4 Whart. 230 | Pa. | 1839
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The paper executed by George Flicker evidently did not pass the title. Though containing potent words of present transfer, as'well as a formal clause of habendum, it was obviously intended for a memorandum, for it has the immethodicalness of one. By the name of a more formal assignment, he reserved the execution of the conveyance till the monéy-should be paid; for what would have been the value of the arrangement to him, if the title had passed in the mean' time 1 The writing in Coleman v. Stouffer, (1 Yeates, 393,).;which, with the exception of the habendum, had all the features of the present, was treated as an agreement. Then as to the damages.
It is, perhaps, the better opinion, that by the English practice, mesne profits eo nomine, were never recovered in ejectment, because the trespass was not laid with a continuando; yet, as not only the expulsion, but the detainer also, was usually laid as a part of the gravamen, it is probable that substantial damages were given for it, else the plaintiff, previously to the time when the term began to be .recovered, must have been remediless, since he could not acquire a constructive possession to found an action of trespass. In Pennsylvania, however, the practice of assessing damages for the mesne profits directly, began at an early date — probably before the secession of Delaware, where it prevails to this day. That it prevailed with ús pretty generally at the close of the revolution, is shown in the opinion prepared by Chief Justice M‘Kean, in Boyd's Lessee v. Cowan; notwithstanding which, it seems to have been discontinued, in consequence, perhaps, of a doubt raised in the professional mind, by the sentiments of his brethren, who, I-was told by the late Chief Justice Yeates, were prepared to overrule him. As no judgment was pronounced, the mere formation of their opinion is entitled to nothing like the respect which is due to actual adjudication ; and even its numerical preponderance on the particular occasion, is compensated by the antagonist opinion said to have been held by their predecessors. As far, then, as the extra-judicial opinion of the bench has come to us, it is in favour of what I take to be the ancient practice, which, to say the least, is not discountenanced by any thing that fell from Mr. Justice Duncan, in Osbourn v. Osbourn. The introduction of the new practice is entitled to the less weight, because, as there were few ejectments for cultivated land, there was little to turn the attention of the bar to the old one. Had the objections to it been examined, they would have been found to rest on nothing more solid than the form which the -action, had received from the plastic hand of the Courts, whose power over it, for purposes of convenience, might have beep still more efficiently exerted. Whatever force there may have formerly been in the assertion, that only nominal damages can be recovered of a nominal defendant, it is sufficient for the present to say, that our statutory ejectment is an actual proceeding betwixt actual parties. , Besides,
In our statutory ejectment, therefore, the plaintiff must be allowed to go for the possession and the profits together; and the remaining inquiry regards the time for which he .shall be permitted to recover. In Starr v. Pease, (8 Connecticut Rep. 541,) the Supreme Court of that state, bounded it by the exit of the writ; but aá the accretion of subsequent profits might still require a supplemental action, and as a part even of these might be barred'pending the ejectment, the rule of that Court might not answer all the purposes of justice. Departing from-the English practice in a single particular, it would be idle to stop short of full relief; and we are bound to allow profits to be recovered for the whole time which has preceded the verdict. Nor is there any lack of analogy for it. By .the "statute of Merton, a widow is entitled to damages for detention of dower, from the death till the judgment;- yet damages are always given by an inquest on a judgment of seisin by default, tijl the taking of the inquisition. Even interest on a penalty or promissory note, is .given as damages for the detention of the debt till the time of the verdict; and thus we she, that though no part of the cause of action must appear in the pleadings to have arisen after the inception of the suit, the principle does not prevent the recovery of an accessory which has accrued subsequentlyconsequently the damages here were well assessed.
Rule discharged.