Upon the argument of this rule, the whole case involved in the foregoing statement of facts was brought into discussion, and fully debated by counsel, and the great
As the case now stands, there is not, and never was any defendant on the record, except that imaginary troubler, Richard Fen, who really never did any body any harm, and now after a lapse of twenty years, we are called upon to give judgment against him, not to his prejudice, for he is as invulnerable as he is harmless, but to the ruin, perhaps, of some honest man who may have been betrayed into security by the slumbers of the plaintiff.
To permit the plaintiff now to enter up judgment against the casual ejector, and turn (it may be) the real owner out of possession, would be to place him in a better position than he would now be in, if he had entered his judgment for want of an appearance and plea in September term, 1824. For a writ of possession cannot be regularly issued on a judgment in ejectment after a year and a day without a scire facias against the defendants and terre-tenants, and that, even in cases in which there has been an appearance entered, and the judgment obtained against a real defendant, (Withers v. Harris, 2 Ld. Raymond, 806, S. C. 7. Mod. 50, and more fully in 7 Mod. 64, Den v. Roe, 1 Taunt. 55;) and Mr. Adams, in his book on ejectment, page 311, says when the judgment is against the casual ejector the terre-tenant must be joined in the seire facias.
When the plaintiff had entered judgment in May term, 1843, the demise had long before expired. This was irregular, and that judgment was very properly set aside in the September term following. It is true that the court then granted a rule permitting the plaintiff to amend by extending the demise, but I am satisfied that rule was inconsiderately and improvidently granted. In Jackson v. Haveland, 13, Johns. R. 229, it became material to consider the effect of a prior judgment in ejectment, in which a default had been entered against the casual ejector in 1790, the demise had been laid, on the 10th May, 1788, for fourteen years, but no judgment was signed until the 27th May, 1811, nor was any possession ever taken under the judgment; and the court held that the plaintiff having slept until the demise had expired, had waived his right of entry under the judgment, and therefore stood in the same relation towards the tenant, as if he had never attempted a legal remedy against him.
And in Aislin v. Parkin, 2 Burr. 667, Lord Mansfield says, “a judgment in ejectment only concludes the parties, as to the 'subject matter of it; and therefore, beyond the time laid in the demise, it proves nothing at all.”
I know that amendments of declarations in ejectment are almost of course, and that the demise will be altered or enlarged even after trial and verdict, and even after writ of error brought, or motion in arrest of judgment, (Small v. Cole, &c. 2 Burr. 1159, Mattel v. Denny, 2 Str. 807, Oates v. Shepherd, 2 Str. 1172, and cases cited in note.) Doe v. Pilkington et al. 4 Burr, 2247, Den v. Snowhill, 1 Green, 23, Den v. Taylor, 2
Here the cause slept for more than eighteen years, and no excuse whatever is offered for it. It is said indeed by the plaintiff’s counsel, that the neglect was on the part of the tenant, in not causing himself to be made defendant instead of the casual ejector and exchanging the consent rules as he ought to have done. But this is not so. If he did not appear and place himself in an attitude of defence according to the course of the court, the plaintiff’s remedy was a plain one. He had only to enter the default and proceed to judgment and execution. It would be a reproach to the forms and the administration of justice, to permit a party to return a declaration in ejectment after a service of it upon a tenant, who may be an ignorant or unfaithful one, or himself a mere trespasser, and then eighteen or twenty years afterwards, enter up a judgment against the casual ejector, and turn the owner out of possession, because the tenant had neglected to appear. It is true that courts have in some instances permitted the demise to be enlarged, for the avowed purpose of saving the plaintiff from the effects of the statute of limitations, when that plea would be a bar to a new action. Bufas I have already said, they were cases in which the efflux of time was not owing to the unusual and inexcusable neglect of the party.
It is further said, that Perry comes here not to try the title, but to turn the plaintiff out of court and drive him to a new action ; that he has no bous standi in court and ought not to be heard, except for the purpose of being let in to defend the action. But there is nothing substantial in this objection. He is now and has been since the year 1829 in possession of the premises as owner, and now finds himself about to be turned out of possession, on an ejectment commenced in the year 1824, (now twenty years
The result is, that in my opinion this cause ought to be considered out of court, and that the several rules heretofore granted be vacated and discharged, without costs on either side.
If the statute of limitations now stand in the way of a new suit, it is the plaintiff’s own fault, and he has no right to complain.
