Mattson v. Hanisch

5 Ill. App. 102 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1880

McAllister, J.

This was replevin in the Superior Court of Cook county by appellants against appellee, for a quantity of mittens and gloves. There were two counts in the declaration —one in the cepit, the other in the detinet. The pleas were non cepit, non detinet, and property in defendant, upon which issue was joined. The verdict was: “ We, the jury, .find the defendant not guilty;” on which the court gave judgment and awarded a retorno habendo. Plaintiffs appealed to this court, and amongst other things assign for error the awarding of retorno habendo upon the mere finding of “ not guilty,” without any finding of the issue on the plea of property.

The pleas of non cepit and non detinet admit property in the plaintiff and put in issue only, the wrongful taking and detention, , Talcott v. Anderson, 1 Gilm. 365; Vose v. Hart, 12 Ill. 378; Ingalls v. Bulkley, 15 Ill. 224; and under those pleas alone, and the plaintiff’s failing to sustain his action, it is error to award a return of the property to the defendant. To justify that judgment there must not only be a plea of property in the defendant or a stranger, the effect of which is to put in issue the right of property, either general or special in the plaintiff, but the verdict must find the property not in the plaintiff. A verdict upon issues raised by such pleas of property filed with non cepit or non detinet which said, “ we, the jury, find the issues for the defendant,” would be regarded as finding the property in the defendant, where he had pleaded property in himself. But a verdict where the issues are upon a plea of non cepit or non detinet, or both, and upon property in defendant, and which merely finds the defendant “ not guilty,” can be regarded only as a finding upon the question of the wrongful taking and detention, and not upon the right of property in the plaintiff at all. The verdict not covering all the issues, and not finding that the property was not in the plaintiff, it is manifest error to give the defendant judgment upon it, that he shall have a return of the property awarded to him.

These questions were involved in Bourk v. Riggs, 38 Ill. 320. The court said: “The verdict of ‘not guilty,’ being responsive to the issues of non cepit and non detinet, both admitting property in plaintiff in error, it was erroneous for the court to-award a writ of retorno habendo. Such a judgment should not he rendered unless it appears from the issues tried and the verdict returned that plaintiff is not the owner.”

In Hanford v. Obrecht, 38 Ill. 320, the pleas were the same -as in the case at bar, only there was in addition a plea of justi-fication. The verdict was simply “ not guilty,” on which the court awarded a retorno habendo. The Supreme Court reversed -it for that error alone. Again, in Underwood v. White, 45 Ill. 437, that court held that a verdict of “ not guilty ” would be responsive only to the i§sue of non cepit, and would not be a finding upon the plea of property.

But there is a broader ground on which this assignment of ■error rests, and it is this : “ If a jury finds but part of the ■matter put in issue, and says nothing as to the rest, the verdict is ill, and a venire facias de novo shall issue -if no judgment is.given; ,but if judgment is given upon such verdict it shall be reversed.” Rex v. Hayes, 2 Lord Raymond, 1518; 1 Graham & W. on New Trials, 140.

The judgment of the court below will be reversed and a new trial granted. -

Beversed and remanded.

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