Case Name: JOB HARVEY v. ANDREW FISHER
Court: Delaware Court of Common Pleas
Jurisdiction: Delaware
Decision Date: 1801-05
Citations: 2 Del. Cas. 145
Docket Number: 
Parties: JOB HARVEY v. ANDREW FISHER.
Judges: 
Reporter: Delaware Cases
Volume: 2
Pages: 145–147

Head Matter:
JOB HARVEY v. ANDREW FISHER.
Court of Common Pleas. New Castle.
May, 1801.
Rodney’s Notes.
Bayard, Finney [for plaintiff]. G. Bead, Vandyke, Rodney . [for defendant].
Joseph Pritchett. Mr. Fisher cut most of the valuable timber off this land in Pencander. If I had the same privilege A. Fisher had, I would have given two hundred dollars per annum for it. Above a hundred acres clear land on it in two places — would rent for £20 each with the meadow. Fisher cut the wood off more than twenty years ago (that I speak of). I was drove off by Andrew Fisher, etc.
Tobias Pritchett. 330 acres. Worth $200 per annum.
John Lewden, senior. Was called on the land by the parties to assess the damages and profits. My opinion was about £1000.
Joseph Israel, esquire. My opinion the damages etc., amounted to £1000; [there] was a reference. Part of the land lay waste. Cannot recover for more than six years. A recovery of damages in Supreme Court.
George Russell. I became acquainted with the land in 1783. Warnick’s Tract forty or fifty acres. The other field has lain out ever since I knew it. The meadow of sixteen or seventeen acres is enclosed.
Kershaw. Clear land has been mostly common since I knew it. Mr. Fisher has been there thirty years, followed Millering. Cut no timber that I knew.
Thomas Bradley.
Michael Moore lived there in 1778 to 1781. Paid forty shillings per year to Andrew Fisher for Warnick’s Tract.
Vandyke for defendant.
Finney.
Statute [of] Limitations cannot avail the gentlemen, not having pleaded it. 3 Wils. 121, plaintiff not confined to value of the mesne profits only, but may recover for his trouble; four times the value I have known given. 2 Burr. 658, Askins v. Shuffins. Bull.N.P. 86.
Vandyke for defendant.
Claim from 1774 to 1790, sixteen years. We are not bound by law to pay. They only claim damages since the demise laid in 1774. 1 Del.Laws 524, Act of Limitation a part of the defense, and more than six years cannot be recovered.
Rodney for defendant.
The Act is a public law, and the court bound to take notice of it, though not pleaded. The party in trespass must prove himself in possession, or he cannot support the action. And also this action for mesne profits stands on the same ground. 7 Term 727 (this point is decided, I contend).
Bayard.
Esp.N.P. 147, 262; Salk. 422; Esp.N.P. 416. Statute [of] Limitations must be pleaded if the defendant relies on it.
G. Bead for defendant.
Every general law court must notice without being pleaded, ex officio. Gilb.Evid. 41; Hob. 227; Vaugh. 150; 4 Co. 76 A; Het. 111. I further say that if Limitation cannot be given in evidence without being pleaded, this action is an exception, being similar to ejectment, in which the Act need not be pleaded. As to the other point, I contend the plaintiff, after his judgment in ejectment, should have issued his writ or obtained possession in some other way before he could sustain this action. 5 Bac.Abr. 217, 218, pl. 26, 27, 29, only the person who has the possession in fact can sustain the action of quare clausum fregit, and the action for mesne profits is similar. 3 Bl.Comm. 305, 306; 12 Mod. 376; 7 Term 354. Any thing that goes to the denial of plaintiff’s right of action may be given in evidence on the general issue.
Bayard for plaintiff.
The point made by the counsel that actual entry was necessary, in support of which they cited 7 Term 727. This case has no application to this question. In the case cited, the judgment of the court was not that the judgment in ejectment was not sufficient to ground the action of mesne profits, but to avoid a fine. 1 Burr. 193. [By] the case of Astin v. Parklin, 2 Burr. 665, the tenant in possession is concluded by the judgment in ejectmént as to possession for mesne profits.

Opinion:
Per Curiam.
Statute [of] Limitations should be pleaded. Judgment in ejectment concludes the defendant as to the possession.
Exception to the above two points prayed by defendant's counsel.
Verdict for plaintiff, £199.15.0.