2 W. Va. 496 | W. Va. | 1868
The first cause of error assigned is that the court refused to allow the demurrer to be filed to the declaration after the plea of not guilty, pleaded. There can be no error in this because the declaration, though very informally drawn, is substantially good, and the demurrer, if filed, must have been overruled. Parsons vs. Hooper, 16 Gratt., 64; Hood vs. Maxwell, 1 West Virginia Rep., 219, and Beckwith vs. Mollohan, decided by this court, the present term.
The second cause of error assigned is that the court erred in refusing to allow the defendant to file his plea, No. 1. This was not error because the matters set up in the plea were not sufficient to bar the plaintiff from recovery. Hood vs. Maxwell, 1 West Virginia Rep., 219. It is claimed that
There was no error in requiring the jury called to try the case, to take the oath jirescribed in the act of 1863 for jurors, because the act is not unconstitutional as claimed by the plaintiff in error.
There was no error in refusing to allow the books of the commissioners of the revenue for 1861 to go in evidence to the jury, if for no other reason because they do not appear to have been relevant to the questions before the jury.
There was no error in excluding the deposition of the witness Pugh to prove the declarations of Heath, because it does not appear that they were so connected with the case as to constitute part of the res gestee. It cannot be seen
The judgment appealed from will have to bo affirmed, with damages and costs to the defendant in error.
Judgment aebtbmed.