Archibeque v. Miera

1 N.M. 160
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1 N.M. 160 (Archibeque v. Miera) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Archibeque v. Miera, 1 N.M. 160 (N.M. 1857).

Opinion

By Court,

Deavenport, C. J.:

This action was commenced before Yicente Eomero, a justice of tbe peace for tbe county of Santa Ana, by Juan Arcliibeque against Jose Maria Miera, for damages done to bis wheat in bis wheat-field by tbe cattle of defendant. The said justice of tbe peace gave judgment against said Miera, that be should pay said Arcliibeque forty almudes of wheat, from which judgment said Miera prayed an appeal to tbe district court for the first judicial district for the county of Santa Ana. In the district court tbe case was tried de novo. Defendant Miera, in tbe district court, made a motion to dismiss plaintiff’s action for reasons apparent on the record, which the court overruled,' and allowed plaintiff to file bis account. 'The account filed is in tbe following words: “To damages caused by tbe cattle of said Jose Maria Miera, eating and destroying tbe wheat of the said Juan Arcliibeque, of tbe value of fifteen dollars, being forty almudes of wheat, in the year 1855.” To tbe overruling of said motion, and permitting said account to be filed in said cause, the appellee assigns as error, if there be error in tbe record, in his joinder to errors assigned by-appellant. To settle tbe practice in cases of appeals from tbe courts of justices of tbe peace to the district courts of this territory, it is deemed necessary to notice these points. Tbe organic act, section 10, enacts, that tbe judicial power of this territory shall be vested in a supreme court, district courts, probate courts, and in justices of the peace. The same act sums up the jurisdiction of these several courts as follows: The jurisdiction of tbe several courts herein provided for, both appellate and original, and that of the probate courts, and of justices of tbe peace, shall be as limited by law, provided that justices of tbe peace shall not have jurisdiction of any matter in controversy where the title or boundaries of land may be in dispute, or when the debt or sum claimed shall exceed one hundred dollars. And tbe said supreme and district courts respectively, shall possess chancery as well as common law jurisdiction.

Under the organic act no court in this territory is clothed with appellate powers except the supreme court. The district court, courts of probate, and of justices of the peace are courts .of original jurisdiction. The jurisdiction of these several courts is thus limited by the organic law as to their appellate and original powers. It fixes their character; and that portion of the organic act which provides that the jurisdiction of the several courts herein provided for, both appellate and original, and that of the probate courts and of justices of the peace, shall be as limited by law, provided, etc., it does not confer upon the legislature the power to bestow upon the supreme court original jurisdiction, nor appellate powers upon the other courts therein mentioned. It only provides that the jurisdiction of the supreme court, with its appellate power, shall be as limited by law, and the jurisdiction of the other courts therein mentioned as courts of original jurisdiction shall be as limited by law.

It will be seen, by reference to the revised code, sec. 101, p. 164, that it is provided, that any person aggrieved by any judgment rendered by any justice may appeal by himself, his agent, or attorney, to the district court of the county where the same was rendered, under the provisions therein specified. Section 104, on same page, provides that the case upon such appeal shall be tried de novo, and the same rules shall govern the district court in said trial that are prescribed for the government of justices’ courts. The appeal here allowed is only a remedy prescribed by law to enable parties who may conceive themselves aggrieved by the judgments of justices of the peace, to take their cases into the district courts as courts of original jurisdiction, to have their cases there tried de novo upon their merits. Section 103 requires that on or before the first day of the next term of the district court for the cpunty, the justice shall file in the office of the clerk of said court a transcript of all the entries made in his docket relating to the case, together with all the papers relating to the suit: See Revised Code, 164. The motion made by appellee, in the court below, to dismiss the action for reasons apparent on the record had reference to the transcript sent up by the justice of the peace. The district court did not sit as a court exercising appellate powers to revise and correct such errors in law as might appear in the transcript of the justice of tbe peace. The case bad been brought by appeal from the court below to be tried de novo. The only office which the transcript by law can perform in the district court is to certify to that court that a certain case had originated in the justice’s court, how said case was decided, and that the appeal had been regularly prayed for and taken to the district court. And upon such appeal being taken it is the duty of the justice of the peace to send up with his transcript all the papers relating to the case. The case then is regularly in the district court, to be tried de novo upon its merits; in other words, the district courts, ascertaining from the justice’s transcript that the case had originated in the justice’s court, and there having been tried and being brought properly before it by appeal, it pays no further attention to the transcript, but proceeds to try the case upon its merits, as if no trial had ever taken place. From this point the district court proceeds unshackled to try the case de novo, allowing the parties, not by way of amendment, but as in a case never before tried, to file their accounts, set-offs, or to do whatever is necessary to a full, clear, and legal representation of the real merits of the issue between the parties. The case in every respect is to be tried de novo, without regard ta the proceedings of the justice of the peace, and the district court can only look to the transcript of the justice of the peace for the purpose of ascertaining if the case appealed is the one that originated there, and, after having done so, the transcript is of no further service than that of enabling the clerk to tax the costs in the case.

In disposing of this error, as assigned by the appellee, this court only does so to settle the practice in relation to appeals from justices of the peace to the district courts, a practice which is of growing importance, inasmuch as from the imperfect manner in which justice’s of the peace keep their entries, if cases had to abide the transcript, made out and sent to the district courts, scarcely one in twenty could ever be tried de novo. In overruling.h;,id motion to dismiss plaintiff’s action, and in permitting him to file bis account, the district court committed no error, and its course is in accordance with law and in consonance with the practice as indicated and set forth above. The case proceeded to trial in the district court below, and the jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendant, Miera, and the court rendered up a judgment in his behalf. Plaintiff below moved for a new trial, which the court overruled. To which opinion of the court, in overruling said motion for a new trial, plaintiff excepted, and prayed an appeal to this court. Two grounds of error are assigned here by appellant: 1. That the district court erred in refusing to grant the motion for a new trial; 2. The district court erred in rendering judgment for appellee Avhen it ■ should have been for appellant. It is necessary to examine the testimony in this case to ascertain if there be error or not.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 N.M. 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/archibeque-v-miera-nm-1857.