13 N.C. 156 | N.C. | 1829
FROM DUPLIN. The declaration was in the following form:
"D. H. and W. H. were attached to answer D. G. Jun, of a plea of trespass on the case, and thereupon the said D. G. Jun., by, etc., complains for that, whereas, the said D. G., Jun., heretofore, to wit, on, etc. *97 at etc., was lawfully possessed as of his own property of certain negro slaves, to wit, Mary, etc., of great value, to wit, of the value, etc., and being so possessed thereof, he, the said D. G., Jun., afterwards, to wit, on, etc., at, etc., casually lost the said slaves out of his possession, and the same afterwards, to wit, on, etc., at, etc., came to (157) the possession, of the said D. H. and W. H. by finding. Yet the said D. H. and W. H., well knowing the said slaves to be the property of the said D. G., Jun., have not as yet delivered the said slaves to the said D. G., Jun., although often requested so to do, and have detained, and still do detain the same, to wit, at, etc., to the damage of the said D. G., Jun., and therefore, etc."
After a verdict for the plaintiff the defendant moved in the court below in arrest of judgment, on the ground of a variance between the writ and the declaration — the former being to answer the plaintiff on the title of his intestate, Nancy Glisson, and the latter counting upon the title of the plaintiff himself. The rule obtained on this motion was discharged by his Honor, Judge NORWOOD, and judgment rendered for the plaintiff, from which the defendants appealed. The writ is in case, in the name of the plaintiff as administrator of Nancy Glisson; the declaration is in detinue, in plaintiff's own right. For these variances it is insisted by the defendant that judgment should be arrested.
In England, for the trial of suits at common law, writs issue from the Court of Chancery, and they never are of record in the Court in which the cause is tried, except upon oyer. All original writs issue out of the officina justitiae, from which they are issued ex debita justitiae, to suit the exigency of every case. Variances between the writ and declaration are only noticed when oyer has been had of the original. In the English Courts oyer is refused, to prevent objections for variance between the writ and declaration. There the capias is considered as mere leading process, to bring the defendant into Court, to be notified of the cause of action, and when it has performed this office, it is functus officio. It forms no part of the record, and no advantage is taken of its defects, or its variances from the declaration, unless on a motion to set aside the proceedings, which is addressed to the discretion of the Court, and is only granted for the attainment of justice. No inconveniences occur in England from this practice. Neither the defendant nor his bail can sustain injury, because no step is taken in the cause until (159) after the appearance of the defendant, when the declaration is *98 served on him, and he can then obtain time to plead if he be taken by surprise; and the bail to the writ are discharged by the principal's appearance.
This notice has been taken of the practice in the English Courts to point out the great difference between legal proceedings in that country and in our State. They differ upon fundamental principles. By the organization of our Courts the original writ issues from the Court in which the suit is instituted, and stands for trial. It forms part of the record of the cause. A prayer for the oyer of the writ is unnecessary, and is unknown to our practice. It answers the double purpose of writ and process. It executes the offices of both, and all its functions are not executed by bringing the defendant into Court. Here, by the construction of our Court law, judgment may be rendered by default against defendant, as well before as after appearance, and in some cases final judgment. Our bail to the writ is also to the action. Hence great inconvenience might arise, and much injury result, from considering our original writ as mere process, and viewing it as no part of the record. For a more enlarged and able view of this subject I refer to Stamps v. Graves,
It has been decided in Stamps v. Graves, supra, that the writ being in debt, and the declaration in assumpsit, the variance is fatal. Here the writ is in case, and the declaration in detinue. The variance is equally fatal. There is an essential difference between the two actions. Trover is to recover damages for the unlawful conversion of chattels. Detinue is to recover the specific articles, and also damages for their unlawful detention. In trover the judgment is that the plaintiff do recover his damages; in detinue, that he do recover the goods (or the value (160) thereof; if the plaintiff cannot have the goods) and his damages. In which should judgment be rendered?
But it is said the declaration, though not technically drawn, is substantially good in trover. It begins by stating that the defendants were attached to answer the plaintiff of a plea of trespass on the case, and thereupon the plaintiff, by his attorney, complains, and then proceeds to set forth the cause of action. The recital of the writ, at the commencement, forms no part of the declaration, and cannot alter the character thereof. It is also said that the averments of possession by plaintiff, and of finding by defendants, are common to both motions, and comport with a declaration, in trover; and no departure is observed, until near the close of the declaration, when, instead of averring the conversion, according to the precedents in that form of action, it is averred that the defendants "have detained, and still do detain," in conformity to the precedents in detinue. And it is contended, with much ingenuity, *99 that these words, ex vi termini, import a wrongful detention; and a wrongful detention is a conversion, and not merely evidence of it, and thus the declaration is substantially good in trover. Conversion and detention are not convertible terms. Detention may be evidence of conversion, but it is not conclusive of the facts. Setting forth a detention is not an averment of the facts of conversion, and conversion must be averred in a declaration in trover. It is the gist of the action. The declaration accords with the precedents in detinue, and is different from the forms prescribed in trover. The same declaration will not answer for either action. This is a good declaration in detinue; it cannot be admitted that it will answer in trover. To avoid confusion the boundaries of actions should be distinctly marked and carefully preserved. The variance is fatal.
The plaintiff issues his writ as administrator of his intestate, Nancy Glisson, and then declares in his own right. The writ and declaration are parts of the record of the same suit. Each sets (161) forth a different right of action, and they are repugnant to each other. Establishing the position that the writ is a part of the record forbids this departure from it in the declaration. By confounding different and distinct rights in the same action the important purposes of pleading may be defeated and confusion may be introduced. It is believed this also is a fatal variance.
It is contended that the variance between the writ and declaration are cured after verdict, by statute 5, Geo. I, ch. 13. In Dudley v. Carmolt,
As to the motion to amend the pleading, under the act of 1824, ch. 3, so as to make it an action of trover, in the plaintiff's own right, the question has been settled by this Court in Matlock v. Gray,
(162) It is there decided that this Court has not power to make the amendment. The party can take nothing by the motion.
PER CURIAM. Reversed.
Overruled: West v. Ratledge,