CASE practice. A contested question before a court of justicea suit or action a cause. 9 Wheat. 738.
CASE,
remedies. This is the name of an action in very general use, which lies
where a party sues for damages for any wrong or cause of complaint
towhich covenant or trespass will not lie. Steph. Pl. 153 Wodd. 167 Ham.
N. P. 1. Vide Writ of trespass on the case. In its most comprehensive
signification, case includes assumpsit as well as an action in form ex
delicto; but when simply mentioned, it is usually understood to mean an
action in form ex delicto. 7 T. R. 36. It is a liberal action; Burr,
906, 1011 1 Bl. Rep. 199; bailable at common law. 2 Barr 927-8; founded
on the justice and conscience of the Tiff's case, and is in the nature
of a bill in equity 3 Burr, 1353, 1357 and the substance of a count in
case is the damage assigned. 1 Bl. Rep. 200.
2.
An action on the case lies to recover damages for torts not committed
with force actual or implied, or having been occasioned by force, where
the matter affected was not tangible, or where the injury was not
immediate but consequential; 11 Mass. 59, 137 1 Yeates, 586; 6 S. &
R. 348; 12 S. & R. 210 ; 18 John. 257 19 John. 381; 6 Call, 44; 2
Dana, 378 1 Marsh. 194; 2 H. & M. 423; Harper, 113; Coxe, 339; or
where the interest in the property was only in reversion. 8 Pick. 235; 7
Conn. 3282 Green, 8 1 John. 511; 3 Hawks, 2462 Murph. 61; 2 N. H. Rep.
430. In these several cases trespass cannot be sustained. 4 T. 11. 489 7
T. R. 9. Case is also the proper remedy for a wrongful act done under
legal process regularly issuing from a court of competent jurisdiction. 2
Conn. 700 11 Mass. 500 6 Greenl. 421; 1 Bailey, 441, 457; 9 Conn. 141; 2
Litt. 234; 3 Conn. 5373 Gill & John. 377. Vide Regular and
irregular process.
3.
It will be proper to consider, 1. in what cases the action of trespass
on the case lies; 2. the pleadings 3. the evidence; 4. the judgment.
4.
1. This action lies for injuries, 1. to the absolute rights of persons
2. to the relative rights of persons; 3. to personal property; 4. to
real property.
5.
- 1. When the injury has been done to the absolute rights of persons by
an act not immediate but consequential, as in the case of special
damages Irising from a public nuisance Willes, 71 to 74 or where an
incumbrance had been placed in a public street, and the plaintiff
passing there received an injury; or for a malicious prosecution. See
malicious prosecution.
6.
- 2. For injuries to the relative rights, as for enticing away an
infant child, per quod servitium amisit, 4 Litt. 25; for criminal
conversation, seducing or harboring wives; debauching daughters, but in
this case the daughter must live with her father as his servant, see
Seduction; or enticing away or harboring apprentices or servants. 1
Chit. Pl. 137 2 Chit. Plead. 313, 319. When the seduction takes place in
the husband's or father's house, he may, at his election, have trespass
or case; 6 Munf. 587; Gilmer, 33but when the injury is done in the
house of another, case is the proper remedy. 5 Greenl. 546.
7.
- 3. When the injury to personal property is without force and. not
immediate, but consequential, or when the plaintiff Is right to it is in
reversion, as, where property is injured by a third person while in the
hands of a hirer; 3 Camp. 187; 2 Murph. 62; 3 Hawks, 246, case is the
proper remedy. 8 East, 693; Ld. Raym. 1399; Str. 634; 1 Chit. Pl. 138.
8.
- 4. When the real property which has been injured is corporeal, and
the injury is not immediate but consequential, as for example, putting a
spout so near the plaintiff's land that the water runs upon it; 1 Chit.
Pl. 126, 141; Str. 634; or where the plaintiff's property is only in
reversion. When the injury has been done to, incorporeal rights, as for
obstructing a private way, or disturbing a party in the use of a pew, or
for injury to a franchise, as a ferry, and the like, case is the proper
remedy. l Chit. Pl. 143.
9.
- 2. The declaration in case, technically so called, differs from a
declaration in trespass, chiefly in this, that in case, it must not, in
general, state the injury to have been committed vi et armis; 3 Conn.
64; see 2 Ham. 169; 11 Mass. 57; Coxe, 339; yet after verdict, the words
" with force and arms" will, be rejected as surplusage; Harp. 122; and
it ought not to conclude contra pacem. Com. Dig. Action on the Case, C
3. The plea is usually the general issue, not guilty.
l0.
- 3. Any matter may, in general, be given in evidence, under the plea
of not guilty, except the statute of limitations. In cases of slander
and a few other instances, however, this cannot be done. 1 Saund. 130,
n. 1; Wilies, 20. When the plaintiff declares in case, with averments
appropriate to that form of action and the evidence shows that the
injury was trespass; or when he declares in trespass, and the evidence
proves an injury for which case will lie, and not trespass, the
defendant should be acquitted by the jury, or the plaintiff should be
nonsuited. 5 Mass. 560; 16 Mass. 451; Coxe, 339; 3 John. 468.
11.
- 4. The judgment is, that the plaintiff recover a sum of money,
ascertained by a jury, for his damages sustained by the committing of
the grievances complained of in the declaration, and costs.
12.
In the civil law, an action was given in all cases of nominate
contracts, which was always of the same name. But in innominate
contracts, which had always the same consideration, but not the same
name, there could be no action of the same denomination, but an action
which arose from the fact, in factum, or an action with a form which
arose from the particular circumstance, praescriptis verbis actio. Lec.
Elem. 779. Vide, generally, Bouv. Inst. Index, h. t.
CASE, STATED,
practice. An agreement in writing, between a plaintiff and defendant,
that the facts in dispute between them are as there agreed upon and
mentioned, 3 Whart. 143.
2.
The facts being thus ascertained, it is left for the court to decide
for which party is the law. As no writ of error lies on a judgment
rendered on a case stated, Dane's Ab. c. 137, art. 4, n. 7, it is usual
in the agreement to insert a clause that the case stated shall be
considered in the nature of special verdict.
3.
In that case, a writ of error lies on the judgment which may be
rendered upon it. And a writ of error will also lie on a judgment on a
case stated, when the parties have agreed to it. 8 Serg. & Rawle,
529.
4.
In another sense, by a case stated is understood a statement of all the
facts of a case, together with the names of the witnesses, and, a
detail of the documents which are to support them. In other words, it is
a brief. (q. v.)
No comments:
Write comments