8 Ala. 508 | Ala. | 1845
When the County Court was established in 1807, it was excluded from all jurisdiction over real actions, actions of ejectment, and of trespass quare clausum fregit. [Dig. 207, § 5.] When .this Court was reconstituted in 1819, it was invested with concurrent jurisdiction with the Circuit Court, of all actions of debt, assumpsit, case, covenant, trespass, and assault and battery. [Ib. § 7.] We think the evident intention of the Legislature, by the use of the term trespass in this connexion, was, to invest the Court with jurisdiction of the action of trespass, as a remedy for injuries to personal property, and that the exclusion prescribed by the act of 1807, yet continues. In many of the States, trespass quare clausum fregit is the common action in which the title to real estate is determined; and even with us is permitted for that purpose. Whatever reason may have induced this exclusion in the first instance, it seems clear that no attempt
As the Court had no jurisdiction of so much of the action as is for breaking the close, it is unnecesary to consider whether the plea answers that part of the count which asserts the breaking and destroying of the personal chattels, as there is but one count, and that for a matter without the jurisdiction.
The judgment must be reversed and remanded, as it is possible from the form of the writ, that a proper count in trespass may be framed on it.
Reversed and remanded.