66 Wis. 561 | Wis. | 1886
An action in ejectment was pending, wherein Bridget Halpin was plaintiff, and Mathew Shea defendant. Judgment was rendered therein in favor of the plaintiff, December 30,1870. Within one year from that time a new
As to the first claim, the action, if it abated at all, did so before Catherine Shea was made a party thereto, and after that there was no action pending to which she could be made a party, and the motion was not to continue the action against her as purchaser; and, as to the second, the action itself was revived by the order, and it was not revived merely for the purpose of adjudicating the claims of the plaintiff for mesne profits, and of the defendant for taxes paid and improvements made. The order, if it have any effect, continues the action of ejectment generally, and that action is now pending for trial, for the recovery of the
But we need not furnish reasons for the common law which abated this action upon the death'of the defendant, for it needs no vindication. The only question here is, Has our statute amended and changed the common law in this respect? It has clearly enlarged the number of actions which survive, and presumably mentions all intended to be revived which did not survive at common law. Our statute on this precise subject (sec. 4253, R. S.) is very strict and clear, leaving nothing to intendment beyond what is expressed in it. It is: “In addition to the actions which survive at common law, the following shall also survive, that is to say: actions for the recovery of personal property, or the unlawful conversion thereof, actions for assault and battery, or false imprisonment, or for goods taken and carried away, and actions for damages done to real or personal estate.” This is very explicit. When the legislature provided that actions for the recovery of personal property should survive, it would have been easy and highly proper to have added “ or real property,” so as to read “ for the recovery of personal or real property.” Expressio unius est exclusio alterius. They must have intentionally omitted real property. Our statute classes actions of ejectment under the designation of “ actions for the recovery of specific real property.” Sec. 3073, R. S. That would have been the natural and proper language to have been inserted, if intended.
There is no other statute which can be tortured into any such amendment of the common law. Sec. 2806, R. S., provides for the continuance of the action in the name of the heir, executor, or administrator of a deceased plaintiff. Why omit a similar provision in respect to the deceased defendant? Sec. 2808 provides that when the action is against several defendants, and one of them die, the action may be prosecuted against the survivors. Why not revive
In all the statutes cited which are claimed to imply such a radical amendment of the common law, it would have .been most natural and proper to have supplied this clear and obvious omission if intended. What was intended seems to have been in all cases most explicitly expressed, so that, by the familiar rule, other material provisions and all other cases not mentioned are excluded. “ It is not to be presumed that the legislature intended to make any innovation upon the' common law further than the case absolutely required. The law rather infers that the act did not intend to make any alteration other than what is specified and besides what has been plainly pronounced.” Dwar. Stats. 185, note 1. “ The same rule of interpretation is adopted by our courts, fedei’al and state;” citing cases. In the samo note the American publisher quotes the language of Chancellor Kent, of most vehement and exalted eulogy upon the common law as the perfection of reason, and gives emphatic sanction to this rule of construction.
■ There can be no question but that the action of ejectment, which still remains substantially as in the past except as to its fictions, also remains as at common law in this respect, and abates on the death of the defendant, and cannot be revived. If the legislature wishes to class this action among those which survive on the death of the defendant, they can easily express such intent in explicit language, and until they do so we prefer to abide by the common law, rather than to spell - out such an amendment by loose and most unreasonable statutory construction.
•That part of the order which admits the heirs of Bridget Halpin, deceased, to prosecute the action, will necessarily fall, because there was no action pending to be prosecuted.
By the Court. — • The order of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to that court to deny the motion.