5 Johns. 278 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1810
delivered the opinion of the court. This was an ejectment for part of lot no. 65. in Milton. All the defendants entered into the consent rule joindy, and pleaded jointly, and the jury found them all guilty, specially; that is, they found that none of them possessed jointly with any of the rest; but that they severally had distinct and separate possessions of the premises demanded.
The question is, whether the lessor of the plaintiff is entitled to judgment upon this verdict, against all, or any, of the defendants.
The general rule in actions for torts against several who join in. a plea is, that the jury may find some guilty of part, or at one time, and the others guilty of another part, or at another time, and that in either of those cases they may assess several damages. (Tidd's K. B. Pr. 805.) The case of Player v. Warn and Dews (Cro. Car. 54.) is to this effect. That was an action of trover for 2,000 bushels of coal. The defendants’joined in their plea; the jury found them guilty, severally, for several loads of the coal, and several damages were assessed, and judgment was given against them severally, for the damages and entire costs, but there was but one judg-> ment in misericordia, This, on error to the Exchequer Chamber, was held well; and the court said that where the trespass is several, and one at one time, and one at another, and so found, although it be contrary to the supposal of the writ, yet being found by verdict, it shall be good, and the plaintiff shall have judgment according to the verdict; and there were, it was said, divers precedents to that purpose. This decision was agreeable, to one of the resolutions in Sir John Heydon's case. (11. Co. 5.) Torts are joint and several; andón a joint suit and issue, one defendant may be found guilty, and another acquitted,
Considering, then, an action of ejectment, in its priginal character, as an action of trespass strictly, there would seem to be no doubt but that the plaintiff in the present case, would be entitled to judgment, against all the defendants severally, according to the verdict. Though it be now a mixed action, yet the Same rule may well apply, as in trespass, of finding the defendants severally guilty, of parts of the trespass, and of finding some guilty, and others not guilty. The plaintiff is not held, as in actions on contracts, to maintain joint charge, and prove a joint possession. In Deckrow and others v. Jenkins, (Cro. Car. 178.) the ejectment
Judgment accordingly.