1 Mich. 165 | Mich. | 1848
By the court,
It is urged in support of the decision of the circuit judge, that there were two material allegations in the declaration, one or both of which defendant might have traversed, as the nature of his .defence required, viz:
1. The right of possession of the plaintiff.
2. The detention of the property.
It is urged that the session law of 1839, p, 230, see. 44, which prescribes the form of the general iss&e in replevin, has -jn no respect changed the nature or effect of the general issue in this action at common law, which was non cepit, and which only denied the taking, but admitted the right of property to be in the plaintiff; and, if this is not correct by analogy in an action of replevin under the statute for a detention, not guilty only denied the detention, and admitted the jiroperty to be in the piaintiff, as alleged.
In this case the only cause of action stated, is, the wilful and unlawful detention of the horse. If it is true that the plea of not guilty only denied the taking, it would have no relation to the subject matter .of complaint alleged in the declaration: for it would only deny what is not asserted. It is manifest, then, that as this plea is given by the statute as an appropriate plea in an action of replevin, whether the action be for
The question, then, is, what effect shall be given to the plea of not guilty in an action of replevin for an unlawful and wrongful detention ? The statute of 183-9 provides, that “the general issue shall be joined on the plea of not guilty.”
In the largest class of actions, where there is strictly and technically a general issue, a plea of .the general issue traverses, thwarts and denies at once the whole declaration, without offering any special matter to evade it. 3 Black. Com. 305. In some actions, some pleas are called the general issue which, strictly speaking, are not so, as mil tiel record in debt, and non est factum in covenant. But the books treat these pleas as being something short of the general issue in its broadest sense. So in replevin at common law it is said non cepit is called the general issue; but it is so in a restricted sense ©My, since it does not embrace and deny all the allegations in the declaration, but takes issue upon a single point, and, like special pleas, admits what it does not deny. It is more like a special plea than the general issue. At common law an action of replevin would only lie in cases- of a wrongful taking, and where trespass would lie. A denial of the taking was the most common defence, and if proved it disposed of the action; the gist of the action was the wrongful taking. In bringing replevin, the plaintiff narrowed his grounds of complaint to the loss resulting from the taking; he did not embrace in his action, as he would in- an action of trespass, the injury accompanying the taking; and the defendant, by the plea of non cepit, still further narrowed the issue to the simple act of taking. The plea of non cepit did not embrace all that was embraced in an- action of trespass by the plea of not guilty. In the one case, the plea denied a specific single fact charged; in the other, every allegation in the declaration was put in issue.
If it was the object of the legislature to give a new and arbitrary name to the plea of non cepit without changing its nature, why did they not adopt the' plain English of the general issue, and say a denial of the taking should be the general issue ? As they have given in an action for a detention a plea which is the general issue in trover, why should we not give to the plea its- appropriate scope and effect — the same meaning that is given to it in actions where the plea is allowed ?
It is urged’ that as non cepit is called the general issue in replevin at common law for a Wrongful taking, non detinet should be the general issue in an action of replevin for a wronful detention only. But as there was- no such aetion at common law, no1 such plea could be pleaded to it: and, consequently,, it cannot be supposed to have been intended by the legislature; Justice Nelson, in 12 Wendell 33, says, that the distinction made between the effect and operation of the general issue in the cases of non cepit and non detinet is in analogy to that existing in the action cf tn sjiáss and trover* In the first the defendant cannot, under tbe plea of not guilty, show property out of - the plaintiff; but he may in the latter. The action of trespass is founded on the right of the plaintiff to the possession trover is founded on the right of property, and this is the reason of the' distinction.
We have, as we think,- already shown that the plea of the general issue in this case could not mean the general issue of non cepit; no special or definite plea was pointed toas the general issue-by saying the general issue should be joined by the plea of not guilty* We think
Judgment reversed,