1 Pin. 456 | Wis. | 1844
Error is prosecuted in this case to reverse the decision of the district court of Milwaukee county, sustaining the demurrer of defendant to plaintiff’s declaration, and entering judgment in favor of defendant.
The plaintiff in this action declared in case against the defendant Holton, setting out his cause of action in three counts: The first reciting substantially a certain proceeding in an action of forcible entry and detainer, theretofore had in favor of plaintiff against one Cornelius Butler, before Clinton Walworth, Esq., a justice of the peace, wherein the plaintiff recovered judgment of restitution of the N. W. i of section fifteen, in Town 8, in Range 21, in the county of Milwaukee, against said Butler, on which judgment a writ of restitution issued ill favor of plaintiff against Butler, directed to the sheriff or any constable of said county, commanding, among other things, “that, taking with him the force of the county if necessary, he cause the said Butler to be immediately removed from the aforesaid premises, and the said Hugh Drum to have peaceable restitution of the same, and thereof with the said writ make due return within thirty days that said writ was delivered to the defendant, who then was and continued until the return day of said writ sheriff of said county; and that he, the defendant, so being sheriff, afterward, on the return day of said writ, falsely and deceitfully returned upon the writ to the court of the said justice, “that he had removed the said Cornelius Butler from the premises mentioned, and had given the said Hugh Drum possession of the same,”
There can be no question but that the two first counts are clearly defective, and do not entitle the plaintiff to recover upon the case presented in either count. The rule of law is imperative, that where you seek to make a sheriff liable for a false return of a writ, you must mer with certainty and particularity wherein the falsity consists, for the reasons: 1. That you are required
The allegation offalsity in the return is too vague and general; it is not set forth with that certainty and precision which is requisite to apprize the opposite party of what is meant to be proved, in order to give him an opportunity to answer or traverse it, or to inform the court whose duty it is to declare the law arising upon the facts. 1 Chitty’s Plead. 255; 3 Black. Com. 395.
These principles are fully recognized in Pangburn v. Ramsey, 11 Johns. 141.
The third count is not obnoxious to the objection of want of certainty and precision in setting out the facts which show the falsity of the return as relied on by plaintiff' to entitle him to recover. The question to be examined is, do the facts relied on in the third count, as establishing the falsity of the return, admitting their truth, as the demurrer ‘ does in law, amount to a false return and entitle the plaintiff to recover in this action %
We are of opinion that they do not. In considering this question, we must look to the proceeding in forcible entry and detainer. It partakes of the nature of a criminal proceeding, for upon conviction of the defendant, the justice may impose a fine for the force used, as limited by our statute. The complaint is direct and special (not general) against the defendant or defendants named ; the issue is between the plaintiff who makes complaint and the person or persons complained of; the finding of the jury is and must be according to the issue ; and the judgment of the justice in consonance with the finding of the jury. After judgment a writ of restitution issues, following the proceedings and judgment, commanding the sheriff or other officer, that, taking with him the aid of the county, if necessary, he oust or dispossess the defendant by name (in the case at bar, Cornelius Butler) of the premises
Any one having adverse title may come in and defend. The writ commands the sheriff to cause the plaintiff to have peaceable possession of the premises (to which, be it remembered, he has proven title as against every one, any one having adverse title being authorized to come in and defend), and the plaintiff may point out the premises to the sheriff and direct who are to be dispossessed; in such case, the sheriff is not a trespasser if he oust a person improperly, but the plaintiff is. And if under this writ the sheriff oust any one who is rightfully on the premises, he may be restored, according to English law and practice, in a summary way, by motion to the court, being a court of superior jurisdiction. It cannot be insisted, that any such practice, sanctioned by law, could obtain before justices of the peace in our Territory, who have jurisdiction by statute in actions of forcible entry and detainer. If the full extent of power, which a plaintiff and sheriff may exercise under the writ of possession in ejectment, is claimed for the plaintiff and sheriff under the writ of restitution in forcible entry and detainer, then the same prompt relief should be at hand for those who may be affected by an abuse of this power.
If there be no obvious reason why the law and practice under the writ of possession in ejectment should apply to proceedings on a writ of restitution in forcible entry and detainer, but very good reasons against it, the courts should refuse its application. The plaintiff in this case
We affirm the judgment of the district court with costs.