Court Opinion

ID: 7866151
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 18:50:18.426813+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:31:05.774212
License: Public Domain

By the Court.
The judgment of the Superior Court was defended on the authority of Hawley v. Castle, (a) and Porter v. Warner, (b) which cases are directly in point; but there appears no sufficient reason to warrant those decisions. The omission in this declaration is, at most, only matter of form; and such a defect is never regarded after verdict. But there is no defect even in point of form. The declaration once demands the seizin of the land, and it concludes with a demand of damages and costs. The declaration, therefore, is apt to the purpose in view, and sufficiently clear and certain, both to a common and legal intent.
The most approved English forms from Lilly’s Entries, and the Pleader’s Assistant, so far as they apply to this declaration, justify it; and the declarations in the actions of debt and ejectment, with respect to the present question, are somewhat analogous.
*136On the general principles of lav.', therefore, and the most approved precedents, the declaration in question is good s and, consequently, the judgment of the Superior Court is erroneous.

 Kirby 218.

 1 Root 488.