91 Va. 583 | Va. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the court.
This case does not involve the amount required by statute to entitle the plaintiff to a hearing by this court. It is, however, contended that there is a constitutional question involved which brings the case within the jurisdiction of this court.
The question presented is, can a defendant, in a motion under section 3211, Code of Yirginia, 1887, claim a trial by a jury, as of right, without tendering an issue ?
When the case was called in the court below, the defendant declined to plead oi tender any issue of fact, claiming the right, as this was a summary proceeding, to go to trial, with out any formal pleadings, and to produce orally in the progress of the trial any defenses he might have. The court declined to allow a jury to be sworn until and unless some issue' of fact was joined. The parties thereupon submitted the matters of law and fact arising in the case to the determination and judgment of the court, but without waiving the defendant’s exception to the ruling of the court.
The contention is that this is a summary proceeding provided by statute, and that it was not necessary, under section 3211, to plead, or make up an issue of fact for the jury, but that the defendant was entitled to a trial by a jury without an issue, and that it was a denial of his constitutional rights not to accord him a jury, without his tendering an issue.
The object of. section 3211 of the Code was to afford a more speedy remedy for the enforcement of contracts, but it was not contemplated that all the rules of pleading were to be abrogated thereby. Section 3213 of the Oode expressly
The general rule applying to all actions will not sustain a judgment given upon a verdict, rendered as upon the trial of an issue, where no issue has been joined. "No verdict can be rendered, or judgment entered thereon, in any case, unless issue shall have first been joined on the pleadings. 1 Bart. L. Prac. 476; 4 Minor’s Inst. pt. 1, p. 851. It would be error in the Circuit Court to enter up a judgment on the verdict of a jury in any case where no issue had been joined, or no plea filed by the defendant. Any such judgment would, for that reason only, be reversed. The cases are numerous, in this and ether States, where verdicts and judgments have been set aside by the appellate court merely because the verdict was rendered when no issue had been joined. Stevens v. Taliaferro, l Wash. (Va.) 155; McMillion v. Dobbins, 9 Leigh, 422; Rowans v. Givens, 10 Gratt. 250; Ruffner v. Hill, 21 W. Va. 152.
The better practice in proceedings by motion would be to make up the issue to be tried by the jury by filiug such formal plea as would be suitable had the action been by declaration, according to the form at common law. Inasmuch, however, as the object of this proceeding by motion under section 3211 was to give suitors a plain and summary proceeding for the recovery of judgments, and it is but in accordance with the spirit of this flexible proceeding by motion to permit the defendant to make his defense by such informal pleas or statement in writing as will state his defense and make up the issue to be tried, this latter practice is permissible, except in all cases where the statute requires the plea to be verified by
In the case at bar, the defendant was deprived of no constitutional right in being required to make up an issue of fact before the jury was impaneled. He could have secured this privilege by filing the formal but simple plea of nil debet, or by filing a statement in writing of the grounds of his defense sufficiently explicit to make up the issue.
For the foregoing reasons, the court is of opinion that there is no error in the judgment complained of, and it is affirmed.
Aeeibmed.