In this case the declaration is general; not. describing any close in particular. The plea describes a close by metes and bounds, containing 150 acres; and states that the supposed trespass was committed in that close, and that it is the soil and freehold of Mary ITanscom, as whose servant the defendant did the act complained of. The replication states that the trespass was committed in a close of fifteen acres, being a part of the close of 150 acres; which part is described by metes and bounds; — and it further slates that it is the soil and freehold of the plaintiff; and contains a traverse that the whole close of 150 acres is the soil and freehold of said Mary Ilanscom. The defendant then in the rejoinder pleads to this new charge that he is not guilty of any trespass on the close of fifteen acres and concludes to the country. To this there is a general demurrer and joinder.
The pleadings appear to have been drawn rather inartificially; and for that very reason, the application of legal principles, in deciding the cause, is attended with more difficulty than in those cases where technical rules are observed.
The replication seems to have been intended as a new assignment; —and the facts disclosed are such as to render a new assignment necessary and proper; for the plaintiff does not in his replication assert a title to the whole close; but only to the fifteen, acres, in which he says the trespass was committed. c£ As the “ plaintiff may new assign the trespass in a different close, so he “ may new assign it in another part of the same close.” Lawes on Plead. 163. This is done in the present case; but the plaintiff has gone further and traversed the title of Mary Hanscom, to the whole close of 150 acres described in the plea. A new assignment of the trespass as committed in another close, need not and should not contain any traverse; for the object is to reduce to certainty the place where the trespass is intended to be proved; which was not attempted in the declaration, and which the plea has not done. u The plaintiff may new assign with or without “ taking issue on, or otherwise answering the special plea.”
This case was decided, on error, in the exchequer chamber, and by the decision, the judgment of the Court of King’s bench was reversed. In the original action the mayor and company of Oxford brought trespass against the plaintiffs in error, for fishing in the plaintiff’s fishery. The defendant pleaded that the locus in quo was an arm of the sea, in which every subject of the realm had the liberty and privilege of free fishing. The plaintiffs replied a prescription for the sole and several right of fishing ; and traversed that every subject had the liberty ai,id privilege off
