21 Vt. 469 | Vt. | 1849
This court, in a recent case in the county of Windsor, Whitcomb v. Wolcott, [ante, page 368,] gave a very decided intimation to the profession, that they could not follow those English or American cases, where, upon motion in arrest of judgment, the courts have refused to make all reasonable intendments in favor of the sufficiency of the finding of the jury. Among these reasonable presumptions, upon a general verdict, the most important is, that the jury did find all the facts alleged in the declaration, and all others^ reasonably inferable from "them. The result of all this seems likely to be, that, if any of the counts in the declaration are sufficient to sustain the verdict, it will be sustained, unless it some way appear, that the finding did proceed upon the defective count.
It is a remarkable fact in English jurisprudence, and in that of a majority of the American states, that while in an indictment for crime, affecting a man’s liberty, and even life, if it contain one defective count, among others which are sufficient, upon a general verdict the court consider it as rendered upon the good counts, upon the very natural inference, that a general verdict finds all the facts alleged in the declaration, yet in an action upon contract judgment is arrested for one defective count, upon the ground, that the verdict may have passed upon that count. It is the pertinacious adoption and perpetuation of such gross absurdities and inconsistencies, which tend so'obviously to bring all special pleading into disrepute.
To apply that rule to the present declaration would leave no doubt whatever. And even upon the old rule it seems to us, that neither of the objections of the defendants is well founded. The case of Myrick v. Slason et al., 19 Vt. 121, establishes the point, that so long as the parties profess to proceed under the contract, no