69 Ga. 251 | Ga. | 1883
Now, what did the plea of not guilty put in issue, and what proof was admissible thereunder? “ In trespass to the person, personal or real property, the defendant, under the general issue of not guilty, can give in evidence matter which directly controverts the fact of his having committed the acts complained of; as in trespass for assault and battery, with a tearing of clothes, a plea of not guilty of the assault modo et forma, was held to operate as a denial of the battery and laceravit as well as the assault.” i Chitty’s Plead., 534, 535. So our Code, §3458, after defining what a plea of the general issue is, provides that no other evidence is admissible under such plea, except such as disproves the plaintiff’s cause of action, and other matters in satisfaction (confession?) or avoidance must be specially pleaded. See upon this section 44 Ga., 199, which is fully in point with the present case.
In all such cases Mr. Chitty, 1 Plead., 535, says, “matters in discharge or confession and avoidance of the action must be specially pleaded.” Again, “the plea of not guilty, therefore, is proper in trespass to person, if the defendant committed no assault, battery or imprisonment; but in trespass to person son assault demesne, the moderate correction of servant, molliter manus imposuit to pre
“A plea,” he says, “justifying an arrest of the plaintiff upon the ground that a felony had been committed, and that there was reasonable ground to suspect and accuse the plaintiff, must distinctly state the specific reasons for suspecting the plaintiff. And a plea justifying assault and imprisonment on the ground of a breach of the peace committed by the plaintiff, must show that the breach of the peace was continuing, or show facts from which a renewal of the breach was to be apprehended, and as little as possible should be left to inference.” Ib.
“These are positive rules of law, in order to prevent surprise on the plaintiff at the trial by the defendant then assigning various reasons and causes for imprisoning the plaintiff, of which he had no notice, and which consequently, he could not be prepared to meet at the trial on a plea of not guilty on fair and equal terms with respect to the evidence and proof of facts.” Ib., 536, 537.
A striking instance of the application of this rule is afforded by the case of Brooks vs. Ashburn et al., 9 Ga., 297, which was an action of trespass on the case for killing a slave, to which the defendants filed the plea of the general issue and sought to justify themselves thereunder by showing that they were acting as patrol when the slave was killed; they relied upon the act of 1770, which declared that “ if any person shall be, at any time, sued for putting in execution any of the powers contained in the act, such person shall and may plead the general issue, and give the special matter and this act in evidence;” but this was not allowed by the court for two reasons: because this was a common action of trespass; the defendants were not sued for putting in execution the powers contained in the act of 1770, and could only avail themselves of the proof under a special plea of justification. This, the court
The plea in the case before us comes substantially up to these requirements. It sets forth that the plaintiff was at the time one of the defendant’s servants, who, with others, had custody of the goods stolen on the vessel; that he and his associates could alone have been guilty of the theft, and particularizes each and all the circumstances that gave the defendant reasonable and probable grounds to suspect the guilt of this party and to cause his arrest, imprisonment and detention, and it avers that he was not detained in custody an unreasonable length of time. We hold this a good plea in justification of the conduct of the defendant, and it gave him the right to open and conclude the argument of the case to the jury.
Again, it is urged that there was no allegation in the only count contained in plaintiff’s declaration on which the case was tried, that authorized the admission of these items in evidence. To that it has been replied, and we think successfully, that the evidence was admitted without objection ; that if objection had been made when it was offered, the declaration could have been amended so as to let it in, and no motion having been made to rule it out, the judge properly charged the jury as to its effect and influence.
Judgment reversed.