23 N.J.L. 201 | N.J. | 1851
This was an action for a breach of warranty in the sale of clover seed. On the trial in the court for the trial of small causes, the justice was challenged by the defendant below, on the ground that he was related to the plaintiff by affinity within the third degree. The justice had married the sister of the plaintiff's wife, but she had died long before the trial, leaving, however, one son. The challenge was overruled by the justice, on the ground, as he states, that the affinity had ceased by the death of his wife. Supposing relationship by affinity to be a sufficient ground for challenge to a judge under our statute, it is more than doubtful whether the answer made by the justice to the challenge was a good one. Affinity, or relationship by marriage, is a good principal ground of challenge, either to the array or to the polls, while it continues ; and it has been held to continue if there be issue of the marriage. Co. Lit. 156 a. and Hargrave’s notes 277, 278; Mounson v. West, 1 Leo. 88 ; Trials per pais 188 (Ed. 1766); Foot v. Morgan, 1 Hill 654.
But it is here of no importance whether the judge erred in law in overruling this challenge, or a subsequent challenge interposed by the defendant to the array, the trial before the justice being by jury. The defendant appealed from the judgment given against him, and, on the trial of the appeal, moved to nonsuit the plaintiff, because, as he alleged, the justice had erred in overruling the challenge without proper trial. The writ of certiorari in the case does not bring up the judgment of the justice, but of the pleas, on the appeal, by which it has been superseded.
But another reason, urged by counsel as a ground of reversal, is founded upon alleged error in the Court of Common Pleas on the trial of the appeal. The defendant below was, it is said, tenant for years in a farm upon which the bad seed was sown, and it would seem that he had also some interest, as one of the heirs of a former owner, in the reversion of the same farm after the death of the tenant for life, under whom he held. It is alleged in the state of demand, as special damage which had accrued from the sale of the seed, that the foul and obnoxious seed, such as wild carrot, wild parsnip seed, and the like, received and sown as clover seed, had greatly injured the pasture land of the plaintiff, lessened the value of its products, &c. Upon the cross-examination of a witness, produced by the plaintiff, it was testified as follows : “ The plaintiff rents the farm of his stepmother, widow Givens; his lease will expire next spring. There are several shares of the farm belonging to the heirs of John Givens, deceased.” At this point,» the defendant’s counsel proposed to ask the witness, “ What share and interest has the plaintiff in the said farm ?” To this question the plaintiff’s counsel objected, on the ground, as stated in the case, that the question was not material, as the plaintiff’s title could not be inquired into; and the court refused to permit the question to be put.
Randolph, J., concurred.
Judgment affirmed.
Cited in Rodenbury v. Roubury, 4 Zab. 493; State v. South Amboy, 3 Vr. 285; Hurff v. Overseers of Camden, 9 Vr. 288.
A regular appeal supersedes judgment of the justice-; the pleas must retry the case on the merits, and give such judgment as the justice ought to have done. Strader v. Freeholders of Sussex, 3 Green 433.