consideration, it is allowable, where an authority may he constituted verbally and generally, to plead it in general terms. Example : In replevin, where the defendant makes cognizance, confessing the taking of the goods or cattle, as bailiff of another person, for rent in arrear, or as damage- feasant, it is sufficient to say that, *' as bailiff of the said E. T., he well acknowledges the taking, etc., as for and in the name of a distress,^' etc., without showing any warrant for that purpose.-^ Averments of Authority must be Strictly Proved. The allegation of authority, like that of title, must, gener- ally, be strictly proved as laid. The above-mentioned particulars of place, time, quality, quantity, and value, tiames of p>er8ons, title, and authority, though, in this work, made the subject of distinct rules, with a view to convenient classification and arrangement, are to be considered but as examples of that infinite variety of circum- stances, which it may become necessary, in different cases and forms of action, to particularize, for the sake of producing a certain issue ; for it may be laid down as a comprehensive rule, that — Rule VII. In General, whatever is Alleged in Pleading, must be Alleged with Certainty.^ This rule, being very wide in its terms, it will be proper to illustrate it by a variety of examples. Jn pleading the performance of a condition or covenant, it is a rule, though open to exceptions that will be presently noticed, that the party must not plead generally that he performed the covenant or condition, but must show specially the time, place, and .manner of performance ; and even though the subject to Veale, Cowp. 18 ; Morse v. James, ^ Matthews v. Cary, 3 Mod. 138. Willes, 122; Johnson v. Warner, ibid. 2 Com. Dig. Pleader, C. 17, C. 22, 528; Titley v. Foxall, ibid. 688. E. 5, F. 17. RtTLES TO PRODUCE CERTAINTY IN THE ISSUE. 859 be performed should consist of several different acts, yet he must show in this special way the performance of each.^ Examples: (1) In debt on bond, conditioned for the payment of £30 to H. S., I. S., and A. S., tamcito (so soon) as they should come to the age of twenty-one years, the defendant pleaded that he paid those sums tarn cito as they came of age, and the plaintiff demurred, because i_tjw;as not shown when they came of age, and the certain times of the payment. " And for this cause all the court held the plea to be ill ; for although it be a good plea, regu- larly, to the condition of a bond, to pursue the words of the con- dition, and to show the performance, yet Coke said there was another rule, that he ought to plead in certainty the time and place and manner of the performance of the condition, so as a certain issue may be taken ; otherwise it is not good. Wherefore, because he did not plead here in certainty, it was adjudged for the plaintiff. (2) "And between the same parties, in another action of debt upon an obligation, the condition being for performance of lega- cies in such a will, he pleaded performance generally, and, not showing the will, nor what the legacies were, it was adjudged for the plaintiff." ^ (3) In debt on a bond, conditioned for the performance of several specific things, "the defendant p\ea,ded j^erformav it omnia (he performed all), etc. Upon demurrer it was adjudged an ill plea; for, the particulars being expressed in the condition, he ought to plead to each particularly, by itself." ^ Exceptions to Rule. This rule, requiring performance to be specially shown, admits of relaxation where the subject comprehends such multi- plicity of matter as would lead to great prolixity ; and a more general mode of 'allegation is in such cases allowable. It is open also to the following exceptions : Where the condition is for the performance of matters set forth in another instru- 1 Com. Dig. Pleader, E. 25, E. 26, 2 Vent. I.'jG ; Lord Evers v. Buckton, 2 W. 33 ; Halsey v. Carpenter, Cro. Benl. 65 ; Braban r. Bacon, Cro. Eliz. Jac. 359; Wimbleton v. lioldrip, 1 Lev. 916; Coduer v. Dalby, Cro. Jac. 363; 303; Woodcock v. Cole, 1 Sid. 215; Leneret v. Rivet, ibid. 503; 1 Sauud Stone V. Bli.ss, 1 Bul.st. 43 ; Fitzpatrick 116, n. 1. V. Robinson, 1 Sliow. 1 ; Austin v. ^ Halsey v. Carpenter, uhi supra. Jervoise, Hob. 69, 77 ; Brown v. liands, ^ Wimbleton v. Holdrip, uhi supra. 360 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. ment, and these matters are in an affirmative and absolute form, and neither in the negative nor the disjunctive, a general plea of performance is sufficient. And where a bond is conditioned for indemnifying the plaintiff from the conse- quences of a certain act, a general plea of noii damnificatus, viz., that he has not been damnified, is proper, without showing how the defendant has indemnified him. These variations from the ordinary rule, and the principles on which they are founded, will be explained hereafter. When, in any of these excepted cases, however, a general -plea of performance is pleaded, the rule under discussion still requires the plaintiff to show particularly in his replication in what way the covenant or condition has been broken ; for, other- wise, no sufficiently certain issue would be attained. Example: In an action of debt on a bond, conditioned for performance of affirmative and absolute covenants contained in a certain indenture, if the defendant pleads generally (as in that case he may) that he performed the covenants according to the condition, the plaintiff can not in his replication tender issue with a mere traverse of the words of the plea, viz., that the defendant did not perform any of the covenants, etc. ; for this issue would be too wide and uncertain; but he must assign a breach, showing specifically in what particular, and in what manner, the covenants have been broken.^ Not only on the subject of performance, but in a variety of other cases, the books afford illustration of this general rule. Examples : (1) In debt on bond, the defendant pleaded that the instrument was executed in pursuance of a certain corrupt con- tract, made at a time and place specified, between the plaintiff and defendant, whereupon there was reserved above the rate of £5 for the forbearing of £100 for a year, contrary to the statute in such case made and provided. To this plea there was a demurrer, assigning for cause, that the particulars of the contract were not specified, nor the time of forbearance, nor the sum to be forborne, nor the sum to be paid for such forbearance. And the court held that the plea was bad, for not setting forth particularly the corrupt contract and the usurious interest ; and Bayley, J., * Plomer v. Ross, 5 Taunt. 386 ; per Lord Maiisfield, Sayre v. Minns, Cowp 578; Com. Dig. Pleader, F. 14. RULES TO PKODUCE CERTAINTY IN THE ISSUE. 361 observed, that he "had always understood that the party who pleads a contract must set it out, if he be a party to the contract." ^ (2) To an action on the case for a libel, imputing that the plaintiff was connected with swindlers and common informers, and had also been guilty of deceiving and defrauding divers per- sons, the defendant pleaded that the plaintiff had been illegally, fraudulently, and dishonestly concerned with, and was one of, a gang of swindlers and common informers, and had also been guilty of deceiving and defrauding divers persons with whom he had had dealings and transactions. To this plea there was a special demurrer, assigning for cause, inter alia (among other things), that the plea did not state the particular instances of fraud ; and though the Court of Common Pleas gave judgment for the defend- ant, this judgment was afterwards reversed upon writ of error, and the plea adjudged to be insufficient, on the ground above mentioned.'^ (3) In an action of trespass for false imprisonment, the de- fendants pleaded, that before the said time, when, etc., certain persons unknown had forged receipts on certain forged dividend warrants, and received the money purporting to be due thereon, in Bank of England notes, amongst which was a note for £100, which was afterwards exchanged at the bank for other notes, amongst which was one for £10, the date and number of which were afterwards altered ; that afterwards, and a little before the said time, when, etc., the plaintiff was suspicioushj possessed of the altered note, and did in a suspicious manner dispose of the same to one A. B., and afterwards, in a suspicious manner, left England and went to Scotland ; whereupon the defendants had reasonable , cause to suspect, and did suspect, that the plaintiff had forged the said receipts, and so proceeded to justify the taking and detaining his person, to be dealt with according to law. Upon general demurrer, this plea was considered as clearly bad, because it did not show the grou7ids of suspicion with suffi- cient certainty to enable the court to judge of their sufficiency ; and it was held that the use of the word sttsjnciousli/ would not compensate that omission.' (4) In an action of trover, for taking a ship, the defendant pleaded that he was captain of a certain man-of-war, and that he seized the ship mentioned in the declaration as prize ; that he carried her to a certain port in the East Indies ; and that the 1 Hill V. Montagu, 2 M. & S. 377 ; 2 j' Anson v. Stuart, 1 T. R. 748. Hiuton V. Roffey, 3 Mod. 35, S. P. ' Mure v. Kaje, 4 Taunt. 34. 362 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. admiralty court there gave sentence against the said ship as prize. Upon demurrer, it was resolved that it was necessary for the plea to show some special cause for which the ship became a prize, and that the defendant ought to show who was the judge that gave sentence and to whom that court of admiralty did belong. And tor the omission of these matters the plea was adjudged insufficient.^ (5) In an action of debt on bond, conditioned to pay so much money yearl}^, while certain letters patent were in force, the defendant pleaded, that from such a time to such a time he did pay, and that then the letters patent became void and of no force. The plaintiff having replied, it was adjudged, on demurrer to the replication, that the plea was bad, because it did not show hoiv the letters patent became void.^ (6) Where the defendant justified an imprisonment of the plaintiff, on the ground of a contempt committed ^aw/ac^is quam verbis (as well by acts as by words), the plea was held bad upon demurrer, because it set forth the contempt in this general way, without showing its nature more particularly.^ With respect to all points on which certainty of allegation is required, it may be remarked that the allegation, when brought into issue, must commonly be proved, in substance, as laid ; and that the relaxation from the ordinary rule on this subject, which is allowed with respect to place, time, quantity, and value, does not, generally speaking, extend to other particulars. Subordinate Rules. Such are the principal rules which tend to certainty ; but it is to be observed, that these receive considerable limita- tion and restriction from some other rules of a subordinate kind, to the examination of which it will now be proper to proceed. (1) It is not necessary in pleading to state that which is merely matter of evidence.'^ 1 Beak v. Tyrrell, Carth. 31. and therefore the matter in fact shall 2 Lewis V. Preston, 1 Show. 290; be pleaded." ( Bowman's Case, 9 Co. s. c. Skin. 303. Rep. 9 b ; and see 9 Ed. IIL 5 b, 6 a, 3 Collet V. The Bailiffs of Shrews- there cited ; Eaton v. Southby, Willes, bury, 2 Leo. 34. 131 ; Jermy v. Jenny, 1 Ld. Raym. 8 j * " Evidence shall never be pleaded, Groenvelt v. Burnell, Carth. 491.) because it tends to prove matter in fact j RULES TO PRODUCE CERTAINTY IN THE ISSUE. 363 In other words, H is not necessary, in alleging a fact, to state such circumstances as merely tend to prove the truth of the fact. Example : In an action of replevin, for seventy cocks of wheat, the defendant avowed under a distress for rent arrear. The plaintiff pleaded in bar, that before the said time, when, etc., one H. L. had recovered judgment against G. S., and sued out execu- tion ; that G. S. was tenant at will to the defendant, and had sown seven acres of the premises with wheat, and died possessed thereof as tenant at will ; that, after his death, the sheriff took the said wheat in execution, and sold it to the plaintiff ; that the plaintiff suffered the wheat to grow on the locals in quo till it was ripe and fit to be cut; that he afterwards cut it, and made it into cocks, whereof the said seventy cocks were parcel ; that, the said cocks being so cut, the plaintiff suffered the same to lie on the said seven acres until the same, in the course of husbandry, were fit to be carried away ; and that, while they were so lying, the defendant, of his own wrong, took and distrained the same, under pretence of a distress, the said wheat not then being fit to be carried away, according to the course of husbandry, etc. The defendant demurred, and, among other objections, urged that it ought to have been particularly shown how long the wheat re- mained on the land after the cutting, that the court might judge whether it were a reasonable time or not. But the court decided against the objection. " For though it is said (in Co. Litt. 56 b) that, in some cases, the court must judge whether a thing be reasonable or not, as in case of a reasonable fine, a reasonable notice, or the like, it is absurd to say that, in the present case, the court must judge of the reasonableness ; for, if so, it ought to have been set forth in the plea, not only how long the corn lay on the ground, but likewise what sort of weather there was during that time, and many other incidents, which would be ridiculous to be inserted in a plea. We are of opinion, therefore, that this matter is sufficiently averred, and that the defendant might have traversed it, if he had pleased, and then it would have come before a jury, who, upon hearing the evidence, would have been the proper judges of it." ^ The reason of this rule is evident, if we revert to the general object which all the rules, tending to certainty, con- template, viz., the attainment of a certain issue. This implies (as has been shown) a development of the question in contro- 1 Eaton V. Southby, Willes, 131, 364 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. versy in a specific shape ; aud it has been elsewhere attempted to define, in a general way, the degree of specification with wbich this should be developed. But, if that object be attained, there is, generally, no necessity for further minute- ness in the pleading; and, therefore, those subordinate facts, which go to make up the evidence by which the affirm- ative or negative of the issue is to be established, do not require to be alleged, and may be brought forward, for the first time, at the trial, when the issue comes to be decided. Thus, in the above example, if we suppose issue joined, whether the wheat cut was afterwards suffered to lie on the ground a reasonable time or not, there would have been sufficient certainty, without showing on the pleadings any of those circumstances (such as the number of days, the state of the weather, etc.) which ought to enter into the considera- tion of that question. These circumstances, being matter of evidence only, ought to be proved before the jury, but need not appear on the record. This is a rule so elementary in its kind, and so well observed in practice, as not to have become frequently the subject of illustration by decided cases ; and (for that reason, probably) is little, if at all, noticed in the digests and treat- ises. It is, however, a rule of great importance, from the influence which it has on the general character of English pleading ; and it is this, perhaps, more than any other prin- ciple of the science, which tends to prevent that minuteness and prolixity of detail, in which the allegations, under other systems of judicature, are involved. Another rule, that much conduces to the same effect, is that — (2) It is not necessary to state matter of which the court takes notice ex officio?- Therefore it is unnecessary to state matter of law ,2 for this the judges are bound to know, and can apply for themselves to the facts alleged. 1 Co. Litt. 303 b ; Com. Dig. Pleader, 2 poct. PI. 102. Per Buller, J., The C. 78; Deybel's Case, 4 Barn. & Aid. 243. King v. Lyme Regis, Doug. 159. RULES TO PRODUCE CERTAINTY IN THE ISSUE. 365 Example : If it be stated in pleading, that an officer of a cor- porate body was removed for misconduct, by the corporate body at large, it is unnecessary to aver that the power of removal was vested in such corporate body ; because that is a power by law incidental to them, unless given by some charter, by-law, or other authority, to a select part only.^ Nor is it the principles of the common law alone, which it is unnecessary to state in pleading. The public statute law falls within the same reason and the same rule ; as the judges are bound, officially, to notice the tenor of every public act of Parliament.2 It is, therefore, never necessary to set forth a public statute.^ The case, however, of private acts of Parlia- ment is different ; for these the court does not officially notice,* and therefore, where a party has occasion to rely on an act of this description, he must set forth such parts of it as are material.^ It may be observed, however, that though it is generally unnecessary to allege matter of law, yet there is sometimes occasion to make mention of it, for the convenience or intel- ligibility of the statement of fact, Examples : (1) In an action of assum^jsit on a bill of exchange, the form of the declaration is to state that the bill was drawn or accepted by the defendant, etc. (according to the nature of the case), and that the defendant, as drawer or acceptor, etc., became liable to pay ; and, being so liable, in consideration thereof promised to pay. (2) It is sometimes necessary to refer to a public statute in general terms, to show that the case is intended to be brought within the statute ; as, for example, to allege that the defendant committed a certain act against the form of the statute in such case made and provided ; but the reference is made in this general way only, and there is no need to set the statute forth. This rule, by which matter of law is omitted in the plead- ings, by no means prevents (it will be observed) the attain- ment of the requisite certainty of issue. For even though 1 The King v. Lyme Kegis, Doug. * Bl. Com. ibid. ; Piatt v. Hill, 1 Ld. 148. Eaym. 331. 2 Bl. Com. I. 86 *. 6 Boyce v. Whitaker, ubi supra. ^ Boyce v. Whitaker, Doug. 97; Partridge v. Strange, Plow. 84. 366 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. the dispute between the parties should turn upon matter of law, yet they may evidently obtain a sufficiently specific issue of that description without any allegation of law: for ex facto jus oritur (from fact the law arises) ; that is, every question of law necessarily arises out of some given state of facts ; and therefore nothing more is necessary than for each party to state, alternately, his case in point of fact ; and, upon demurrer to the sufficiency of some one of these pleadings, the issue in law must at length (as formerly demonstrated) arise. As it is unnecessary to allege matter of law, so, if it he alleged, it is improper (as it has been elsewhere stated) to make it the subject of traverse. Besides points of law^ there are many other matters of a public kind, of which the court takes official notice, and with respect to which, it is, for the same reason, unnecessary to make allegation in pleading, such as matters antecedently alleged in the same record,^ the time of the king's accession, his proclamations, his privileges, the time and place of hold- ing Parliament, the time of its sessions and prorogations, and its usual course of proceeding; the ecclesiastical, civil, and maritime laws; the customary course of descent in gavel- kind, and borough-English tenure; the course of the almanac ;2 the division of England into counties,^ provinces, and dioceses ; the meaning of English words, and terms of art (even when only local in their use) ; legal weights and measures, and the ordinary measurement of time ; the existence and course of proceeding of the superior courts at Westminster, and the other courts of general jurisdiction ; and the privileges of the officers of the courts at Westminster.* (3) It is not necessary to state matter which would come more properly from the other side.^ 1 Co. Litt. 303 b; The King v. * This enumeration is principally KnoUys, 1 Ld. Eaym. 13. taken from Chit. PI. 196-204, where 2 But see Mayor of Guilford v. further information on the subject will Clarke, 2 Vent. 247. be found. 3 But not the local situation and 5 Com. Dig. Pleader, C. 81 ; Stowell distances of the different places in a v. Ld. Zouch, Plow. 376 ; Walsingham's county from each other. (Deybel's Case, i'ierf. 564; St. John r. St. Jolin, Hob. Case, 4 Barn. & Aid. 243.) 78; Hotham v. East India Company, RULES TO PRODUCE CERTAINTY IN THE ISSUE. 367 This, which is the ordinary form of the rule, does not fully express its meaning. The meaning is, that it is not necessary/ to anticipate the answer of the adversary, which, according to Hale, C, J., is " like leaping before one comes to the stile." ^ It is sufficient that each pleading should, in itself, contain a good prima facie case, without reference to possible objections not yet urged. Examples : (1) In pleading a devise of land by force of the statute of wills (32 Hen. VIII. c. 1), it is sufficient to allege that such an one was seised of the land in fee, and devised it by his last will, in writing, without alleging that such devisor was of full age. For, though the statute provides that wills made by femes covert, or persons within age, etc., shall not be taken to be effectual, yet, if the devisor were within age, it is for the other party to show this in his answer,'* and it need not be denied by anticipation. (2) In a declaration of debt upon a bond, it is unnecessary to allege that the defendant was of full age when he executed it.^ (3) Where an action of debt was brought upon the statute 21 Henry VI., against the bailiff of a town, for not returning the plaintiff, a burgess of that town, for the last Parliament (the words of the statute being that the sheriff shall send his precept to the mayor, and, if there be no mayor, then to the bailiff), the plaintiff declared that the sheriff had made his precept unto the bailiff, without averring that there was no mayor. And, after verdict for the plaintiff, this was moved in arrest of judgment. But the court was of opinion, clearly, that the declaration was good, " for we shall not intend that there was a mayor, except it be showed ; and if there were one, it should come more properly on the other side." * (4) Where there was a covenant in a charter-party, " that no claim should be admitted, or allowance made for short tonnage, unless such short tonnage were found and made to appear on the ship's arrival, on a survey to be taken by four shipwrights, to be indifferently chosen by both parties ; " and, in an action of cove- nant, brought to recover for short tonnage, the plaintiff had a verdict, the defendant moved, in arrest of judgment, that it had 1 T. R. 638 ; Palmer v. Lawson 1 Sid. 2 Stowell v. Ld. Zouch, Plow. 376. 333 ; Lake v. Raw, Carth. 8 ; Williams -^ Walsingham's Case, ibid. 564. Sir V. Fowler, Str. 410. Ralph Bovy's Case, uhi supra. 1 Sir Ralph Bovy's Case, 1 Vent. ■* St. John v. St. John, Hob. 78. 217. 368 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. not been averred in the declaration that a survey was taken, and short tonnage made to appear. But the court held that, if such survey had not been taken, this was matter of defence, which ought to have been shown by the defendants, and refused to arrest the judgment.^ But where the matter is such, that its affirmation or denial is essential to the ajyparent or prima facie right of the party pleading, there it ought to be affirmed or denied by him in the first instance, though it may be such as would otherwise properly form the subject of objection on the other side. Examj^le : In an action of trespass on the case, brought by a commoner against a stranger, for putting his cattle on the common, per quod communia7n in tain annplo viodo habere non potuit (on account of which he could not have common in so full a manner), the defendant pleaded a license from the lord to put his cattle there, but did not aver that there was sufficient common left for the commoners. This was held, on demurrer, to be no good plea, for, though it may be objected that the plaintiff may reply that there was not enough common left, yet, as he had already alleged in his declaration that his enjoyment of the common was obstructed, the contrary of this ought to have been shown by the plea.^ Exceptions : Pleas op Estoppel, and of Alien Enemy. There is an exception to the rule in question, in the case of certain pleas, which are regarded unfavorably by the courts, as having the effect of excluding the truth. Such are all pleadings in estoppel^ and the plea of alien enemy. It is said that these must be certain in every particular ; which seems to amount to this, that they must meet and remove, by antici- pation, every possible answer of the adversary. Example : In a plea of alien enemy, the defendant must state not only that the plaintiff was born in a foreign country, now at enmity with the king, but that he came here without letters of 1 Hotham V. East India Company, 1 1 Freeman, 190; Greenhow v. Ilsley, T. K. 638. Willes, 619. 2 Smith V. Feverell, 2 Mod. 6 ; s. c. ^ Co. Litt. 352 b, 303 a ; Dovaston V. Payne, 2 H. Bl. 530. RULES TO PRODUCE CERTAINTY IN THE ISSUE. 3G9 safe conduct from the king; ^ whereas, according to the general rule in question, such safe conduct, if granted, should be averred by the plaintiff in reply, and need not, in the first instance, be denied by the defendant. (4) It is not necessary/ to allege circumstances necessarily implied.'^ Examples : (1) In an action of debt on a bond, conditioned to stand to and perform the award of W. R., the defendant pleaded that W. R. made no award. The plaintiff replied that, after the making of the bond, and before the time for making the award, the defendant, by his certain writing, revoked the authority of the said W. R., contrary to the form and effect of the said condi- tion. Upon demurrer, it was held that this replication was good, without averring that W. R. had notice of the revocation, because that was implied in the words "revoked the authority;" for there could be no revocation without notice to the arbitrator ; so that, if W. R. had no notice, it would have been competent to the defendant to tender issue " that he did not revoke in manner and form as alleged." ^ (2) So, if a feoffment be pleaded, it is not necessary to allege livery of seisin, for it is implied in the word " enfeoffed." ^ (3) So, if a man plead that he is heir to A., he need not allege that A. is dead, for it is implied.^ (5) It is not necessary to allege what the law will presume.^ Examples : (1) In debt on a replevin bond, the plaintiff's declared that, at the city of C, and within the jurisdiction of the mayor of the city, they distrained the goods of W. H. for rent, and that W. H., at the said city, made his plaint to the mayor, etc., and prayed deliverance, etc., whereupon the mayor took from him and the defendant the bond on which the action was 1 Casseres v. Bell, 8 T. R. 166. did not put his claim on the revocation 2 Vynior'sCase, 8Co. Rep. 81 b; Bac. of the submission, but on an alleged Ab. Pleas, &c. I. 7 ; Com. Dig. Pleader, non-performance of the award ; suck E. 9 ; Co. Litt. 303 b ; 2 Saund. 30.5 a^ was the judgment in Marsh v. Bulteel. n. 13 ; Reg. Plac. 101 ; Sheers v. Brooks, * Co. Litt. 303 b ; Doct. PI. 48, 49 ; 2 H. Bl. 120; Handford v. Palmer, 2 2 Saund. ?(6? s?//)rrt. Brod. & Bing. 361 ; Marsh i-. Bulteel, 5 ''2 Saund. tibi supra ; Com. Dig. Bam. & Aid. 507. ubi supra ; Dal. 67. ^ Vynior's Case, ubi supra; Marsh ^ Wilson v. Hobday, 4 M. & S. 125; V. Bulteel, ubi supra, S. P. ; but Chapman v. Pickersgill, 2 Wils. 147. judgment on the demurrer should be for the defendant, for the plaintiff 24 370 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. brought, conditioned that W. H. should appear before the mayor or his deputy, at the next court of record of the city, and there prosecute his suit, etc., and thereupon the mayor replevied, etc. It was held not to be necessary to allege in this declaration a custom for the mayor to grant replevin and take bond, and show that the plaint was made in court, because all these circumstances must be presumed against the defendant, who executed the bond and had the benefit of the replevin.^ (2) In an action for slander, imputing theft, the plaintiff need not aver that he is not a thief, because the law presumes his innocence till the contrary be shown.^ (6) A general mode of pleading is allowed tvhere great pro- lixity is thereby avoided^ It has been objected, with truth, that this rule is indefinite in its form.* Its extent and application, however, may be collected with some degree of precision from the examples by which it is illustrated in the books, and by considering the limitations which it necessarily receives from the rules tending to certainty, as enumerated in a former part of this work. Examples : (1) In assumpsit, on a promise by the defendant to pay for all such necessaries as his friend should be provided with by the plaintiff, the plaintiff alleged that he provided necessaries amounting to such a sum. It was moved, in arrest of judgment, that the declaration was not good, because he had not shown what necessaries in particular he had provided. But Coke, C. J., said, " this is good, as is here pleaded, for avoiding such multi- plicities of reckonings ; " and Doddridge, J., "this general allega- tion, that he had provided him with all necessaries, is good, without showing in particular what they were." And the court gave judgment unanimously for the plaintiff.^ (2) In assump)sit for labor and medicines, for curing the defendant of a distemper, the defendant pleaded infancy. The 1 Wilson V. Hobday, 4 M. & S. 125. Brownwick, 1 Sid. 334; Cryps v. Bayn- 3 Chapman v. Pickersgill, 2 Wils. ton, 3 Bulst. 31 ; Banks v. Pratt, Sty. 147. 428; Huggins i". Wiseman, Carth. 110 ; ^ Co. Litt. 303 b ; 2 Saund. 116 b,411, Groenvelt v. Burnell, /fti'c?. 491 ; J'Auson n. 4; Bac. Ab. Pleas, &c. I. 3 ; Jermy v. Stuart, 1 T. R. 753 ; Shum i'. Far- ??." Jenny, 1 Ld. Raym. 8; Aglionby rington, 1 Bos. & Pull. 640; Barton r. ?•. Towerson, ibid. 400 ; Parkes v. Mid- Webb, 8 T. R. 459 ; Hill v. Montagu, 2 dleton, Lutw. 421 ; Keating v. Irish, M. & S. 378. ibid. 590; Cornwallis v. Savery, 2 Burr. ■* 1 Arch. 211. 772; Mints v. Bethil, Cro. Eliz. 749; 5 Cryps y. Baynton, 3 Bulst. 31. Braban v. Bacon, ibid. 916; Church v. RULES TO PRODUCE CERTAINTY IN THE ISSUE. 371 plaintiff replied that the action was brought for necessaries gener- ally. On demurrer to the replication, it was objected, that the plaintiff had not assigned, in certain, how or in what manner the medicines were necessary ; but it was adjudged that the replica- tion, in this general form, was good ; and the plaintiff had judgment.^ (3) In debt on a bond, conditioned that the defendant should pay, from time to time, the moiety of all such money as he should receive, and give account of it, he pleaded, generally, that he had paid the moiety of all such money, etc. Et -per curiam (and by the court), " This plea of payment is good, without showing the particular sums, and that in order to avoid stuffing the rolls with multiplicity of matter." Also, they agreed that, if the condition had been to pay the moiety of such money as he should receive, without saying /rom time to time, the payment should have been pleaded specially.^ (4) In an action on a bond, conditioned that W. W. , who was appointed agent of a regiment, should pay all such sum and sums of money as he should receive from the paymaster general for the use of the regiment, and faithfully account to and indemnify the plaintiff, the defendant pleaded a general performance, and that the plaintiff was not damnified. The plaintiff replied, that W. W. received from the paymaster general, for the use of the said regiment, several sums of money, amounting in the whole to £1,400, for and on account of the said regiment and of the com- missioned and non-commissioned officers and soldiers of the same, according to their respective proportions, and that he had not paid a great part thereof among the colonel, officers, and soldiers, etc., according to the several proportions of their pay. Upon demurrer, the court said, that " there was no need to spin out the proceedings to a great prolixity, by entering into the detail, and stating the various deductions out of the whole pay, upon various accounts, and in different proportions." ^ (5) In debt on bond, conditioned that R. S. should render to the plaintiff a just account, and make payment and delivery of all moneys, bills, etc., which he should receive as his agent, the defendant pleaded performance. The plaintiff replied, that R. S. received, as such agent, divers sums of money, amounting to £2,000, belonging to the plaintiff's business, and had not ren- dered a just account, nor made payment and delivery of the said ^ Huggins V. "Wiseman, Carth. 110. ^ Cornwallis v. Savery, 2 Burr. 772. 2 Church r. Brownwirk, 1 Sid. 3.34 ; and see Mints v. Betliil, Cro. Eliz. 749. 372 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. sum, or any part thereof. The defendant demurred specially, assigning for cause, that it did not appear by the replication from whom, or in what manner, or in what proportions, the said sums of money, amounting to £2,000, had been received. But the court held the replication " agreeable to the rules of law and precedents." ' (7) A general mode of pleading is often sufficient^ where the allegation on the other side must reduce the matter to certainty? This rule comes into most frequent illustration in pleading performance, in actions of debt on bond. It has been seen that the general rule as to certainty requires that the time, place, and manner of such performance should be specially shown. Nevertheless, by virtue of the rule now under consideration, it may be sometimes alleged in general terms only ; and the requisite certainty of issue is in such cases secured by throw- ing on the plaintiff the necessity of showing a special breach in his replication. This course, for example, is allowed in cases where a more special form of pleading would lead to inconvenient prolixity. Example : In debt on bond, conditioned that the defendant should at all times, upon request, deliver to the plaintiff all the fat and tallow of all beasts which he, his servants, or assigns, should kill or dress before such a day, the defendant pleaded that, upon every request made unto him, he delivered unto the plaintiff all the fat and tallow of all beasts which were killed by him, or any of his servants or assigns, before the said day. On demurrer, it was objected, "that the plea was not good in such generality ; but he ought to have said that he had delivered so much fat or tallow, which was all, etc. ; or that he had killed so many beasts, whereof he l^d delivered all the fat." But the court held " that the plea was good ; for where the matters to be pleaded tend to infiniteness and multiplicity, whereby the rolls shall be encumbered with the length thereof, the law allows of a general pleading in the affirmative. And it hath been resolved, by all the justices of England, that in debt, upon an obligation to perform the covenant in an indenture, it sufficeth to allege performance generally. So, where one is obliged to deliver all 1 Shum u. Farrington, 1 Bos. & Pull. Cro. Eliz. 749; 1 Sannd. 117, n. 1 ; 2 640 ; and see a similar decision, Burton Saund. 410, n. 3 ; Church r. Brownwick, V. Webb, 8 T. R. 459. 1 Sid. 334. 2 Co. Litt. 303 b; Mints v. Bethil, A RULES TO PRODUCE CERTAINTY IN THE ISSUE. 373 his evidences, or to assure all his lands, it sufficeth to allege that he hath delivered all, etc., or assured all his lands, and it ought to come on the other side to show the contrary in some particular."'!^ Another illustration is afforded by the plea of non damnifi- catus, on an action of debt on an indemnity bond, or bond conditioned " to keep the plaintiff harmless and indemnified,'^ etc. This is in the nature of a plea of performance, being used where the defendant means to allege that the plaintiff has been kept harmless and indemnified, according to the tenor of the condition ; and it is pleaded in general terms, without showing the particular manner of the indemnification. Example : If an action of debt be brought on a bond, conditioned that the defendant " do, from time to time, acquit, discharge, and save harmless the churchwardens of the parish of P., and their successors, etc., from all manner of costs and charges, by reason of the birth and maintenance of a certain child ; " if the defend- ant means to rely on the performance of the condition, he may plead in this general form : " That the churchwardens of the said parish, or their successors, etc., from the time of making the said writing obligatory, were not in any manner damnified by reason of the birth or maintenance of the said child ; " ^ and it will then be for the plaintiff to show in the replication how the churchwardens were damnified. But with respect to the plea of non damnificatus, the follow- ing distinctions have been taken : First, if, instead of plead- ing in that form, the defendant alleges affirmatively that he " has saved harmless,''^ etc., the plea will in this case be bad, unless he proceeds to show specifically how he saved harm- less.^ Again, it is held that if the condition does not use the words " indemnify," or " save harmless," or some equivalent term, but stipulates for the performance of some specific act, intended to be by way of indemnity, such as the payment of a sum of money by the defendant to a third person, in exon- 1 Mints V. Bethil, Cro. Eliz. 749 ; Case, 2 Co. Rep. 4 a ; 7 Went. Index, and see Church v. Brownwick, 1 Sid. 615 ; 5 Went. .5.S1. 334. M Saund. 117, n. 1; White v. 2 Richard v. Hodges, 2 Saund. 84 ; Cleaver, Str. 681 ; Hillier v. I'lympton, Hayes v. Bryant, 1 H. Bl. 253 ; Com. ibid. 422. Dig. Pleader, E. 25, 2 W. 33 ; Manser's 374 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. eration of the plaintiff's liability to pay the same sum, the plea of non damnificatus will be improper : and the defendant should plead performance specifically, as," that hejjaid the said sum,^^ etc.^ It is also laid down that, if the condition of the bond be to " discharge " or " acquit " the plaintiff from a particular thing, the plea of non damnificatus will not apply, but the defendant must plead performance specially, " that he dis- charged and acquitted^^ etc., and must also show the manner of such acquittal and discharge.^ But, on the other hand, if a bond be conditioned to " discharge and acquit the plaintiff from any damage " by reason of a certain thing, non damnif catus may then be pleaded, because that is, in truth, the san. thing with a condition to " indemnify and save harmless," etc.^ The rule under consideration is also exemplified in the case where the condition of a bond is for performance of covenants, or other matters, contained in an indenture, or other instru- ment collateral to the bond, and not set forth in the condition. In this case, also, the law often allows (upon the same prin- ciple as in the last) a general plea of performance, without setting forth the manner.^ Examples : (1) In an action of debt on bond, where the condi- tion is, that T, J., deputy postmaster of a certain stage, " shall and will, truly, faithfully, and diligently, do, execute, and perform all and every the duties belonging to the said office of deputy post- master of the said stage, and shall faithfully, justly, and exactly observe, perform, fulfill, and keep all and every the instructions, etc., from his majesty's postmaster general," and such instruc- tions are in an affirmative and absolute form, as follows : " You shall cause all letters and packets to be speedily and without delay, carefully and faithfully, delivered, that shall from time to time be sent unto your said stage, to be dispersed there, or in the towns and parts adjacent, that all persons receiving such letters may have time to send their respective answers," etc., it is sufficient for the defendant to plead (after setting forth the instructions) 1 Holmes v. Rhodes, 1 Bos. & Pull. ^ 1 Saund. uhi supra. 638. * Mints v. Bethil, Cro. Eliz. "49 ; ^ 1 Saund. 117, n. 1 ; Bret v. Audar, Bac. Ab. Pleas, &c. I. 3 ; 2 Saund, 410, 1 Leon. 71 ; White ?;. Cleaver, Str. 681 ; n. 3 ; 1 Saund. ubi supra ; Com. Dig. Leneret v. Rivet, Cro. Jac. 503 ; Harris Pleader, 2, V. 13 ; Earl of Kerry v. V. Pett, 5 Mod. 243 ; 8. c. Carth. 375. Baxter, 4 East, 340. RULES TO PRODUCE CERTAINTY IN THE ISSUE. 375 " that the said T. J., from the time of the making the said uniting obligatory, hitherto hath well,, truly ^ faithfully,, and diligently done, executed, and 'performed all and every tJjfe duties belonging to the said office of deputy -postmaster of the said stage, and faith- fully, justly, and exactly observed, performed, fulfilled, and kept all and every the instructions, etc., according to the true intent and meaning of the said instructions,''^ without showing the manner of performance, as that he did cause certain letters or packets to be delivered, etc., being all that were sent.^ (2) If a bond be conditioned for fulfilling all and singular the covenants, articles, clauses, provisos, conditions, and agreements, comprised in a certain indenture, on the part and behalf of the defendant, which indenture contains covenants of an affirmative and absolute kind only, it is sufficient to plead (after setting forth the indenture) that. the defendant always hitherto hath well and truly fulfilled all And singular the covenants, articles, clauses, provisos, conditions, and agreements comprised in the said inden- ture, on the part and behalf of the said defendant.'^ But the adoption of a mode of pleading so general as in these examples will be improper, where the covenants, or other matters mentioned in the collateral instrument, are either in the negative or the disjunctive form ; ^ and, with respect to such matters, the allegation of performance should be more specially made, so as to apply exactly to the tenor of the collateral instrument. Example : In the example above given, of a bond conditioned for the performance of the duties of a deputy postmaster, and for observing the instructions of the postmaster general, if, be- sides those in the positive form, some of these instructions were in the negative, as, for example, " you shall not receive any letters or packets directed to any seaman, or unto any private soldier, etc., unless you be first paid for the same, and do charge the same to your account as paid," it would be improper to plead merely that T. J. faithfully performed the duties belonging to the office, etc., and all and every the instructions, etc. Such plea will apply sufficiently to the positive, but not to the negative part of the instructions.* The form, therefore, should be as follows : " That ^ 2 Saand. 40.3 b, 410, n. 3. supra; Of^lethorp v. Hyde, Cro. Eliz. 2 Gainsford v. Griffith, 1 Saund 55, 23.3 ; Lord Arlington v. Merricke, 2 117, n. 1 ; Earl of Kerry v. Baxter, 4 Saund. 410, and n. 3, ibid. East, 340. * Lord Arlington v. Merricke, ubi * Earl of Kerry v. Baxter, ubi supra. 376 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. the said T. J., from the time of making the said writing obligatory, hitherto hath well, truly, faithfully, and diligently executed and l^erformed all and every the duties belonging to the said offi,ce of deimty postmaster of the said stage, and faithfully, justly, and exactly observed, performed, fulfilled, and kept all and every the instructions, etc., according to the true intent and meaning of the said instructions. And the said defendant further says, that the said T. J., from the time aforesaid, did not receive any letters or packets directed to any seaman, or private soldier, etc., unless he, the said T. J., was first paid for the same, and did so charge himself, in his account, with the same as 2>aid," etc.^ And the case is the same where the matters mentioned in the collateral instrument are in the disjunctive or alternative form ; as, where the defendant engages to do either one thing or another. Here, also, a general allegation of performance is insufficient ; and he should show which of the alternative acts was performed.^ The reasons why the general allegation of performance does not properly apply to negative or disjunctive matters are, that, in the first case, the plea would be indirect or argumen- tative in its form ; in the second, equivocal ; and would, in either case, therefore, be objectionable, by reason of certain rules of pleading, which we shall have occasion to consider in the next section. It has been stated in a former part of this work that where a party founds his answer upon any matter not set forth by his adversary, but contained in a deed, of which the latter makes profert, he must demand oyer of such deed, and set it forth. In pleading performance, therefore, of the condition of a bond, where (as is generally the case) the plaintiff has stated in his declaration nothing but the bond itself, without the condition, it is necessary for the defendant to demand oyer of the con- dition, and set it forth.^ And in pleading performance of matters contained in a collateral instrument., it is necessary not only to do this, hut also to make profert., and set forth the whole' substance of the collateral instrument,^ iov otherwise it will not appear that that instrument did not stipulate for the 1 2 Saund. 410, and n. 3 ibid. 3 2 Sauud. 410, n. 2. 2 Oglethorp v. Hyde, Cro. Eliz. 233. * Ibid. RULES TO PRODUCE CERTAINTY IN THE ISSUE. 377 performance of negative or disjunctive matters,^ and, in that case, the general plea of performance of the matters therein contained would (as above shown) be improper. (8) No greater particularity is required than the nature of the thing pleaded will conveniently admit? Thus, though generally, in an action for injury to goods, the quantity of the goods must be stated, yet, if they can not, under the circumstances of the case, be conveniently ascer- tained by number, weight, or measure, such certainty will not be required. Examples : (1) In trespass for breaking the plaintiff's close, with beasts, and eating his peas, a declaration, not showing the quantity of peas, has been held suflacient; "because nobody can measure the peas that beasts can eat." ^ (2) In an action on the case for setting a house on fire, per quod the plaintiff, amongst divers other goods, ornatus pro eqids amisit (provisions for his horses lost), after verdict for the plaintiff, it was objected, that this was uncertain ; but the objec- tion was disallowed by the court. And, in this case, Windham, J., said, that if he had mentioned only diversa bona (sundry goods), yet it had been well enough, as a man can not be supposed to know the certainty of his goods when his house is burnt ; and added, that, to avoid prolixity, the law will sometimes allow such a declaration.* (3) In an action of debt brought on the statute 23 Hen. VI. c. 15, against the sheriff of Anglesea, for not returning the plaintiff to be a knight of the shire in Parliament, the declaration alleged that the plaintiff " was chosen and nominated a knight of the same county, etc., by the greater number of men then resi- dent within the said county of Anglesea, present, etc., each of whom could dispend 40s. of freehold by the year," etc. On de- murrer, it was objected that the plaintiff " does not show the cer- tainty of the number ; as to say, that he was chosen by 200, which was the greater number; and thereupon, a certain issue might arise, whether he was elected by so many, or not." But it was held that the declaration was " good enough, without showing 1 See Earl of Kerry v. Baxter, 4 Partridge v. Strange, ibid. S.') ; Hartley East, 340. V. Herring, 8 T. R. 130. 2 Bac. Ab. Pleas, &c. (B. 5) 5, and ^ Bac. Ab. uhi supra. 409, 5th ert. ; Buckley v Rice Thomas, * Bac. Ab. Pleas, &c. 409, 5th ed. Plow. 118; Wimbish v. Tailbois, ibid. 54 ; 378 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. the number of electors ; for the e/ection might be made by voices, or by hands, or such other way, wherein it is easy to tell who has the majority, and yet very diificult to know the certain number of them." And it was laid down that, to put the plaintiff " to declare a certainty, where he can not, by any possibility, be pre- sumed to know or remember the certainty, is not reasonable nor requisite in our law." ^ (4) In an action for false imprisonment, where the plaintiff declared that the defendant imprisoned him until he made a cer- tain bond, by duress, to the defendant, " and others unknown," the declaration was adjudged to be good, without showing the names of the others ; " because it might be that he could not know their names ; in which case, the law will not force him to show that which he can not." "^ (9) iess particularity is required, when the facts lie more in the knoivledge of the opi^osite party , than of the party pie adiny.^ This rule is exemplified in the case of alleging title in an adversary, where (as formerly explained) a more general statement is allowed, than when title is set up in the party himself. Examples : (1) In an action of covenant, the plaintiff declared that the defendant, by indenture, demised to him certain prem- ises, with a covenant that he, the defendant, had full power and lawful authority to demise the same, according to the form and effect of the said indenture ; and then the plaintiff assigned a breach, that the defendant had not full power and lawful authority to demise the said premises, according to the form and effect of the said indenture. After verdict for the plaintiff, it was assigned for error, that he had not in his declaration shown, " what person had right, title, estate, or interest, in the lands demised, by which it might appear to the court that the defendant had not full power and lawful authority to demise." But, "upon conference and debate amongst the justices, it was resolved that the assignment of the breach of covenant was good; for he has followed the words of the covenant negatively, and it lies more properly in the knowledge of the lessor, what estate he himself 1 -Buckley r. Rice Thomas, Plow. 118. ney General i-. MeUer, Hard. 459; 2 Cited ihid. See also Wimbish v. Denham r. Stephenson, ] Salk. 3.55 ; Tailbois, Plow. 54, 55 ; Partridge v. Robert Bradshaw's Case, 9 Co. Rep. Strange, Plow. 85. 60 b ; Gale v. Read, 8 East, 80 ; Com 3 Rider v. Smith, 3 T. R. 766 ; Dig Pleader, C. 26. Derisley y. Custance, 4 T. R. 77 ; Attor- RULES TO PRODUCE CERTAINTY IN THE ISSUE. 379 has in the land which he demises, than the lessee, who is a stranger to it." ^ (2) Where the defendant had covenanted that he would not carry on the business of a rope-maker, or ma.ke cordage for any person, except under contracts for government, and the plaintiff, in an action of covenant, assigned for breach, that after the making of the indenture, the defendant carried on the busi- ness of a rope-maker, and made cordage for divers and very many persons, other than by virtue of any contract for government, etc. ; the defendant demurred specially, on the ground that the plaintiff "had not disclosed any and what particular person or persons for whom the defendant made cordage, nor any and what particular quantities or kinds of cordage the defendant did so make for them, nor in what manner, nor by what acts, he carried on the said business of a rope-maker, as is alleged in the said breach of covenant." But the court held, "that as the facts alleged in these breaches lie more properly in the knowledge of the defend- ant, who must be presumed cognizant of his own dealings, than of the plaintiff, there was no occasion to state them with more particularity; " and gave judgment accordingly.^ (10) Less particularity is necessary in the statement of matter of inducement, or aggravation, than hi the main allegations? This rule is exemplified in the case of the derivation of title ; where, though it is a general rule that the commence- ment of a particular estate must he shown, yet an exception is allowed, if the title be alleged by way of i^iducement only. Examples : (1) Where, in assumpsit, the plaintiff declared that, in consideration that, at the defendant's request, he had given and granted to him, by deed, the next avoidance of a certain church, the defendant promised to pay £100, but the declaration did not set forth any time or place at which such grant was made; upon this being objected, in arrest of judgment, after verdict, the court resolved, that "it was but an inducement to the action, and therefore needed not to be so precisely alleged;" and gave judgment for the plaintiff.* 1 Robert Bradshaw's Case, 9 Co. Rep. 12 Mod. 597 ; Chamberlaiu v. Greenfield, 60 b. 3 Wils. 292 ; Alsope v. Sytwell, Yelv. 2 Gale V. Read, 8 East, 80. 17; Riggs v. Bulliugham, Cro. Eliz. 8 Co. Litt. 303 a; Bac. Ab. Pleas, 715; Woolaston v. We!)h, Ilob. 18; &c. 322, 348, 5th ed. ; Com. Dig. Bishop of Salisbury's Case, 10 Co. Pleader, C. 31, C. 43, E. 10, E. 18; Rep. 59 b ; 1 Saund. 274, n. 1. Doct. PI. 283; Wetherell v. Clerkson, * Riggs i;.BuUingham, ubi supra. 380 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. (2) In trespass, the plaintiff declared that the defendant broke and entered his dwelling-house, and " wrenched and forced open, or caused to be wrenched and forced open, the closet-doors, drawers, chests, cupboards, and cabinets of the said plaintiff," Upon special demurrer, it was objected, that the number of closet-doors, drawers, chests, cupboards, and cabinets, was not specified. But it was answered, "that the breaking and enter- ing the plaintiff's house was the principal ground and foundation of the present action; and all the rest are not foundations of the action, but matters only thrown in to aggravate the damages ; and on that ground need not be particularly specified." And of that opinion was the whole court ; and judgment was given for the plaintiff.-^ (11) With respect to acts valid at common law, but regulated, as to the mode of performance, by statute, it is sufficient to use such certainty of allegation, as was sufficient before the statute? By the common law, a lease for any number of years might be made by parol only ; but, by the statute of frauds (29 Car. II. c. 3, s. 1, 2), all leases and terms for years made by parol, and not put into writing, and signed by the lessors or their agents authorized by writing, shall have only the effect of leases at will, except leases not exceeding the term of three years from the making. Yet in a declaration of debt for rent on a demise, it is sufficient (as it was at common law) to state a demise for any number of years, without showing it to have been in writing.^ So, in the case of a promise to answer for the debt, default, or miscarriage of another person (which was good by parol, at common law, but by the statute of frauds, section 4, is not valid unless the agreement, or some memo- randum or note thereof, be in writing, and signed by the party, etc.), the declaration, on such promise, need not allege a written contract.* And on this subject, the following difference is to be remarked, that " where a thing is originally made by act of Parliament, and required to be in writing, it must be 1 Chamberlain v. Greenfield, 3 Wils. 12 Mofl. 540; Bac. Ab. Statute, L. 3; 292. 4 Hen. VII. 8. 2 1 Saund. 276, n. 2; 211, n. 2; s i Saund. 276, n. 1. Anon. 2 Salk. 519; Birch v. Bellamy, * 1 Saund. 211, n. 2 ; Anon. 2 Salk. 519. RULES TO PRODUCE CERTAINTY IN THE ISSUE. 381 pleaded with all the circumstances required by the act ; as in the case of a will of lands, it must be alleged to have been made in writing ; but where an act makes writing necessary to a matter, where it was not so at the common law, as where a lease for a longer term than three years is required to be in writing by the statute of frauds, it is not necessary to plead the thing to be in writing, though it must be proved to be so, in evidence." ^ Distinction : As to the rule under consideration, however, a distinction has been taken between a declaration and a plea ; and it is said, that though in the former the plaintiff need not show the thing to be in writing, in the latter the defendant must. Example : In an action of indebitatus assumpsit, for necessaries provided for the defendant's wife, the defendant pleaded, that before the action was brought, the plaintiff and defendant, and one J. B., the defendant's son, entered into a certain agreement, by which the plaintiff, in discharge of the debt mentioned in the declaration, was to accept the said J. B. as her debtor for £9, to be paid when he should receive his pay as a lieutenant ; and that the plaintiff accepted the said J. B. for her debtor, etc. Upon demurrer, judgment was given for the plaintiff, for two reasons : first, because it did not appear that there was any consideration for the agreement ; secondly, that, admitting the agreement to be valid, yet, by the statute of frauds, it ought to be in writing, or else the plaintiff could have no remedy thereon ; " and though, upon such an agreement, the plaintiff need not set forth the agreement to be in writing, yet when the defendant pleads such an agreement in bar, he must plead it so as it may appear to the court that an action will lie upon it ; for he shall not take away the plaintiff's present action, and not give her another, upon the agreement pleaded." ^ 1 1 Sannd. 276, d, e, n. 2. the first objection. The case is, perhaps, 2 Case V. Barber, 1 Ld. Raym. 450. therefore, not decisive as to the validity It is to be observed, that the plea was of the second. at all events a bad one with respect to CHAPTEE XIII. OF RULES WHICH TEND TO PREVENT OBSCURITY AND CONFUSION IN PLEADING. Rule I. Pleadings must not be insensible nor repugnant.^ (1) If a pleading be unintelligible (or, in the language of pleading, insensible), by the omission of material words, etc., this vitiates the pleading.^ (2) If a pleading be inconsistent with itself, or repugnant, this is ground for demurrer. Examples : (1) "Where, in an action of trespass, the plaintiff declared for taking and carrying away certain timber, lying in a certain place, for the completion of a house then lately built, — this declaration was considered as bad for repugnancy ; for the timber could not be for the building of a house already built.* (2) Where the defendant pleaded a grant of a rent, out of a term of years, and proceeded to allege that, by virtue thereof, he was seised in his demesne, as of freehold, for the term of his life, the plea was held bad for repugnancy.* Exception. If the second allegation, which creates the repugnancy, is merely superfluous and redundant, so that it may be rejected from the pleading, without materially altering the general sense and effect, it shall, in that case, be rejected, at least, if laid under a videlicet, and shall not vitiate the pleading ; for the maxim is, utile, per inutile, non vitiatur.^ 1 Com. Dig. Pleader, C. 23 ; Wyat 3 Xevill v. Soper, uhi supra, r. Aland, 1 Salk. 324 ; Bac. Ah. Pleas, ^ Butt's Case, ubi supra. &c. I. 4; Nevill v. Soper, 1 Salk. 213; 5 Gilb. C. P. 131, 132 ; The King v. Butt's Case, 7 Co. Rep. a ; Hutchinson Stevens, 5 East, 255 ; Wyat v. Aland, !■. .Jackson, 2 Lut. 1324 ; Vin. Ab. Abate- ubi supra; 2 Saund. 291, n. 1,306, ment, D. a. n. 14 ; Co. Litt. 303 b. - Com. Dig. ubi supra; Wyat v. Aland, ubi supra. TO PREVENT OBSCURITY AND CONFUSION IN PLEADING. 383 Rule II. Pleadings must not be ambiguous, or doubtful, / j J IN Meaning ; and when two Different Meanings present ^ themselves, that Construction shall be adopted which is most unfavorable to the Party pleading.^ Examples: (1) If in trespass quare clausum f regit, the defend- ant pleads, that the Locus in quo was his freehold, he must allege that it was his freehold at the time of the trespass ; otherwise the plea is insufficient.^ (2) In debt on a bond, conditioned to make assurance of laud, if the defendant pleads that he executed a release, his plea is bad, if it does not express that the release concerns the same land.'^ (3) In trespass quare clausum, fregit, and for breaking down two gates and three perches of hedges, the defendant pleaded that the said close was within the parish of K., and that all the parishioners there, from time immemorial, had used to go over the said close, upon their p>erambulation in rogation week ; and because the plaintiff had wrongfully erected two gates and three perches of hedges, in the said way, the defendant, being one of the parishioners, broke down those gates and those three perches of hedges. On demurrer, it was objected, that though the defendant had justified the breaking down two gates and three perches of hedges, it does not appear that they were the same gates and hedges, in respect of which the plaintiff complained ; it not being alleged that they were the gates and hedges " aforesaid,'^ or the gates and hedges "m the declaration mentioned^ "And thereto agreed all the justices, that this fault in the bar was incurable. For Walmsley said, that he thereby doth not answer to that for which the plaintiff chargeth him." And he observed, that the case might be, that the plaintiff had erected four gates and six perches of hedges ; and that the defendant had broken down the whole of these, having the justification mentioned in the plea, in respect of two gates and three perches only, and no defence as to the remainder ; and that the action might be brought in respect of the latter only.* A pleading, however, is not objectionable, as ambiguous or obscure, if it be certain to a common intent ; ^ that is, if it be 1 Co. Litt. 303 b ; Purcell v. Bradley, 2 Com. Di^. Pleader, E. 5. Yelv. 36 ; Rose v. Standen, 2 Mod. 29.5 Dovaston v. Payne, 2 H. Bl. .530 Thornton v. Adams, 5 M. & S. 38 ^ Com. Dig. nhi supra ; Manser's Case, 2 Co. Rep. 3. 4 Goodday v. Michell, Cro. Eliz. 441. Lord Huntingtower y. Gardiner, 1 Barn. ^ Com. Dig. Pleader, E. 7, F. 17: & Cress. 297 ; Fletcher v. Pogson, 3 I Saund. 49, n. 1 ; Long's Case, 5 Co. Bam. & Cress. 192. Rep. 121 a; Doct. PI. 58 ; Colthirst v. 384 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. clear enough, according to reasonable intendment or construc- tion, though not worded with absolute precision.^ Examples : (1) In debt on a bond, conditioned to procure A. S. to surrender a copyhold to the use of the plaintiff, — a plea that A. S. surrendered and released the copyhold to the plaintiff, in full court, and the plaintiff accepted it, without alleging that the surrender was to the plaintiff's use, is sufficient ; for this shall be intended. '^ (2) In debt on a bond, conditioned that the plaintiff shall enjoy certain land, etc., — a plea that after the making of the bond, until the day of exhibiting the bill, the plaintiff did enjoy, is good, though it be not said, that always after the making, until, etc., he enjoyed ; for this shall be intended.' Negative Pregnant. It is under this head, of ambiguity, that the doctrine of negatives pregnant appears most properly to range itself. A negative pregnant is such a form of negative expression as may imply, or carry within it, an affirmative. This is considered as a fault in pleading ; and the reason why it is so considered, is, that the meaning of such a form of expression is ambiguous. Examples : (1) In trespass, for entering the plaintiflPs house, the defendant pleaded, that the plaintiff's daughter gave him license to do so ; and that he entered by that license. The plain- tiff replied, that he did not enter by her license. This was con- sidered as a negative pregnant ; and it was held, that the plain- tiff should have traversed the entry by itself, or the license by itself, and not both together.* It will be observed that this form of traverse may imply, or carry within it, that a license was given, though the defendant did not enter by that license. It is, there- fore, in the language of pleading, said to be pregnant with that admission, viz., that a license was given.^ At the same time, the Bejushin, Plow. 26, 28, 33 ; Fulmerston " certain " is here used, not in the sense V. Steward, ibid. 102; Cooper r. Mouke, of particular or specific, as in former Willes, 52 ; The Iving v. Lyme Regis, parts of this work, — but in its other 1 Doug. 158; Hamond v. Dod, Cro. meaning, of c/ear or rf/.s^ncf. Car. 5 ; Poynter v. Poynter, ibid. 194 ; ^ Hamond i\ Dod, Cro. Car. 6. Dovaston y. Payne, 2 H. Bl. 530 ; Jacobs » Harlow v. Wright, ibid. 105. V. Nelson, 3 Taunt. 423. See especially •» Myn v. Cole, Cro. Jac. 87. Chit. PL 212-218. ^ Bac. Ab. Pleas, &c. 420, 5th ed. 1 It will be observed, that the word TO PREVENT OBSCURITY AND CONFUSION IN PLEADING. 385 license is not expressly admitted ; and the effect, therefore, is to leave it in doubt whether the plaintiff means to deny the license or to deny that the defendant entered by virtue of that license. It is this ambiguity which appears to constitute the fault.^ J (2) In an action for negligently keeping a fire, by which the ' plaintiff's houses were burned, the defendant pleaded that the plaintijfs Iwuses were not burned by the defendant'' s negligence in keejr'mg his fire ; and it was objected that the traverse was not good, for it has two intendments : one that the houses were not burned ; the other that they were burned, but not by negligent keeping of the fire; and so it is a negative pregnant (28 Hen. VI. 7). (3) In trespass, for assault and battery, the defendant justified, for that he, being master of a ship, commanded the jjlaintiff to do some service in the ship ; which he refusing to do, the defend- ant moderately chastised him. The plaintiff traversed, with an absque hoc, that the defendant moderately chastised him ; and this traverse was held to be a negative pregnant ; — for, while it apparently means to put in issue only the question of excess (ad- mitting, by implication, the chastisement), it does not necessarily and distinctly make that admission ; and is, therefore, ambiguous in its form.*^ If the plaintiff had replied that the defendant immoderately chastised him, the objection would have been avoided ; but the proper form of traverse would have been de injuria sua projjria absque tali causa.^ This, by traversing the whole " cause alleged," would have distinctly put in issue all the facts in the plea ; and no ambiguity or doubt, as to the extent of the denial, would- have arisen.* This rule, however, against a negative pregnant, appears in modern times, at least, to have received no very strict con- struction. For many cases have occurred in which, upon various grounds of distinction from the general rule, that form of expression has been held free from objection.^ 1 28 Hen. VI. 7 ; Slade v. Drake, has been over-ruled by the hxter case of Hob. 295 ; Styles' Pract. Reg. tit. Penn v. Ward, 2 Cromp. M. & K. .3.-58. Negative Pregnant. The moderation of the chastisement 2 Anberie v. James, Vent. 70; s. c. can not be put in issue I)y the traverse 1 Sid. 444; 2 Keb. 62.3. dp, injuria; for this purpose a uew " Auberie v. .James, nU supra. assignment of the e.rccs.s of chastisement * Since Mr. Stephen published this is required, edition, the case of Auberie v. James ^ Com. Dig. Pleader, R. 6. 25 386 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. Example : lu debt on a bond, conditioned to perform the cov- enants in an indenture of lease, one of which covenants was that the defendant, the lessee, would not deliver possession to any but the lessor, or such persons as should lawfully evict him, the defendant pleaded, that he did not deliver the possession to any hut such as lawfully evicted him. On demurrer to this plea, it was objected, that the same was ill, and a negative pregnant ; and that he ought to have said that such a one lawfully evicted him, to whom he delivered the possession ; or that he did not deliver the possession to any ; but the court held the plea, as pursuing the tvords of the covenant, good — being in the negative — and that the plaintiff ought to have replied, and assigned a breach ; and therefore judgment was given against him.^ Rule III. Pleadings must not be argumentative.^ In other words, the pleadings m us t advance th pit' pnsiti'nng of fact in an absolute form, and not leave them to be collected iby i nference and argument only. Examples : (1) In an action of trover, for ten pieces of money, the defendant pleaded that there was a wager between the plain- tiff and one C, concerning the quantity of yards of velvet in a cloak ; and the plaintiff and C. each delivered into the defend- ant's hand ten pieces of money, to be delivered to C. if there were ten yards of velvet in the cloak, and if not, to the plaintiff ; and proceeded to allege that, upon measuring of the cloah, it ivas found that there were ten yards of velvet therein ; whereupon the defendant delivered the pieces of money to C. Upon demurrer, " Gawdy held the plea to be good enough ; for the measuring thereof is the fittest way for trying it : and when it is so found by the measuring, he had good cause to deliver them out of his hands, to him who had won the wager. But Fenner and Popham held that the plea was not good ; for it may be that the meas- uring was false ; and therefore he ought to have averred, in fact, that there were ten yards, and that it was so found upon the measuring thereof." ^ (2) In an action of trespass, for taking and carrying away the plaintiff's goods, the defendant pleaded that the plaintiff never 1 Pullin V. Nicholas, 1 Lev. 83 ; see v. Lubram, ibid. 870 ; Blackmore v. Com. Dig. Pleader, R. 6; Semb. cont. Tidderley, 11 Mod.38 ; s. c. 2 Salk. 423 ; Lea V. Luthell, Cro. Jac. 559. Murray v. East India Company, 5 Barn. 2 Bac. Ab. Pleas, &c. L 5; Com. & Aid.' 21 5. Dig. E. 3 ; Co. Litt. 303 a ; Dy. 43 a ; 3 Ledesham v. Lubram, ubi supra. "Wood V. Butts, Cro. Eliz. 260 ; Ledesham TO PEEVENT OBSCUEITY AND CONFUSION IN PLEADING. 387 had any goods. " This is an infallible argument, that the defend- ant is not guilty, and yet it is no plea." ^ (3) In ejectment, the defendant pleaded a surrender of a copy- hold, by the hand of Fosset, then steward of the manor. The plaintiff traversed that Fosset ivas steward. All the court held this to be no issue, and that the traverse ought to be that he did not surrender ; for if he were not steward, the surrender is void.^ The reason of this last decision appears to be, that to deny that Fosset was steward could be only so far material as it tended to show that the surrender was a nullity ; and that it was, therefore, an argumentative denial of the surrender ; which, if intended to be traversed, ought to be traversed in a direct form. Two Affirmatives do not make a Good Issue. It is a branch of this rule that two affirmatives do not maJce a goo d issue .^ The reason is, that the traverse by the second affirmative is argumentative in its nature . Example : If it be alleged by the defendant that a party died seised in fee, and the plaintiff allege that he died seised in tail, this is not a good issue,^ because the latter allegation amounts to a denial of a seisin in fee, but denies it by argument or inference only. ms_t his branch of the rule against a rfjfum.P.'n.f.nfivP'nfsn fbnf gav e rise (as in part already explained) to the form of a sp ecial travers e. Wher e, for any of the reasons mentioned in a preceding part of this "work, it becomes expedient for a party traversing to set for th new affirmative matter tend- in g to explain or qualify his denial , he is allowed to do 80 ; but as this, standing alone, will render his pleading argumentative, he is required to add to his affirmative allega- tion an express denial^ w h ich is held to cure or prevent the argu mentativeness.^ Thus, in the example last given, the 1 Doct. PI. 41 ; Dy. 43 a. * Doct. PI. 349 ; 5 Hen. VII. 11,12. 2 Wood V. Butts, Cro. Eliz. 260. 5 Bac. Ab. Pleas, &c. H. 3 ; Courtney 8 Com. Dig. Pleader, R. 3 ; Co. Litt. v. Phelps, Sid. 301 ; Herring v. Blacklow, 126 a; per Buller, J., Chandler v. Cro. Eliz. 30; 10 Hen. VI. 7, PI. 21. Roberts, Doug. 60 ; Doct. PI. 43, 360 ; Zouch and Barafield's Case, 1 Leon. 77. 388 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. plaintiff may allege, if he pleases, that the party died seised in tail ; but then he must add, absque hoc, that he died seised in fee, and thus resort to the form of a special traverse.^ Exception to Rule. The doctrine, however, that two affirmatives do not make a good issue, is not taken so strictly but that the issue will, in some cases, be good, if there is sufficient negative and affirm- ative in effect, though, in the form of words, there be a double affirmative. Examjjle : In debt on a lease for years, where the defendant pleaded that the plaintiff had nothing at the time of the lease made, and the plaintiff replied that he was seised in fee, this was held a good issue.^ Two Negatives do not make a Good Issue. Another branch of the rule against argumentativeness is that two negatives do not make a good issue.^ Exami^le : If the defendant plead that he requested the plain- tiff to deliver au abstract of his title, but that the plaintiff did not, when so requested, deliver such abstract, but neglected so to do, the plaintiff can not reply that he did not neglect and refuse to deliver siTch abstract, but should allege affirmatively that he did deliver.^ Rule IY. Pleadings must not be Hypothetical, or in the Alternative.^ Examples : (1) In an action of debt against a jailer for the escape of a prisoner, where the defendant pleaded that i/ the said prisoner did, at any time or times after the said commitment, &c., go at large, he so escaped without the knowledge of the defend- ant, and against his will ; and that, -(/"any such escape was made, the prisoner voluntarily returned into custody before the defend- ant knew of the escape, &c. ; the coiirt held the plea bad : for " he can not plead hypothetically that if there has been an escape there 1 Doct. PI. 349. * Martin v. Smith, 6 East, 557. 2 Co. Litt. 126 a; Eeg. Plac. 297, » Griffiths v. Eyles, 1 Bos. & Pul. 298; and see Toralin v. Burlace, 1 413 ; Cook i;. Cox, 3 M. & S. 114 ; The Wils. 6. Kingj^Brereton.SMod.SSOjWitherley 8 Com. Dig. Pleader, R. 3. v. Sarsfield, 1 Show. 127. TO PREVENT OBSCURITY AND CONFUSION IN PLEADING. 389 has also been a return. He must either stand upon an averment that there has been no escape, or that there have been one, two, or ten escapes, after which the prisoner returned." ^ (2) Where it was charged that the defendant wrote and pub- lished, or caused to be written and published, a certain libel, this was considered as bad for uncertainty.^ Rule V. Pleadings must not be by Way op Recital, BUT MUST BE POSITIVE IN THEIR FORM.^ Example : If a declaration in trespass, for assault and battery, make the charge in the following form of expression : " and thereupon the said A. M., by , his attorney, complains, for that whereas the said C. D. heretofore, to wit, &c., made an assault,'^ &c., instead of "/or that the said C. D. heretofore, to wit, &c., made an assault" &c. — this is bad ; for nothing is positively affirmed.* WherE-^ a-4eed- or other instrnmftnt is plendfid^ it is gen- erally not proper to allege (though in the words of the instru- ment itself) that it is witnessed (testatum existitj that such a party granted, &c. ; but jt should be stated absolutely an d directly that he granted, &c. But, as to this point, a differ- ence has been established between declarations and other pleadings. In the former (for example, in a declaration of covenant) it is sufficient to set forth the instrument with a testatum existitj though not in the latter. And the reason given is, that, in a declaration, such statement is merely inducement ; that is, introductory to some other direct allega- tion. Thus, in covenant, it is introductory to the assignment of the breach.^ 1 Griffiths V. Eyles, 1 Bos. & Pul. 413. will he observed, however, that in trespass 2 The King v. Brereton, 8 Mod. 330. on the case, the " whereas " is unobjec- 3 Bac. Ab. Pleas, &c. B. 4 ; Sherland tionahle, being used only as introductory V. Heaton, 2 Bulst. 214; Wettenhall ?;. to some subsequent positive allegation. See Sherwin, 2 Lev. 206 ; Mors V. Thacker, also Min. Inst. IV. 572, 1017, 1018. ibid. 193; Hore v. Chapman, 2 Salk. Professor Minor recommends the use of 636; Dunstall i;. Dnnstall, 2 Show. 27 ; the following formula: "for this, to Gourney v. Fletcher, ibid. 29.5 ; Dobbs wit." V. Edmunds, 2 Ld. Raym. 1413 ; Wilder ^ Bultivant v. Holman, Cro. Jac. V. Handy, Str. 1151 ; Marshall v. Iliggs, 537 ; 1 Sannd. 274, n. 1. (See the form ibid. 1162. of declaring with a testatum existit. * See the authorities last cited. It 3 Went. 352, 523.) 390 common-law pleading. Rule VI. Things are to be Pleaded according to their Legal Effect or Operation.^ ; The meaning is, that in stating an instrument or other matter in pleading, it should be set forth, not accor ding to its terms, or itsj^o/^^, but according to its effect in law : and the reason seems to be, that it is under the latter aspect that it must principally and ultimately be considered; and therefore, to plead it in terms or form only, is an indirect and circuitous method of allegation. Examples : (1) If a joint tenant conveys to his companion ^ the words "gives," "grants," &c., his estate in the lands holde. in jointure, this, though in its terms a grant, is not properly such in operation of law, but amounts to that species of con- veyance called a release. It should therefore be pleaded, not that he ^'^granted," &c., but that he " released,'" &,c.^ (2) If a tenant for life grant his estate to him in reversion, this is, in effect, a surrender, and must be pleaded as such, and not as a grant.^ (3) Where the plea stated that A. was entitled to an equity of redemption, and, subject thereto, that B. was seised in fee, and that they, by lease and release, granted, «&;c., the premises, ex- cepting and reserving to A. and his heirs, &c., a liberty of hunting, &c., it was held upon general demurrer, and after- wards upon writ of error, that as A. had no legal interest in the land there could be no reservation to him; that the plea, therefore, alleging the right (though in terms of the deed) by way of reservation was bad ; and that if (as was contended in argument) the deed would operate as a grant of the right, the plea should have been so pleaded, and should have alleged a grant and not a reservation.* The rule in question is, in its terms, often confined to deeds and conveyances. It extends, however, to all instru- ments in writing, and contracts, written or verbal; and, 1 Bac. Ab. Pleas, &c. I. 7 ; Com. 2 2 Saund. 97 ; Barker v. Lade, 4 Dig. Pleader, C. 37 ; 2 Saund. 97, and Mod. 150, 151. 97 b', n. 2 ; Barker v. Lade, 4 Mod. 150 ; 3 Barker v. Lade, 4 Mod. 151. Howel y. Bichards, 11 East, 633; Moore * Moore v. Earl of Plymouth, ubi V. Earl of Plymouth, 3 Barn. & Aid. 66 ; supra. Stroud V. Lady Gerard, 1 Salk. 8; 1 Saund. 235 b, n. 9. TO PREVENT OBSCURITY AND CONFUSION IN PLEADING. 391 indeed, it may be said, genei'ally, to all matters or transac- tions whatever which a party may have occasion to allege in pleading, and in which the form is distinguishable from the legal effect.^ Exception. But there is an exception in the case of a declaration for written or verbal slander, where (as the action turns on the words themselves) the words themselves must he set forth ; and it is not sufficient to allege that the defendant published a libel, containing false and scandalous matters, in substance as follows, &c., or used words to the effect following, &c? Rule VII. Plea dings should observe the K nown and Ancient Forms of Expression, as contained in Ap- PRjjvED Precedents.^ Thus, so long ago as in the time of Bracton, in the count on a writ of right there were certain words of form, besides those contained in the writ, which were considered as essen- tial to be inserted. It was necessary to allege " the seisin " of the ancestor " in his demesne as of fee " — and " of right " — " % taking the esplees " — " in the time of such a king " — and (if the seisin were alleged at a period of civil commotion) "m time of peace J^^ And all this is equally necessary in framing a count on a writ of right at the present day ; and no parallel or synonymous expressions will supply the omis- sion.^ So, too, the general issues are examples of forms of expression fixed by ancient usage from which it is improper 1 Stroud V. Lady Gerard, 1 Salk. 8. ^ Com. Dig. Abatement, G. 7 ; 2 Wright V. Clemeuts, 3 Barn. & Aid. Buckley v. Eice Thomas, Plow. 12.3; 503; Cook v. Cox, 3 M. & S. 110; Dally v. King, 1 H. Bl. 1; Slade v. Newton v. Stubbs, 2 Show. 435. But Dowland, 2 Bos. & Pul. 570; Dowland in an action for a malicious prosecution, v. Slade, 5 East, 272 ; King v. Fraser, 6 if the declaration states merely that the East, 351 ; Dyster v. Batty o, 3 Barn. & defendant, without reasonable or prob- Aid. 448; per Abbott, C. J., Wright v. able cau,se, indicted the plaintiff for Clements, ibid. 507. perjury, without setting forth the in- * Bract. 373 a, b. dictment, this is sufficient after verdict. ^ Slade v. Dowland, ubi snpra ; (Pippot K. Hearn, 5 Barn. & Aid. 634.) Dally v. King, ubi supra; Dowland See also Blizard v. Kelly, 2 Barn. & v. Slade, ubi supra. Cre.ss. 283; Davis v. Noake, 6 M. & 8.33, 392 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. to depart. And another illustration of this rule occurs in the following modern case : — Example: To an action on the case, the defendants pleaded the statute of limitations, viz., that they were not guilty within six years, &c. The court decided, upon special demurrer, that this form of pleading was bad, upon the ground that " from the passing of the statute to the present case the invariable form of pleading the statute to an action on the case for a wrong has been to allege that the cause of action did not accrue within six years, &c. ; " and that " it was important to the administration of justice that the usual and established forms of pleading should be observed." ^ It may be remarked, however, with respect to this rule, that the allegations to which it relates are of course only those of frequent and ordinary recurrence ; and that even as to these, it is rather of uncertain application, as it must be often doubtful whether a given form of expression has been so fixed by the course of precedent as to admit of no variation. Another rule, connected in some measure, with the last, and apparently referable to the same object, is the following : Rule YIII. Pleadings should have theie Proper Formal Commencements and Conclusions.^ This rule refers to certain formulce occurring at the com- mencement of pleadings subsequent to the declaration, and to others occurring at the conclusion. A formula of the latter kind, inasmuch as it prays the judgment of the court for the party pleading, is often denom- inated thej^rav er of Judgment , and occurs (it is to be observed) in all pleadings that do not tender issue, but in those only. Formal Commencements and Conclusions of Dilatory Pleas. A plea to the jurisdiction has usually no commencement of the kind in question.^ Its co7ielusion is as follows : 1 Dyster v. Battye, 3 Barn. & Aid. Saund. 209, n. 1 ; per Holt, C. J., 448. Bowyer v. Cook, 5 Mod. 146. 2 Co. Litt. .303 b ; Com. Dig. Pleader, ^ But sometimes it has such com- E. 27, E. 28, E. 32, E. 33, F. 4, F. 5, G. mencement. Chit. PI. 399. 1 ; Com. Dig. Abatement, I. 12 ; 2 ^ TO PREVENT OBSCURITY AND CONFUSION IN PLEADING. 393 — the said C. D. prays judgment if the court of our lord the king here will or ought to have further cognizance of the plea ^ aforesaid. or (in some cases) thus : — — the said C. D. prays judgment if he ought to be compelled to answer to the said plea here in court.'-^ A PLEA IN SUSPENSION seems also to be generally pleaded without a formal commencement.^ Its conclusion (in the case of a plea of nonage) is thus : — — the said C. D. prays that the parol may demur (or that the said plea may stay and be respited) until the full age of him, the said C. D., &c.* A PLEA IN ABATEMENT is also usually pleaded without a formal commencement^ within the meaning of this rule.^ The conclusion is thus : — in case of plea to the writ or hill, — prays judgment of the said writ and declaration (or bill), and that the same may be quashed.^ in case of plea to the person, — prays judgment if the said A. B. ought to be answered to his said declaration (or bill).'' 1 1 "Went. 49 ; Bl. Com. III. 303 * ; matter explained, Saund. and Arch. Powers V. Cook, 1 Ld. Raym. 63. ibid., to which the reader is referred 2 I Went. 41, 49; Bac. Ab. Pleas, generally for the learning on the &c. E. 2 ; per Holt, C. J., Bowyer v. subject of these formula of pleas in Cook, 5 Mod. 146 ; Powers v. Cook, ubi abatement. supra. ® Powers v. Cook, ubi supra; 2 3 Plasket V. Beeby, 4 East, 485. Saund. ubi supra ; Com. Dig. Abate- * 1 Went. 43. As to the form, in ment, I. 12. Yet in some instances, it other pleas in suspension, see Lib. Plac. seems, it may be si curia cognoscere velit 9, 10; 1 Went. 15; 2 Saund. 210, n. 1; (if the court will take cognizance). John Trollop's Case, 8 Co. Rep. 69; (Chatland v. Thornly, 12 East, 544.) Reg. Plac. 180; Onslow y. Smith, 2 Bos. In proceedings by bill, it seems that it & Pul. 384. is informal to pray judgment of tlie ^ 2 Saund. 209 a, n. 1 ; 1 Arch. 305 ; declaration, or of the bill and declaration. Lutw. 11. But if a matter apparent on '' Co. Litt. 128 a; Com. Dig. Abate- ihe face of the ivrit be pleaded, there ment, I. 12; 1 Went. 58,62. should be a commencement. See this 394 common-law pleading. Formal Commencements and Conclusions op Pleas in Bar. A PLEA IN BAR has this commencement : — — says that the said A. B. ought not to have or maintain his aforesaid action against him, the said CD., because, he says, &c. This formula is commonly called actio non. The conclusion is, — prays judgment if the said A. B. ought to have or maintain his aforesaid action against him. Formal Commencements and Conclusions op Replications. A replication to a plea to the jurisdiction has this com- mencement : — — says that notwithstanding anything by the said C. D. above alleged, the court of our lord the king here ought not to be pre- cluded from having further cognizance of the plea aforesaid, because, he says, &c.-^ or this : — — says that the said C. D. ought to answer to the said plea here in court, because, he says, &c.^ and this conclusion : — — wherefore he prays judgment, and that the court here may take cognizance of the plea aforesaid, and that the said C. D. may answer over, &c.^ A replication to a plea in suspension (in the case of a plea of nonagej has this commenceinent : — — says that notwithstanding anything by the said C. D. above alleged, the parol ought not further to demur for, the said plea ought not further to stay, or be respited), because, he says, &c.* And (if there be any case in which such replication does not tender issue) it should probably have' this conclusion : — 1 1 Went. 60 ; Lib. Plac. 348. » Lib piac. 348 ; 1 Went. 39. 2 1 Went. 39. * Liber Intrat. TO PREVENT OBSCURITY AND CONFUSION IN PLEADING. 895 — wherefore he prays judgment if the parol ought further to demur (or, if the said plea ought further to stay, or be respited), and that the said C. D. may answer over, A REPLICATION TO A PLEA IN ABATEMENT has this com- mencement : — where the plea was to the writ or hill^ — says that his said writ and declaration (or bill), by reason of anything in the said plea alleged, ought not to be quashed ; be- cause, he says, &c} where the plea was to the person, — says that notwithstanding anything in the said plea alleged, he, the said A. B., ought to be answered to his said declaration (or bill) ; because he says, «&c.^ The conclusion, in most cases, is thus : — where the plea was to the writ or hill, — wherefore he prays judgment, and that the said writ and de- claration (or bill) may be adjudged good, and that the said C. D. may answer over, &c. where the plea was to the 'person, — wherefore he prays judgment, and that the said C. D. may answer over, &c.^ A REPLICATION TO A PLEA IN BAR has this commencement : — — says that by reason of anything in the said plea alleged, he ought not to be barred from having and maintaining his aforesaid action against him, the said C. D. ; because, he says, &c. This formula is commonly called precludi non. The conclusion is thus : — in debt, — wherefore he prays judgment, and his debt aforesaid, together 1 1 Arch. 309; Rast. Ent. 126 a; 155; Carth. 137. As to the cases in Sabine v. Johnstone, 1 Bos. & Pul. 60. which the conclusion should be different, 2 1 Went. 42 ; I Arch. 309. and should pray damages, see 2 Saund. 8 1 Went. 43, 45, 54; 1 Arch. 309; 211, n. 3 ; Medina v. Stoughton, 1 Ld. Rast. Ent. 126 a; Bisse v. Harcourt, 3 Raym. 594; Co. Ent. 160 a; Lil. Ent Mod. 281; s. c. 1 Salk. 177; 1 Show, 123; Lib. Plac, 1. 396 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. with his damages by him sustained by reason of the detention thereof, to be adjudged to him. in covenant, — wherefore he prays judgment, and his damages by him sus- tained by reason of the said breach of covenant, to be adjudged to him. in trespass., — wherefore he prays judgment, and his damages by him sus- tained by reason of the committing of the said trespasses, to be adjudged to him. in trespass on the case, in assumpsit, — wherefore he prays judgment, and his damages by him sus- tained by reason of the not performing of the said several prom- ises and undertakings, to be adjudged to him. in trespass on the case, in general, — wherefore he prays judgment, and his damages by him sus- tained by reason of the committing of the said several grievances, to be adjudged to him. And so, in all other actions, the replication concludes with a prayer of judgment for damages or other appropriate redress, according to the nature of the action. Pleadings Subsequent to the Replication. With respect to pleadings subsequent to the eeplication, it will be sufficient to observe, generally, that those on the part of the defendant follow the same form of commencement and conclusion as the plea ; those on the part of the plaintiff, the same as the replication. These forms are subject to the following variations : — First, with respect to pleas in abatement. Matters of abate- ment, generally, only render the writ abatable upon plea ; but there are others, such as the death of the plaintiff or defendant before verdict or judgment by default, that are said to abate it de facto ; that is, by their own immediate effect, and before plea ; the only use of the plea, in such cases, being TO PEEVENT OBSCURITY AND CONFUSION IN PLEADING. 397 to give the court notice of the fact.^ Where the writ is merely abatable, the forms of conclusion above given are to be observed ; but, when abated de facto, the conclusion must pray, ^''whether the court will further proceed;^' for the writ being already, and ipso facto, abated, it would be improper to pray " that it may be quashed^ ^ Again, when a plea in bar is pleaded puis darreign continu- ance, it has, instead of the ordinary actio non, a commencement and conclusion of actio non ulterius (action not further). So, if a plea in bar be founded on any matter arising after the commencement of the action, though it be not pleaded after a previous plea, and therefore not puis darreign continuatice, yet it pursues, in that case also, in its commencement and con- clusion, the same form of actio non ulterius, instead of actio non generally ; ^ for the actio non is taken to refer, in point of time, to the commencement of the suit, and not to the time of plea pleaded, and would, therefore, in the case supposed, be improper.* Commencements and Conclusions of Pleadings by Way of Estoppel. All pleadings by way of estoppel have a commencement and conclusion peculiar to themselves. A plea in estoppel has the following commencement : — " says that the said A. B. ought not to be admitted to say " (stating the allegation to which the estoppel relates) ; and the following conclusion : — " wherefore he prays judgment if the said A. B. ought to be admitted, against his own acknowledgment, by his deed afore- said " (or otherwise, according to the matter of the estoppel), " to say that " (stating the allegation to which the estoppel relates).^ 1 Bac. Ab. Abatement, K., G., F. ; » Le Bret v. PapUlon, 4 East, 502. Com. Dig. Abatement, E. 1 7 ; 2 Saund. * Le Bret v. Papillon, ubi supra ; 210, n. 1. Evans v. Prosser, 3 T. K. 186; Selw. 2 Com. Dig. Abatement, H. 33, I. N. P. 138. 12; 2 Saund. 210, n. 1; Hallowes v. ^ 1 Arch. 202; Veale v. Warner, I Lucy, 3 Lev. 120. Saund. 325 ; 3 Edw. III. 21. 398 COMMON-LAW PLEADING. A replication, by way of estoppel, to a plea, either in abate- ment or bar, has this commencement : — " says that the said C. D. ought not to be admitted to pl^dd the said plea hy him above pleaded ; because, he says^'' &c} Its conclusion, in case of a plea in abatement, is as follows : " wherefore he prays judgment if the said C. B. ought to be admitted to his said plea, contrary to his own acknowledgment, ^c, and that he may answer over^'' &c. In case of a plea in bar : — wherefore he prays " judgment if the said 0. D. ought to be admitted, contrary to his own acknowledgment, ^c, to plead, that " (stating the allegation to which the estoppel relates). Rejoinders and subsequent pleadings follow the forms of pleas and replications respectively .^ When Pleading is to a Pakt only of Adverse Matter. If any pleading be intended to apply to part only of the matter adversely alleged, it must be qualified accordingly, in its commencement and conclusion.^ ' Variations in Replevin. Another variation occurs in the action of replevin. Avowries and cognizances, instead of being pleaded with actio non commence thus : an avowry, that the defendant " tvell avows ; " a cognizance, that he " well acknowledges " the tak- ing, &c. ; and conclude thus : that the defendant '■'- prays judg- ment and a return of the said goods and chattels, together with his damages, ^c, according to the form of the statute in such case made and provided, to be adjudged to him^^