Morton Gravel Road Co. v. Wysong

51 Ind. 4
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 51 Ind. 4 (Morton Gravel Road Co. v. Wysong) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morton Gravel Road Co. v. Wysong, 51 Ind. 4 (Ind. 1875).

Opinion

Downey, J.

A motion is made in this case by the appellee to dismiss the appeal for want of jurisdiction. The amount for which the action was commenced was thirty-one dollars, and the action originated before a justice of the peace'. The judgment before the' justice was for three dollars and twelve cents. On appeal, in the circuit court, judgment was rendered for the defendant. In actions originating before a justice of the peace or mayor of a city, this court has no jurisdiction, where the amount in,controversy, exclusive of interest and costs, does not exceed ten dollars. 2 G. & H. 269, sec. 550. Where the plaintiff’s claim is for more than ten dollars, whatever may have been the judgment of the justice of the peace,.and his recovery on appeal to the circuit court does not exceed ten dollars, it seems to have been held that this court has no jurisdiction. In such cases the amount of the judgment on appeal, in the circuit court, is held to be the amount in controversy here. Bowers v. The Town of Elwood, 45 Ind. 234; Moffitt v. Wilson, 44 Ind. 476; Jones v. Yetman, 6 Ind. 46; Reed v. Sering, 7 Blackf. 135; Tripp v. Elliott, 5 Blackf. 168; Quigley v. City of Aurora, 50 Ind. 28. But what is the rule where the amount sued for before the justice, etc., is more than ten dollars, where the judgment before the justice is for the plaintiff, and on appeal to the circuit court, the judgment is for the defendant, and the plaintiff" appeals to this court ? What is the amount in controversy, in this court, in such a case ?

In Webb v. Thorpe, 12 Ind. 451, it does not appear what the amount of the plaintiff’s claim was before the justice of the peace.

In Bogart v. The City of New Albany, 1 Ind. 38, the point was ruled against the jurisdiction of the court. The learned judge who wrote the opinion says:

In the case before us, though the plaintiff claims more [6]*6than twenty dollars in her declaration, yet she recovered but ten, and with that amount she is content. The defendant claims the allowance of no set-off rejected below, and only seeks- in this court to obtain a decision that shall relieve him from the payment of the judgment of ten dollars. This amount does not give us jurisdiction, and the writ of error must be dismissed.” Yet this case is cited as authority in the case in 12 Indiana. It was clearly a case not at all in point.

In Beach v. Livergood, 15 Ind. 496, the amount claimed before the justice of the peace by the plaintiff was twenty-five dollars, and the plaintiff had judgment there for one dollar and seventy-five cents. On appeal to the common pleas, that court dismissed the action, and the plaintiff appealed to this court.

In his opinion, Hanna, J., said: “ Here the amount sued for exceeds ten dollars. The recovery below, after an appeal, did not limit the plaintiff to the sum so recovered; but if he had recovered judgment in the Court of Common Pleas, it might have been for the amount so demanded: so that amount was really, in controversy.” Believing this to be the correct rule in such cases, we follow it, and overrule the motion to dismiss the appeal.

The action was to recover for tolls for the use of the plaintiff’s road by the defendant, and also the amount of a penalty prescribed by a by-law of the plaintiff, which it was alleged the defendant had violated. The action was not commenced in the township of the county in which the ’defendant resided, but was commenced before a justice of the peace of Russell township, while the defendant resided in Clinton township, and there was a competent justice in this township. The defendant made default before the justice of the peace.

In the circuit court, the cause was tried upon an agreed statement of facts, and there was a finding for the defendant, both ón the matter relating to the jurisdiction of the justice, and also on that relating to the matter in bar of the action. The plaintiff moved the court for a new trial, which motion [7]*7was overruled, and there was judgment for the defendant, that the plaintiff take nothing by his action, and that the defendant recover oí him his costs, etc.

The question, so far as it relates to the jurisdiction of the justice of the peace, depends upon the following statutes:

Section 17 of the Plank Road Law, under which the plaintiff claims to have organized, gives the company remedy by “an action of debt before any justice of the peace of the county where the offender may be found,” for the penalty given by that section. This law was approved May 12th; 1852, and by an emergency clause went into force at that date.

The act relating to the jurisdiction, etc., of justices of the peace, 2 G. & H. 576, was approved on the 9th day of June, 1852, and having no emergency clause, did not, probably, go into force until the general distribution of the revised statutes of 1852. The ninth section of this act provides that the jurisdiction of justices in civil cases shall, unless otherwise provided by law, be limited to their townships respectively.

Section 13, as amended in 1861, is as follows: “No person who is a resident of any township in this State shall be sued out of said township, except as specified in the above mentioned acts, unless said suit is commenced by a capias ad respondendum, or when there shall be no justice competent to act in such township.”

The action for recovery of tolls, or for the statutory penalty for not paying the same, is a civil action, and must be gov- , erned by the rules applicable in other civil actions. If it be conceded that the legislature may make different rules governing the territorial jurisdiction of justices of the peace, in cases of this kind, from that which prevails generally in other cases, still it appears to us that the sections referred to in the act relating to the jurisdiction of justices of the peace, being later than that part of the plank road law in question, must govern the case.

It was urged, as a reason for a new trial, that the court had erred in finding against the plaintiff in bar, after finding [8]*8against him on the question of jurisdiction. Had this question been presented_ in some other form, it might have been urged here with better success. Rut we cannot regard it as any reason for a new trial. It should, probably, have been presented as a motion in arrest of that part of the judgment in bar. Where there are issues in abatement and also in bar in the same action, and both are found for the defendant, it seems to us now that judgment should be rendered exclusively on the issues in abatement, and not on those in bar.

The remaining question has reference to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the finding of the court against the plaintiff in bar of the action. The case was tried upon an agreed statement of facts, as follows:

“To facilitate a trial in this cause, the parties submit the same on the folloxvixig agreed statement of facts, as evidence herein: The defendant, Wysong, is a resident of Clinton township, Putnam county, Indiaxra, axid there is in that township a justice competent to act and try this cause. This case was commenced axxd heard and tried below before a justice of Russell township, the defendaxxt being served with process and making default in said cause.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bennett v. Hibernia Bank
305 P.2d 20 (California Supreme Court, 1956)
Arizona Southwest Bank v. Odam
300 P. 195 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1931)
Smith v. American Crystal Monument Co.
65 N.E. 524 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1902)
Jeffersonville, Madison & Indianapolis Railroad v. Harrold
30 N.E. 158 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1892)
Wayne Pike Co. v. Bosworth
91 Ind. 210 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1883)
Bowlus v. Brier
87 Ind. 391 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1882)
Carroll v. Mullanphy Savings Bank
8 Mo. App. 249 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1880)
Hunter v. Burnsville Turnpike Co.
56 Ind. 213 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1877)
Hutts v. Williams
55 Ind. 237 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1876)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 Ind. 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morton-gravel-road-co-v-wysong-ind-1875.