58 Tenn. 741 | Tenn. | 1872
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action prosecuted for the recovery of damages, for alleged trespasses, charged to have been committed in 1864. On a trial in the court below a verdict was rendered for $2,500, on which judgment a writ of error is prosecuted to this court. The only
The declaration, after reciting a large amount of irrelevant matter by way of introduction, that need not be noticed, alleges that on the fourth day of June, 1864, the defendant, with force and arms, etc., broke and entered the plaintiff’s close, situated in the county of Johnson, with a loud noise, and aroused plaintiff and his family from slumber, and then and there made an assault upon the said plaintiff in the peace of the State then and there being, and him the said plaintiff did then and there beat, abuse and ill-treat, and then and there forcibly and wrongfully entered the dwelling house of the said plaintiff, his family being therein, and unduly and unlawfully searched said dwelling house, and then and there forcibly seized, took and carried away divers articles of personal property belonging to the plaintiff of great value, to-wit, one sorrel mare of the value of $150, one double barrel shot gun of the value of $30, one Colt’s pis
There is a second count in the declaration for conversion of the property mentioned in the first count, to which no objection is made. The first count of the declaration contains a distinct allegation of two separate causes of action in any aspect of it, to-wit, the charge of an assault and battery, in the language quoted above, and which is that the defendants made an assault on plaintiff, etc., and him did then and there beat, abuse and ill-treat. The other fact of entering the close ' may be taken as a recital by way of inducement of the circumstances under which the assault was made, and probably might have been proven without having been stated at all, under the rule that “ the manner, motives, place and circumstances of the assault, though tending to increase the damages, need not be specially stated, but may be shown in evidence.” 2 Grenl. Ev., sec. 89. The other portion of the same count is just as clearly a distinct claim for entering the dwelling of plaintiff with force, wrongfully seizing the personal goods therein
By the Code in chapter on Forms of Action, secs. 2746-2748, it is provided, “ all contracts may be sued on in the same form of action.” All wrongs and injuries to the property and person in which money only is demanded as damages, may be' redressed by an action on the facts of the case, and whenever the facts .of the case entitle the plaintiff to sue for breach of contract, or at his election, for the wrong and injury, he may join statements of his cause of action in both forms or either. Then follows provisions for bringing the action of replevin and detainer for recovery of specific personal chattels, and actions of ejectment and forcible entry, or detainer for recovery of real property. Then sec. 2757 is that “in all actions at law the cause of action shall be stated clearly, explicitly, and as briefly as possible.” It is urged that the provisions of sec. 2747, above quoted, sustains this declaration, providing that “all wrongs and injuries to the property and person in which money is demanded as damages, may be redressed by an ac
That the declaration was not intended to thus join separate and distinct causes of action in the same •count, is still more clearly shown by the further provisions of the Code, as in article 2 of this chapter, where it is provided that the declaration shall state the plaintiffs cause of action, that “ it may contain several statements or counts; but where several dis-distinct causes of action against the same party are joined, the court may direct separate trials of the issue, and then in the forms of declaration given in the Code it will be seen that this idea is strictly carried out. The rule contained in sec. 2896 goes clearly on the idea that a party may have several statements or counts in his declaration of distinct causes of action, but when thus joined as separate counts the court may order separate trials of the issue made on the distinct causes of action in such separate .counts. Taking the general tenor of the provisions of the Code on the subject of ’pleading, we do not mean to be understood as holding that the strictness, and even rigidity of the rules of the common law pleading on the question of duplicity were intended to be preserved, but that the rule is that separate and distinct causes of action, of a nature entirely distinct, to which the pleas proper for defense of such. actions may pre
But while all this, we think, is clear, yet the ques