Abbott v. Chase
This text of 55 Vt. 466 (Abbott v. Chase) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The single question presented for consideration is, whether the County Court had original jurisdiction of the action. To give it such jurisdiction the debtor side of the plaintiff’s account must exceed two hundred dollars. R. L. ss. 821 and 822. The plaintiff presented an account the debtor side of which amounted to $278.54. But it is found by the auditor that when the account commenced the defendant held a note against the plaintiff for $225 ; and that before any of the items of account accrued, the parties entered into a contract by which the work and materials first charged, and to the amount of the note, were to be performed, delivered and “ applied in then present payment of the note.” The auditor further finds “ that the plaintiff did furnish material and do work under said contract, and that they were accepted by the defendant in then present payment of the note, and thereby the note was paid and extinguished.” Under this finding the first items of the plaintiff’s account were payments upon the note at the time they severally accrued, and no indebtedness was thereby created from the defendant to the plaintiff, nor did any right arise therefrom to the plaintiff to charge such items in account to the defendant. In determining the jurisdiction of the County Court on the facts found by the auditor, that part of the account presented by the plaintiff, which first accrued to the amount of $225, must be treated as having been made and received in payment of the note, and as having no existence as an account. The balance for which the plaintiff had the legal right to charge the defendant is not sufficient in amount to give the [468]*468County Court original jurisdiction of the action. Hence, the County Court correctly dismissed the action for want of jurisdiction. This is in harmony with all the authorities cited by counsel on both sides. There is not a single case cited’ that conflicts with this holding ; and it would be an unnecessary labor to review the cases heretofore decided by this court on this subject. Under the decisions the good faith of the plaintiff in bringing his suit in the County Court cannot, on the facts of this casé, aid the jurisdiction of the County Court. See the cases cited by the counsel on both sides.
Judgment affirmed.
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55 Vt. 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abbott-v-chase-vt-1883.