By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
[1.] The defendant in ejectment having confessed judgment; to the plaintiff for the premises in dispute and costs of suit,. “but nothing for rents or mesne profits,” can the plaintiff,, in an action quare clausum fregit, go behind this judgment and recover damages 'for the asportation of timber cut on the land ?
Notwithstanding the cases in 1 Harris Johnson, 408, and 2 Haywood, 881, seemingly to the contrary, we take it to be well settled, that as the action for mesne profits is an action of trespass vi et armis, the Jury are not confined ini their verdict to the mere rent of the premises, although the-action is said to be brought to recover the rents and profits of the estate, but may give such extra damages as they may think the particular circumstances of the case may demand.. (Adams on Ejectment, 391.)
And accordingly, in Morgan vs. Varick, (8 Wend. 587,) the Court held, that inasmuch as the severance of machinery from the mill did not divest the owner of his property, that what was before part of the freehold, by the severance, became personal property, and the owner might recover for the-property thus severed in an action for trespass in mesne profits.
This was an action of trespass for mesne profits and cle bonis asportaiis, to which the Statute of Limitations was pleaded. And Chief Justice Savage, in delivering the opinion of the-Court, says: “ It scorns, indeed, unjust that the defendant should obtain tortious possession of the plaintiff’s real estate, remove the buildings or timber," (the very injury com*585plained of in the case before us,) “which constituted, perhaps, the principal value, and secure himself from responsibility, by delaying the action of ejectment for six years,” &c. And he decides, in conformity with the elementary principle cited from Adams, that the action for mesne profits is an action of trespass in which the plaintiff can recover for any injury done within the Statutory limit, which, in the State of New York, is six years.
The history of the action of ejectment casts light upon this question. Before the time of Henry VII, plaintiff's in ejectment did not recover the term ; but until about that time the mesne projits wore the measure of damages. Brush out of the mind, now, the fiction in which this action, is veiled, and which makes it so terrific to the legal tyro, to-wit: the nominal plaintiff and nominal defendant, the casual ejector, the dramatis persones, or cictores feibulce, and, as we before said, by the old law and the practice of the Courts, the plaintiff received nothing but damages, the measure whereof was the mesne profits ; no term was recovered; but when it became established that the term should be recovered, the ejectment was moulded into the form of a real action. The proceeding was in rem; and the thing, itself, the term, only was recovered, and nominal damages, but not the mesne profits. And thereupon grew up and was established the present mode of recovering the mesne profits in an action of trespass, grafted upon the fiction in ejectment. And the present action is put in the place of the ejectment at Common Law, which was indeed a true and not a fictitious action, and in which the mesne profits only, and not the term, were recovered; for it was no other than a mere action of trespass. The plaintiff, in effect, says to the defendant, “you have turned me out of possession and kept me out, ever since the demise laid in the declaration ; therefore, I desire to be paid the damages, to the value of the mesne profits which I lost thereby; this is just am! reasonable.”
L vlMr. Justice Gjould, in Goodtitle vs. Tombs, (3 Wils. *586121,) stated that- he had known four times the value of themesne profits given by a Jury in this sort of action of trespass ; and that if it were not sometimes so, complete justieecould not be done to the party injured.
It may be that the very trespass complained of in this case,. was necessary for using and cultivating the land and occupying the houses, and was done for that purpose; and consequently, would be included in an action for mesne profits for • the use and occupation of the land, according to the most-narrow and restricted views of the suit.
Being satisfied that the alleged trespass ivas intended to be-included in the confession, and that by the rules of law it might have been recovered in that action; and inasmuch as the policy of this State is opposed to a multiplicity of suits, when the whole grievance may be, and now by Statute must be, settled in one, we hold that the plaintiff is not entitled to the right which he is seeking to enforce.
A similar construction has been put, by the Courts of England, upon the Statute passed by the British Parliament during the reign of G-eorge IV, inhibiting, as our Act of 1884-does, a separate suit for mesne profits. The plaintiff there - recovers, together with the premises in dispute, all such sums- - of money, by way of damages, to which he is entitled on ac?-count of the disseizin.