135 Mass. 242 | Mass. | 1883
Upon the agreed facts, the defendant was a trespasser, and the owners of the property attached were entitled to recover it in an action of replevin against him. Sanborn v. Royce, 132 Mass. 594. Both partners should have joined in the action of replevin. Hart v. Fitzgerald, 2 Mass. 509. Ladd v. Billings, 15 Mass. 15. Kimball v. Thompson, 4 Cush. 441. Hackett v. Potter, 131 Mass. 50. The plaintiff objects that nonjoinder of Thwaites as plaintiff could only be availed of by plea in abatement.
By submitting the case upon agreed facts, the parties waived all questions of pleading, and the case is to be determined on its merits, upon the facts agreed, as if the questions relating to them had been presented upon proper pleadings, and matters which can be taken advantage of in pleading only by plea in abatement are not open in a case submitted on an agreed statement of facts, unless specially reserved. Scudder v. Worster, 11 Cush. 573. Esty v. Currier, 98 Mass. 500. West Roxbury v. Minot, 114 Mass. 546. Smith v. Carney, 127 Mass. 179.
There is some conflict of authority, but we are of opinion that, by the weight of authority, joint ownership of the plaintiff and
In Reinheimer v. Hemingway, 35 Penn. St. 432, 438, Mr. Justice Strong says: “ In Hart v. Fitzgerald, 2 Mass. 511, it was ruled that a part owner of a chattel cannot maintain replevin for his undivided part, and if it appear in the writ, the court will arrest the judgment. Part ownership in another is therefore pleadable in bar and not exclusively in abatement.” “ The plea of property imposes upon the plaintiff the necessity of establishing his title, and his right to the possession; and that right must, of necessity, be exclusive in order to warrant a delivery of the property to him.”
In Chambers v. Hunt, 3 Harr. (N. J.) 339, the court say: “ It is a good plea in abatement or in bar, to say, the property is in the plaintiff and the defendant; or in the plaintiff and a stranger; or if there be two or more plaintiffs, that it is in one of them.”
“ And so in a replevyn it is a good plea to say, that the property is to the plaintife and to a stranger; and where there be two plaintifes, that the property is to one of them.” Co. Litt. 145 b. See Morris on Replevin, 125; Wells on Replevin, § 160; Wilson v. Gray, 8 Watts, 25.
In Garvin v. Paul, 47 N. H. 158, and Wright v. Bennett, 3 Barb. 451, the questions decided appear to have depended upon peculiar statutory provisions.
As the case now stands, judgment must be entered for the defendant, but if the plaintiff elects to amend, by joining Thwaites as co-plaintiff, he may do so, upon such terms as the Superior Court may impose; and, if such amendment is made, judgment is to be entered for the plaintiffs.
Ordered accordingly.