6 Fla. 332 | Fla. | 1855
Judge of the Southern Circuit (who sat in this case in place of Douglas, J,, disqualified,) delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appeal, in this case, is from a judgment rendered in the Circuit Court of Duval county, in which Maria Doggett was plaintiff and Samuel L. Burritt defendant. The declaration contains two counts, the first for use and occupation, and the second for an account stated. The first alleges the use and occupation, by the defendant, “of a certain messuage, tenement and premises, situated on a certain lot in the town of Jacksonville, in the county of Duval, State of Florida, and known on the plan of said town as lot number six, in square number one, with appurtenances.” Accompaningthe declaration is an account with two items, the first charging indebtedness by the defendant to the plaintiff, for rent of house used as an office, May 1st, 1847,” and the second, “ for rent of same from 1st May, 1847, to 19th. May, 1849.” The pleas are the general issue and the statute of limitations. The facts, according to the statement agreed upon by the attorneys of the parties, are as follows : “ that the amount of the rent rendered in the verdict, was proved to be due for rent of a house in the town of Jacksonville, but that the further description of lot number six, in square number one, in said town, was not proved, there being no evidence on that point.”
At the trial, the defendant’s counsel asked for this in
This instruction the Court refused, but gave the following : “ If, from the evidence, you find that the defendant has rented and occupied a house of the said plaintiff, at any time during the said five years, then the said plaintiff is entitled to recover such rent as you may find due and owing, under the evidence.”
To this ruling, the defendant’s counsel excepted, and, after verdict for the plaintiff, moved for a new trial, on the ground that the Court erred in its ruling. This motion was refused and an appeal taken.
No error is assigned, and no objection is made in this Court to that part of the instruction given, which relates to the plea of the statute of limitations, and the only question we are to determine, is the propriety of the ruling, as to the quantity of proof necessary to sustain the statement in the declaration, describing the property for the use and occupation of which a recovery is sought. The usual form of statement in such actions, is “ a certain messuage, tenement and premises, with the appurtenances,” 2 Ch. Pl. 40, which seems to be sufficiently specified, for it is well settled that the action of assumpsit for use and occupation will lie. It is, therefore, transitory, and may be brought against a defendant residing in any other county or State, than that in which the messuage is situated, as well as any other action in assumpsit. Damages are sought for a breach pf promise, and the description of the property for the yso
The testimony goes so far as to prove that the messuage Was situated in the town of Jacksonville, without showing the square or lot. The plaintiff insists, however, that all of the statements in the declaration as to the location of the premises, is immaterial and superfluous, and consequently it was not necessary to prove it, and that proof of the use and occupation, by the defendant, of a house belonging to her, at any place whatever, is sufficient to entitle her to a recovery. It is also contended that the description of the premises may be referred to the venue and considered as part of it, In regard to the latter position, we will observe that if it -appeared to be the design in the declaration to make the description refer to the venue, or if it was doubtful, whether it was the intention to make the statement matter of description or matter of venue, the a*
We cannot, therefore, consider the averment of the location of the premises as referable to the venue, and the question next arises, was it necessary to have enabled the plaintiff to recover, for her to have proved the unnecessary allegation that the house was on the lot and square specified in the declaration, or was the proof of any messuage whatever belonging to her, sufficient?
A division of the averments contained in pleadings, is into matters of substance and matters of description, which require different degrees of evidence to sustain them. The former may be substantially proved, but the latter must be strictly proved, and in some cases with literal precision. Allegations fixing the identity of that which is legally essential to the claim, can never be rejected. 1 Greenleaf, Ev. p. 126. Purcell vs. Macnamara, 9 East, 160. This case, in East furnishes an example of matters of substance, and
Other cases in the books show the degree of proof required in averments of descriptions. Cudlip vs. Rundle, Carth. 202, was an action by a lessor against his tenant' for negligence, &c. A demise of seventy years was alleged, when the proof was of a tenancy at will. The variance was held to be fatal. It was requisite to have alleged some tenancy, and one generally was sufficient, yet the plaintiff having unnecessarily identified it by describing the precise term, he was bound to prove it as laid.— Another case is that of justification in taking cattle damage feasant, Dyer, 365, where the allegation of a general freehold title was sufficient, but the defendant without any necessity for it, alleged a seisin in fee, he was held to the proof of a seisin in fee, because it was descriptive and limiting that which it was necessary ¿for him to aver and prove, to wit: a freehold title. In Savage vs. Smith, 2 W. B., 1101, an officer was sued for extorting illegal fees on a fieri facias. Here it was required ¿to allege only the issue of the writ, but the judgment on which it was founded, was also set out. The plaintiff was
The rule extracted from these and other cases in the authorities, upon the subject of variance, is that all averments in a declaration, which neednotbe made or proved, when made, in order to entitle the plaintiff to recover, may be stricken out or disregarded in the proofs, except when they touch the identity of that which is necessary to be proved. When they go to fix the identity, they become matters of description and must be proved precisely as laid. The object for which the rule is establishedis to effect the same purpose as a declaration, that is, to warn the defendant of the claim or charge which is sought to be made out against him, and to enable him to plead the judgment in bar of a second suit, for the same thing. We think the rule is sound and well calculated to effect the end of justice. It looks to the same purpose with that intended by the rules of special pleading, which we have adopted, that is, to make the one party fully informed of the demand against him, and the other of the defence he is to meet, so that neither may be surprised or unarmed in the contest which is about to ensue.
How does the rule bear on the case before us ? The plaintiff alleges the use and occupation by the defendant of a “ messuage, tenement and premises,” but not stopping-here, she makes the further unnecessary averment,that the messuage, &c., were situated on a particular lot and square in the town of Jacksonville, and County of Duval, thereby pointing out with as much precision as possible, the particular messuage, for the use of which she sues. This averment goes to fix the idenity of that which was before aver
A bill] of particulars could not have been required in this case, as the identity of the house, was already by the terms used in the count as apparent as any words could have made it. But if the averment had been in the general terms used in such actions, “ messuage and appurtenances” only, and the defendant had called for a bill of particulars, to which he would have been entitled, and the specification of the property had been the same as in the body of this declaration, she could have no more recovered for the rent of another house, than she could have recovered for other goods, than those specified in the items of a bill of particulars, attached to a common count for goods sold.
It is with much reluctance that we feel constrained to reverse the judgment in this cause. It is hard upon a plaintiff to be defeated or delayed in collecting a claim, which from the evidence and the finding of a jury, appears to be just, on account of inadvertence arising probably from the hurry and excitement of a trial at nisi prius. But satisfied as we are, that the rule of evidence as we have laid it down, has been long established, and that a departure from it, might prove injurious, by unsettling fortns of pleading and rules of evidence well known and commonly used, we • cannot direct a shorter course by which the plaintiff may obtain her claim than a new trial.