Clancy v. Neumeyer

17 A. 154, 51 N.J.L. 299, 22 Vroom 299, 1889 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 72
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 17 A. 154 (Clancy v. Neumeyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clancy v. Neumeyer, 17 A. 154, 51 N.J.L. 299, 22 Vroom 299, 1889 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 72 (N.J. 1889).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Reed, J.

The question which the facts propound is this t What should a justice of the peace do when in a court for the trial of small causes a set-off is tendered which contains a counter claim of'an amount in excess of the jurisdiction of the justice to hear? The Small Cause act, which contains express directions for the guidance of the justice in most instances, fails to provide for this. The jurisdiction of the justice includes every suit of a civil nature at law where the debt, balance or other matter in dispute does not exceed, ex-[301]*301elusive of 'costs, the sum or value of $200. Rev., p. 538. The defendant is permitted, by the Small Cause act, to file a set-off. Rev., p. 544, § 23. If the defendant has a set-off, and when sued in a justice’s court shall neglect or refuse to deliver a copy of his or her account or state of demand against the plaintiff, he shall be precluded from suing for said account; provided, that where the balance found to be due to the defendant exceeds $100, then the defendant shall not be precluded from recovering his demand in any court. Rev., p. 544, § 24.

It is entirely clear that when the set-off in the present case was filed the justice had no jurisdiction to hear the merits of that demand. The jurisdiction of the court was restricted to the determination of claims, whether contained in the plaintiff’s state of demand or in the defendant’s set-off, not exceeding $200. Waterman Set-off, § 691; Murphy v. Evans, 11 Ind. 517.

The contention of the prosecutor is, that the justice should have received the set-off, that he should have proceeded to ascertain the balance that was due to either the plaintiff or the defendant, and if. he found the balance due to be less than $200 he should have entered judgment, but if he found that more than $200 was due he should have certified that fact upon his docket and dismissed the parties. 'A practice like this has the approval of Mr. Griffith in his Treatise on the Jurisdiction of Justices, p. 73.

The difficulties in the way of such a practice are of such a character that I think it cannot be adopted. The notion, upon which such a practice is advised, is that the court may entertain a suit where the cross demands are of such a character that a trial may result in finding that a balance exists of over $200. That means that a trial may be had when one of the parties claims that he is entitled to a recovery of over $200, which recovery of course the opposing party disputes. The amount in dispute is therefore in excess of the jurisdictional sum limited by the statute, and it is the amount in dispute, not what may be ultimately recovered, that is the test of juris[302]*302diction. It is apparent, therefore, that whenever one of the parties claims that there is due to him more than $200, it ends the power of the court to try that claim. And it does not matter that there is a counter claim which, if credited, leaves a balance less than the jurisdictional amount. When the balance claimed is less than $200, jurisdiction of course attaches, because then there is no dispute concerning a larger sum. When, therefore, the plaintiff, filing a claim which standing alone would exceed this limit, b} credits reduces his claim below the limit, the balance in dispute is within the jurisdiction of the court. Farley v. McIntire, 1 Gr. 190.

And I concede that if a defendant should file a counter claim for $300 or $400, and should credit upon it all or enough of the plaintiff’s demand to bring the balance within the $200, it would be cognizable, because there would then be a dispute about a balance less than the jurisdictional amount. But this condition of fact does not exist, when to a state of demand for $100 an offset and nothing more is filed for $300. There flows from the act of filing the offset no admission on the part of the defendant that he owes the plaintiff the amount of his demand or any part thereof. The defendant is at full liberty to contest the validity of the plaintiff’s claim as is the plaintiff at liberty to contest his. The dispute is not, therefore, in reference to whether the plaintiff owes the defendant the difference between the two sums, but involves a contest as to whether each owes the other the full amount of the respective counter demands.

Besides this, it appears in the present case that no inquiry could be entered into by the justice which would not involve the existence of a debt in excess of $200. In any aspect in which this case could be viewed, the extent of the inquiry exceeds the jurisdiction of the justice. Not only the claim presented by the defendant exceeds such limit, but if a credit of plaintiff’s demand be made still the balance in dispute remains in the same position.

But the view that the justice shall in any case proceed to hear, and if he finds a balance below $200 should enter a [303]*303judgment in the case, and if he finds a balance above $200 should enter that fact upon his docket and dismiss the cause, rests upon the notion that jurisdiction depends upon the sum recovered and not upon the sum in dispute. But, as already-observed, it is the amount in dispute which, by the express terms of the Small Cause act, determines jurisdiction.

Aside from this, the practice suggested is properly subject to the criticism of Justice Dixon in the case of Sipley v. Wass, 18 Vroom 187, which was, that the statute nowhere authorizes a justice’s court to record any determination as to the balance due either party, except by final judgment in favor of that party on which execution is to be awarded. In that case it was held that the existence of a balance of $100 mentioned in the act might be determined in the court where the action for the set-off was brought, although the set-off had not been presented to the justice who tried the counter demand.

For these reasons I conclude that the practice indicated by Mr. Griffith cannot be adopted.

There was another course of action indicated by Chief Justice Kinsey in the case of South v. Hall, Coxe 29. He stated it in the following reported language: “Where defendant claims above £12 (the limit of jurisdiction at that time), and exhibits an account, and no circumstances justify the belief that it is done fraudulently, the justice ought not to proceed, but stay proceedings on the terms of defendant suing in a higher court in a reasonable time.” These remarks were made obiter, as it was held in the case then under consideration that the court had jurisdiction over the amount involved. This cause was decided in 1790, and it was not until Judge Paterson’s revision in 1798 that the provisions in respect to set-offs in justices’ courts, already set out, appeared in the statutes of this state.

The course of conduct proposed by Chief Justice Kinsey has apparently never been followed. Mr. Griffith evidently thought that the later statutory provisions in the Justices’ Court act were inconsistent with it, and two later reported [304]*304cases disregarded it. Montgomery v. Snowhill, 1 Penn. 362 ; Huffman v. Reading, 2 Id. 148.

Indeed, this rule is open to the same objection as that of Mr. Griffith, for it requires a determination whether the set-off is filed in good faith which involves a trial of some kind as to the character of the set-off, for which trial there is no statutory provision.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 A. 154, 51 N.J.L. 299, 22 Vroom 299, 1889 N.J. Sup. Ct. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clancy-v-neumeyer-nj-1889.