Morris v. Shryock

50 Miss. 590
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 50 Miss. 590 (Morris v. Shryock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morris v. Shryock, 50 Miss. 590 (Mich. 1874).

Opinion

Peyton, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The material facts of this case, as presented by this record, are, that Y. L. Sanders & Co., a mercantile firm, located and doing business in the town of Greenville, in the county of Washington, in this state, were indebted to one M. Morris, in the sum of $251.98, as evidenced by their two promissory notes, one dated January 15, 1873, for $112.70, payable thirty days after date, the other, dated 1st of February, 1873, for $139.28, and payable thirty days after date.

On the 5 th day of March, 1873, the said M. Morris sued out [594]*594before one J. L. Griffin, a justice of the peace of said county of Washington, two several writs of attachment on said notes against the estate of M. E. Sanders, as surviving partner of the said firm of V. L. Sanders & Co., returnable into said justice’s court, which were levied by the sheriff of said county on the same day on thirty packages of goods, wares and merchandise on the wharf-boat at the said town of Greenville, as the property of the said M. E. Sanders as surviving partner as aforesaid. And the officer levying said attachments, being of opinion that the goods and chattels levied on are perishable property, and in danger of immediate waste and decay, sold the same for the sum of $296.70-, of which sum, after paying freight, charges and sheriff’s fees, he holds in his hands the sum of $242.75, subject to the order of the court.

Upon issues joined on pleas in abatement, filed by the defendant in the attachments, traversing the truth of the alleged causes for which said attachments were sued out, the jury found the issues for the defendant, and that the attachments were wrongfully sued out, and assessed his damages, by reason thereof, at $253.90. Whereupon the plaintiff moved the court for a new trial, which motion was sustained by the justice of the peace and a new trial granted. From this ruling of the court in granting a new trial the defendant in attachments brings the cases to the circuit court of said county, on the 7th day of March, 1873, by writ of certiorari.

And on the 8th day of March, 1873, the defendants in error, Shryock and Eowland, merchants of St. Louis, Missouri, interposed a claim to the-property on which said attachments were levied, and their claim was sustained by the jury at the next December term of said circuit court, and judgment rendered in their favor for the possession of said property. And from this judgment the plaintiff below prosecutes this writ of error.

The main questions presented by this record for our consideration in disposing of this case are three: 1. Did the justice of [595]*595the peace have jurisdiction of the attachment suits? 2. Had the circuit court upon the return of the certiorari a right to try the causes anew on their merits, and try the right of property ? 3. Did the levy of the attachments displace the lien of the defendants in error, arising from their right, as vendors of the goods, of stoppage in transitu ?

"With respect to the first question involving the jurisdiction of the justice of the peace, it will be seen, by reference to the twenty-third section of the sixth article of the constitution, that the civil jurisdiction of justices of the peace is limited to causes in which the principal of the amount in controversy shall not exceed the sum of one hundred and fifty dollars. In this case, at the time the attachments were sued out the record shows that the defendant was indebted to the plaintiff therein, in the sum of $251.98, which constituted, in the language of the constitution, the principal of the amount in controversy between the parties. And if the law, to prevent a multiplicity of suits and unnecessary accumulation of costs, prohibits a plaintiff from dividing his claim, so as to bring it within the jurisdiction of a justice of the peace, the justice in this case had no jurisdiction. And this, we think, is settled by the former adjudications of this court in the-cases of Grayson v. Williams, Walker, 298, and Schofield v. Pensons, 4 Cushman, 402. In the last mentioned case, the plaintiff below, on the 13th of May, 1850, held three notes against the defendant, one for $50, another for $44, and the third for $3.60. On that day he brought suit before one justice of the peace of Adams county on the note for $50, and on the same day another suit on the other notes before another justice of the peace of the same county. Judgments having been rendered by each justice of the peace for the plaintiff, the defendant prosecuted an appeal to the circuit court of said county, when the court, upon motion, dismissed both suits for the want of jurisdiction in the justices of the peace to render the judgments. The jurisdiction of justices of the peace was at that time limited to causes in which the [596]*596principal of the amount in controversy shall not exceed fifty dollars. In that case the court say: “The principal sum of these notes is $97.60, ánd this was the amount in controversy, because it was what the plaintiff claimed, and what the defendant refused to pay. It is then clear, that the claim was one of which a justice of the peace could take no jurisdiction whatever. If the law forbids the plaintiff from dividing his claim and suing before different justices of the peace at the same time for sums within their jurisdiction, a multo fortiori does the prohibition apply where the suits are brought before the same justice of the peace at the same time, as in the case under consideration. This doctrine commends itself to our adoption as founded in good reason and sound policy.

The next question is, Had the circuit court jurisdiction upon the return of the certiorari to try the causes de novo, and to try the right of property ? Section 1336 of the Code of 1871 provides that when any cause is removed by certiorari to the circuit court, the court shall be confined to the examination of questions of law arising or appearing on the face of the record and proceedings. And in case of affirmance of the judgment of the justice, the same judgment shall be given as on appeals. In case of a reversal, the circuit court shall enter up such judgment as the justice ought to have entered, if the same is apparent, or may then proceed to try the cause anew on its merits. There was no final judgment of the justice of the peace which could be brought into the circuit court, either by appeal or. writ of certiorari. Even if the justice had the legal right to set aside a verdict and grant a new trial, it would only bean interlocutory order in the progress of the cause, and not such a judgment as could be removed to the circuit court by either of the modes above mentioned. But the justice had no power to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial. Where there is a verdict in the justice’s court in a case in which he has jurisdiction, it is his duty to enter judgment on such verdict. His action in granting a new trial of the issue [597]*597which had been passed upon by the jury was simply void, and could furnish no ground for carrying the cases to the circuit court. The circuit court has no power to retain the suits and try them upon their merits for another reason, that the justice of the peace had no jurisdiction of them. The jurisdiction of the circuit court, in cases originating before a justice of the peace, must be regulated and determined by the jurisdiction of the justice. Glass v. Moss, 1 How., 520. In other words, in cases taken by appeal or certiorari

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Bluebook (online)
50 Miss. 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-v-shryock-miss-1874.