Doe ex dem. Cumming v. Roe

6 Ga. 88 | Ga. | 1849

By the Court

Lumpkin, J.

delivering the opinion

Uprd Cohe deemed special pleading so delightful a science, that its very name was derived, according to him, from its pleasurable nature. “ Quia bene placitare omnibus placet" My brethren, who were engaged in the management of this casé, in the Circuit Court, will pardon me for suggesting, that they seem intent on restoring this exquisite recreation to its pristine state.

Had a motion been made to dismiss this writ of error, as having been prematurely brought, it must have been sustained. No final judgment has been rendered in the cause, below. There being a mis-trial, all the issues of law and of fact, are still pending, and the presumption is, they will be correctly adjudicated.

The origin and growth of the action of ejectment, will be found fully stated by Mr. Sergeant Adams, in the opening chapter of *91bis Treatise on Ejectment. It is an action in which a tenant, for a term of years, claims damages for a forcible ejection or ouster from the land demised. It was invented in the reign of Edward II. or Edward III. to enable suitors to escape from the thousand niceties in which real actions were embarrassed; and which, moreover, were cognizable in the Courts of Common Pleas only. Real actions having been abolished, ejectment is the regular mode of proceeding, for the trial of possessory titles. Anciently, damages only were recoverable — subsequently, the land itself. It is needless to add, that this form of action is entirely fictitious. It Is thus described and illustrated by Lord Mansfield :

“ An ejectment is an ingenious fiction, for the trial of titles to the possession of land. In form, it is a trick between two, to dispossess a third, by a sham suit and judgment. The artifice would be criminal, unless tire Court converted it into a fair trial between the proper parties. The great advantage of this fictitious mode of proceeding is, that being under the control of the Court, it may be so modelled as to answer in the best manner, every end of justice and convenience. The control which the Courts have over the casual ejector, enables them to put any terms upon the plaintiff which are just. He was soon ordered to give notice to the tenant in possession. When the tenant in possession asked to be admitted defendant, the Court was enabled to impose conditions 5 and therefore, obliged him to allow the fiction, and go to trial upon the real merits, without being entangled in the niceties of pleading on either side. Fairclaim vs. Shamtitle, 3 Burr. 1294.

[1.] Four things are necessary to enable a person to support an ejectment, viz : title, lease, entry and ouster. And as the three latter are.only feigned in the modem practice, the plaintiff would be non-suited at the trial, if he were obliged to prove them. The Courts, therefore, compel the defendant to enter into what is called the consent rule, by which he undertakes that at the trial he will confess the lease, entry and ouster to have been regularly made, and rely solely upon the merits of his title. In England, at present, the consent rule admits possession also. The consent rule is presumed to be taken in every case, and beingatbestbuta useless form, its observance is dispensed with in point of fact; and this dispenses with all special pleading in ejectment. The defendant can plead only “ not guilty,” and the Statute of Limitations.

*92[2.] With us in Georgia, as in most of the States, the general issue in ejectment denies the defendant’s possession, as well as the plaintiff’s title. Stevens vs. Griffith, 3 Ver. R. 448.

It was not necessary, therefore, in this case, that the defendant should have pleaded specially, that he was not in the possession of the premises in dispute, at the time suit was commenced. And yet it was not competent for the plaintiff, on the other hand, to demur to this plea. At most, it was but an act of supererogation. The defendant did more than duty required of him. The Court was wrong in. compelling the defendant to elect between these pleas, and in sending him to the Jury, upon the question of possession alone. The Court might very properly, for the symmetry of its records, have directed this supernumerary plea to have been stricken out as surplusage.

It is true, that if the verdict had been for the defendant, it would have ended the case ; but if the finding had been for the plaintiff, upon this issue of possession, still he would have to show title in himself, before he could have recovered. Under our system of appeals, therefore, this mode of procedure might have involved four trials instead of two; andfor this reason, if no other, the practice should be discountenanced.

Let the cause be remanded, and further proceedings be had, in conformity with this opinion.