Court Opinion

ID: 3644274
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:00:57.485578+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:52:49.921252
License: Public Domain

We are clearly of opinion that his Honor in the court below erred in ordering the cause "to be placed upon the trial docket for trial by jury." The plaintiff in the recordari was not, under the circumstances, entitled to a trial by jury in court.
At the inquisition taken before the justice he entered a plea by which he traversed the force charged against him, and also the alleged title of the relators, and the verdict upon both points of his traverse was found against him. After such a finding the only remedy open to him in that proceeding was to take the case to the Superior Court by a writ ofrecordari, and object if he could that there was some "misconduct or irregularity in the justice in receiving improper testimony, or refusing proper testimony, or otherwise." State upon the relation of Sherrill v.Nations, 1 Ire., 325. Here the plaintiff in the recordari does not set forth in his petition any instance of misconduct or irregularity committed by the justice, but insists that the jury found a wrong verdict upon the evidence submitted to them; and that in truth he had the better title to the land, and was not guilty of the force complained of. His object in suing out the writ of recordari is manifestly to obtain a new trial in court of the issue which has been found against him. Upon this question the case of S. v. Nations, above referred to, is *Page 199 
directly in point. It is there said that "if the defendant have notice and the traverse jury find the force, and the proceedings are regular, or if the defendant decline to traverse, he must restore the possession if the relator be tenant for years or has a greater estate in the land. If the defendant have any title, he must bring his action of ejectment and obtain possession in a peaceable manner." In the present case the proceedings before the justice were regular, and as the jury found that the relators had an estate in fee simple in the land      (242) from which they were forcibly ejected by the defendant, his writ of recordari ought to have been dismissed from the Superior Court, instead of being placed upon the trial docket.
PER CURIAM.                                   Order reversed.