84 Va. 331 | Va. | 1888
delivered the opinion of the court.
The questions to be determined are: First, whether the replication is sufficient; and if not, then, secondly, whether the circuit court erred in giving final judgment on the demurrer for the defendant.
1. As to the first point, we are of opinion that the replication is clearly bad. It admits the averment in the plea that the cause of action accrued more than five years before the date of the writ, which is equivalent to an averment of adverse possession by the defendant of the breastpin mentioned in the declaration for that length of time before the action was brought, but it attempts to avoid the effect of that averment, ■or, in other words, to repel the limitation of the statute, by alleging a subsequent acknowledgment by the defendant that the breastpin was the property of the plaintiff. Such an acknowledgment, however, has not the effect for which the plaintiff contends. The time within which an action of detinue may be brought, is limitedby the statute to five years next after the right to sue accrues, and the time thus prescribed cannot be enlarged by any acknowledgment.
These are the only exceptions restrictive of the operation of the statute which the legislature has seen fit to make, and for the courts to add to the number would he to assume legislative authority. Code 1873, ch. 146; 4 Min. Inst., 510; 1 Rob. (old) Pr., 100; 1 Rob. (new) Pr., 581; A’Court v. Cross, 3 Bing., 329 (11 Eng. C. L., 124); Outhont v. Thompson, 20 Johns, 277; Bickle v. Chrisman, 76 Va., 678.
The result, therefore, in the present case is, that what may have been originally a wrong, has, by operation of the statute,, which is a statute of repose, ripened into a right. In other words, the defendant, having held adverse possession of the chattel in question more than five years before the commencement of the action, acquired a title thereto by operation of the statute, which was not divested, nor was the plaintiff’s right to sue revived, by the acknowledgment relied on in the replication.
In Newby’s adm’r v. Blakey, 3 H. & M., 57, it was held that five years’ adverse possession of certain slaves, acquired without force or fraud, gave to the party holding such possession a legal right which entitled him to recover the slaves in an action of detinue. And in Elam v. Bass’ ex’ors, 4 Munf., 301, it was
bTor is the case of Smith v. Townes’ adm’r, 4 Munf., 191, relied on by the plaintiff in error, in conflict with these views. That was an action of detinue to recover certain slaves, which had been bequeathed by one Booker, to the female plaintiff, and which at the testator’s death were in the possession of the defendant’s intestate. At the trial, the plaintiffs offered to prove that about one month after the testator’s death, in 1802, the defendant’s intestate, in a conversation with the executrix of Booker, remarked that the will was a just one, and that the slaves bequeathed to the female plaintiff, then a feme sole, “had as well remain in Ms (the intestate’s) possession for her benefit, to which the executrix assented,” and that he “had held the said slaves, on account, of that conversation, till bis death in 1810.” The' trial court excluded this and other evidence of a similar nature, but on appeal the judgment was reversed; this court holding that the evidence was admissible to rebut the alleged adverse possession by the defendant and Ms intestate. In other words, to show that there was nothing in the case upon which the statute of limitations could operate, since the evidence tended to show that the possession of the defendant’s intestate was, confessedly, all the time the j>ossession of the female plaintiff. The case is, therefore, clearly distinguishable from the present case and the cases just mentioned.
2. The replication, then, being insufficient, the circuit court, upon sustaining the demurrer, rightly entered final judgment for the defendant. The rule is, that where a plea goes to bar the action, as does the plea of the statute of limitations, and is
This rule was recognized in Clearwater v. Meredith, 1 Wall., 25. There the defendants filed six pleas. To the fifth the plaintiff replied. The defendants demurred to the replication, and the demurrer was sustained. And a demurrer to an amended replication, which was filed by leave of the court, having been also sustained, judgment was rendered for the defendants. In deciding the case, the supreme court said: “But the plaintiff insists that, even if his replication was bad, that still, upon the whole record, he was entitled to judgment, because the first and fourth pleas were undisposed of. If an issue of fact had been joined on the fifth plea, and found for the defendants, judgment was inevitable for them, because the plea was in bar of the action, and the other pleas would then have presented immaterial issues. If the plea was true, being a complete defence, it would have been useless to have tried other issues, for no matter how they might terminate, judgment must still be for the defendants. The state of pleading leaves the fifth plea precisely as if traverse had been taken on a matter of fact in it, and determined against the plaintiff.”
The application of this rule is decisive of the present case. Here the plaintiff, when the demurrer to his replication was sustained, chose to rest his case upon the record as it is, and in that state of the pleadings to bring the case on a writ of error to this court. He did not ask leave to amend, or to file a new replication, nor has it been suggested in the lower court
Launtleroy, J., dissented.
Judgment aeeirmed.