Court Opinion

ID: 8505778
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-23 01:26:55.485521+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:50:52.765424
License: Public Domain

Bell, J.
In actions of trespass, where the defendant pleads any special plea, by which the title of real estate maybe drawn in question, it becomes the duty of the justice to record the plea, and no further proceedings can be had before him, unless the plaintiff elects to become nonsuit, in which case a judgment for costs may be rendered against him. Upon such special plea being filed, “ the plaintiff may enter his action at the next court of common pleas for the county, and file there attested copies of the writ, plea, and all other papers used in the cause, and prosecute the action in the same manner, as if the action had been originally *362commenced in that court.” Rev. Stat. 346 chap. 175 §§ 1 to 4.
This case seems to have been regularly transferred to the court of common pleas. The third plea is clearly a plea of title, which must oust the jurisdiction of the justice; and the second plea, however doubtful it might be in ordinary cases, seems to us good and sufficient in this case, because, without such a plea, no evidence would be admissible, whose tendency was to deny the plaintiff’s title to, or his possession of, real estate. Wheeler v. Rowell, 7 N. H. Rep. 515; 6 Pick. 417; 17 Pick. 217.
We perceive nothing in the statute which necessarily confines the trial, in cases of this kind, in the court of common pleas, to the mere question of title raised by the special plea, upon which the action is transferred to that court. The general policy of the law, in other cases, permits a defendant to avail himself of as many several grounds of defence as exist in his favor; and we discover no considerations of justice or expediency, which should deprive a defendant, jn a case involving the title of real estate, of any other just defence. The action of trespass, commenced before a justice, and upon a plea of title entered in the court of common pleas, is there regularly pending, and unless that view is forbidden by the clear language of the statute, it should be there treated and regarded like any other action of trespass.
Upon these general views we are of the opinion that a defendant, who desires to avail himself of the state of the title to real estate as a defence, may plead in these actions of trespass the proper plea to oust the jurisdiction of the justice, and transfer the action to the court above, and with it may plead the general-issue, and plead or give notice by brief statement, of as many grounds of defence as he thinks fit; and upon the trial there, he may avail himself of any defence, which he could do, if the action were commenced there in the usual mode.
*363When the action is regularly entered in this way in the eourt of common pleas, it seems to us that the parties have all the same rights, and the courts the same powers, in relation to filing new pleadings, or amending the old, that they would have if the action had been commenced by a writ originally returnable in that court, and that the plaintiff had a right to reply and new assign the locus in quo ; that no motion for that purpose was necessary; and that it was not competent for the court to refuse permission to do so.
In an action originally commenced in that court, the plaintiff would clearly have the right thus to reply and new assign, and his right by the terms of the statute is entirely clear, to prosecute an action entered in this mode in that court in the same manner as if originally commenced there.
■The cases cited by the defendant rest on reasons affecting the jurisdiction of the courts in Massachusetts and Maine, which do not exist here. The courts here, by their control over the costs, have the same power to cheek the improper transfer of actions from justice courts which they have to restrain the prosecution of other small actions in the courts above.

New assignment allowed