52 Tenn. 401 | Tenn. | 1871
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought in the Circuit Court of Hardeman county, on the 17th October, 1866. As the Code declares that “all contracts may be sued on
It is insisted, for the plaintiffs, that their cause of action, as developed in the evidence, arose out of transactions between them and the defendants in relation to the purchase of cotton. Plaintiffs allege that they were engaged, in 1861-2, in the business of cotton spinning, at Huntsville, Alabama; that they employed the defendants, who were merchants at Sauls-bury, Tennessee, to purchase cotton for them and forward it to them at Florence,. Alabama, by the Memphis and Charleston Railroad; that, under this contract,
The issue of fact thus made, seems to have been contested with an ardor and earnestness -proportionate to the magnitude of the cause and the important and delicate, not to say startling, inquiries involved in it. It has been submitted to three different juries, and on each occasion several days and a large part of the term appear to have been devoted to its investigation. Two mistrials were entered, and on the last trial a verdict and judgment were rendered for the defendant, from which the plaintiffs prosecute this appeal; and the case is now before us, in a record of more than seven hundred pages, made out with unusual neatness and care. The costs of the cause already amount to between seven and eight hundred dollars, and as it must eventually be determined by a jury, upon the question of fact, it is with much reluctance that we feel constrained to reverse the judgment and remand it for another trial.
Among the various questions argued with zeal and ability by the counsel on both sides, there are but two upon which we deem it necessary to announce an opinion.
1. On the 5th November, 1869, the following entry appears to have been made in the Circuit Court of Hardeman, viz.:
“In this cause the Court is pleased to grant the motion of the defendants, supported by the affidavit of*415 M. C. Pearce, N. Berry, John S. Belote and John H. McClellan, asking a change of venue, and orders that the venue o this case be changed to the Circuit Court of Fayette, county, Tennessee, that being the nearest county; and the Clerk is hereby ordered to make out a complete transcript of the record in this cause, and all orders, and forward them forthwith to the Circuit Court of Fayette county, together with all the papers in this cause. To all of which the plaintiff, by his attorney, excepts. And thereupon came the plaintiff, by his attorney, and asked to be allowed to prove that John PI. McClellan, one of the three citizens who support the application of defendants for a change of venue in this cause, is interested in this cause, and the Court refuses to allow the same. To which the plaintiff, by attorney, excepts.”
In obedience to this order, the cause was transferred to the Circuit Court at Somerville, where it was continued from term to term until October Term, 1870, when, as before stated, it was submitted to, and tried by, a jury of Fayette county.
No formal bill of exceptions to the action 'of the Court in ordering the change of venue, was signed and sealed by the Circuit Judge, but we hold that the entry above, made upon the minutes, was a sufficient bill of exceptions, according to the last paragraph of the opinion in Wynne v. Edwards, 7 Hum., 420. But upon the authority of that, as well as several other cases decided by this Court, we hold that the affidavits of Pearce and his several compurgators, which are copied into the transcript, form no part of the record.
For the purpose of saving expense to the parties, as well as for other causes, the trial by jury which is co-eval with the common law, was intended to be by a jury of the vicinage or county, but in order to secure a fair and impartial trial, where it could not be had in the county, a change of venue was authorized in this State, so early as the act of 1809, c. 49, s. 17: Car. & Nich., 700; 2 Meigs’ Dig., 1021. That act was subsequently' amended by other statutes, the provisions of which were condensed and re-enacted in the Code. These statutes were constructed with some degree of strictness, and it was held that, under their provisions, a cause could not be transferred from one Circuit Court to another because a Judge, from interest or otherwise, was incompetent to try it; and in another case, that where the order for the change of venue directed that the transcript should be sent to the Court to which the case was removed within fifteen days, and this was not done until after that time, the Court to which the cause was intended to be removed did not acquire jurisdiction. See Williams, ex parte, 4 Yerg., 579; McHenry v. Wallen, 2 Yerg., 441. See also Walker v. Snowden, 1 Swan, 193.
So important, as a general rule, is it to litigants that their causes shall be tried in the counties where they reside, that the statute does not allow a change of venue as a matter of right ■ or of course. It can
In Blackburn v. Hawthorne, no satisfactory reason is given for excluding counter affidavits; but, in sup
This conclusion of the' opinion is not an absolute and unequivocal determination that this Court can not, in any case, review the action of the Circuit Court in changing, or refusing to change,' the venue, and is to be regarded as applying to the peculiar facts in that case. It treats such action as difficult, and, perhaps, ineffective; and .in Walker v. Snowden, 1 Swan, 193, already cited, the action of the Court, in ordering a change of venue, was reviewed and annulled by this Court, on the ground that the Circuit Court had no authority to transfer the cause under the Act of 1809, by directing that a transcript of the record merely, and not a transcript and the original papers, should be sent to the Circuit Court of the county to which the cause was removed. The case of Blackburn v. Hawthorne, in which Judge Hawkins delivered a dissenting opinion, is, therefore, overruled so far as it declares that affidavits in opposition to a change of venue can not be received; and, except so far as herein otherwise expressed, we concur in the reasoning of the dissenting opinion. See 4 Col., 221, 227. ■ But the practice of receiving counter affidavits, which are generally made ex parte, should not prevail except under very special circumstances. The correct practice is to hear the witnesses for and against the change of venue in open Court, or to cause their depositions
It results from this view, that the case never was properly in the Circuit Court of Fayette, and must be remanded to the Circuit Court of Hardeman county.
2. This Court would be content to rest its action on this ground alone, but for the fact that our attention has been expressly invited to the following paragraph in his Honor’s charge: “The defendants, however, insist as a defense to this action, that the cotton purchased by them for plaintiffs was burned, or directed to be burned, by the military authorities of the Confederate States, against their consent. If you find from the proof in the case that such is the fact, then it would be your duty to find in favor of the defendants.” This is not a correct statement of the law.
3. It is no answer to this objection that it is shown in the bill of exceptions, that “the charge was not excepted to by either counsel for plaintiffs or defendants.’-’ Neither the consent nor- silence of counsel can make the law; and while the Circuit Courts are not to be put into error by the failure of counsel to ask for appropriate instructions, where the charge is otherwise unobjectionable, yet where actual error occurs in the instructions, of such a nature as to mislead the jury on a material question in the cause, 'it is the duty of this Court, as a reviewing tribunal, to review and correct it, although every intendment, especially after verdict, is in favor of the regularity of the proceedings in the Court below.
4. Other material and important questions have been ■discussed in argument, and there are, perhaps, other
Reverse the judgment and remand the cause to the Circuit Court of Hardeman county, to which the Circuit Court of Fayette will return all the original papers transmitted therein to that Court.