44 Vt. 441 | Vt. | 1872
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Under the pleadings and evidence in the case, the county court ruled that if the defendants had proved title to the house in question in Plunkett, by whose command the defendants by their special pleas claimed to justify, and had proved authority
It is iusisted on the part of the plaintiff that even if what the court held would entitle the defendants to a verdict was a justification of the entry and trespass upon the freehold, still it was no bar to the recovery by the plaintiff for the unnecessary damage to the plaintiff’s goods, done by the defendants, alleged in the declaration, and which the plaintiff’s evidence tended to prove. The counsel for the defendants claim that the removal of the plaintiff’s goods by the defendants, as set forth in the declaration, is only matter of aggravation, and that the defendants had a' right so to regard it; and hence, whatever justifies the entry upon the freehold, is a full answer to the action. It is true that in actions of trespass on the freehold, where the declaration, in addition to the averment of the breaking and entering the plaintiff’s close, contains allegations of other matters, such as expulsion of the plaintiff from the premises, or the taking and carrying away of personal property, leaving it equivocal whether the plaintiff intends such additional matter merely as aggravation to give character to the principal trespass, the trespass upon the freehold, or whether it was inserted'as distinct trespass or trespasses for which the plaintiff seeks to recover as a substantive ground of action, the defendant has the right to assume that it was intended as aggravation merely; and in his plea pass over it in silence, answering only the alleged trespass on the freehold. In such case, if the defendant so pleads, and his plea is a good answer to the alleged trespass on the freehold, it is prima facie an answer to the whole action. And if the plaintiff wishes to avoid this effect, and recover for such additional trespass or trespasses, as well a-s for the trespass on the freehold, he must now assign in respect to such additional' trespass or trespasses, and in his new assignment allege that ho brought his action as well for the trespass or trespasses mentioned in the plea, as for the trespasses newly assigned. But the object of a new assignment is to correct a misunderstanding or affected misunderstanding or error into which the defendant in his plea has fallen as to the identity or extent of the plaintiff’s intended
This view of the questions already alluded to leads to a reversal of the judgment.
Whether the plaintiff was entitled to the instructions asked in relation to the entry into the house with strong hand or multitude of people, and not peaceably, depends on the question whether the pleadings in the case and the issue, formed present the question involved in that request. The question has been argued without much reference to authorities, none whatever having been referred to on the part of the plaintiff; but we are inclined to think that, under the pleadings and the issue formed, the plaintiff was not entitled to that instruction.
Another important question in the case arises upon the exclusion by the court of the evidence offered by the plaintiff to show the deeds to Smythe, Sprague & Cooper were mortgages, and the debt secured thereby paid, and that this was known to Plunkett when he took his deed. This was a material question in the case, because, even if the levies were valid, and nominally embraced the whole premises, from what is stated in the exceptions the plaintiff may have been entitled to a homestead as against the levies. Upon the question of the admissibility of this evidence, we have had so little aid from the counsel from an examination and reference to authorities, that we do not decide it; but as the judgment is to be reversed on other points, we deem it not advisable to hold the case for re-argument on this point.
A question has been made whether the declaration is to be construed as containing two counts, or but one, but we have not regarded that, under the issue formed, as material. There is clearly
Judgment reversed and new trial granted.