Roberts v. Hickory Camp Coal & Coke Co.

52 S.E. 182, 58 W. Va. 276, 1905 W. Va. LEXIS 109
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 7, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 52 S.E. 182 (Roberts v. Hickory Camp Coal & Coke Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberts v. Hickory Camp Coal & Coke Co., 52 S.E. 182, 58 W. Va. 276, 1905 W. Va. LEXIS 109 (W. Va. 1905).

Opinion

McWhorter, Judge:

William M. Roberts brought his action against the Hickory Camp Coal and Coke Co., a corporation, before Justice [277]*277E. Ii. Ball, of Kanawha county, for a balance of $283.25 due on a contract, with interest from July 8, 1904. The defendant appeared and filed his answer admitting the claim of plaintiff but setting up the fact that it was served with a suggestion in a certain suit pending before J. B. Champe, a justice of Fayette county, in which the Imperial Colliery Company was plaintiff and the said Roberts was defendant, requiring it to show what was due from it to Roberts; that afterwards in said suit it was ordered to pay to the Imperial Colliery Company the sum of $272.20, the amount of the judgment of the Imperial Colliery Company rendered against Roberts in said suit, which amount was paid by the defendant, Hickory Camp Coal and Coke Co., to R. R. Huddle-ston, deputy sheriff of ' Fayette county, on the 6th of February, 1904, under an execution then in his hands; and admitting that it still owed to plaintiff Roberts the sum of $11.00, which it was ready to pay. Plaintiff Roberts filed a replication to the said plea or answer of defendant averring that the payment set up by the defendant claiming to have been made on the judgment rendered by the Fayette county justice was no payment of the debt sued for and admitted by the said plea to have been due and payable to plaintiff, because there was no valid judgment rendered against plaintiff by the Fayette county justice in favor of the Imperial Colliery Company, for want of jurisdiction; that plaintiff Roberts had always been a resident of the State of West Virginia, and was then and had been for years past a resident of Kanawha county, West Virginia; that no summons or other process was ever served upon him at any time or in any manner in said action of the Imperial Colliery Company against him; that he never had any notice of said action or said judgment until the defendant set up the same as defense in this case; that the justice in Fayette county never obtained jurisdiction of said Roberts in said action and could not render any valid judgment therein, and could not legally have directed the defendant in this case to pay such judgment without having such jurisdiction, and that all that was done by said Fayette county justice was without jurisdiction and without authority of law and ivas null and void; and denied the existence of any valid judgment rendered against him by said justice in the action mentioned in defendant’s plea, and denied that the [278]*278payment claimed by the defendant in answer to the suggestion was any payment whatever of the debt here sued for, and denied that he ever authorized the defendant to pay anything whatever to the Imperial Colliery Company, and denied that he owed the Imperial Colliery Company anything, and prayed judgment for the amount sued for and for which the defendant admitted it had owed him. Upon the hearing J ustice Ball held that the justice of Fayette county had no jurisdiction to render any judgment or to make an order for the Hickory Camp Coal and Coke Company to paj^ said judgment and that the judgment and order against the garnishee were null and void, and that the payment claimed to have been made by the defendant was no paj^ment of the Roberts’ debt against it, and gave judgment'for the amount sued for, $283.25. The defendant took the case by appeal to the circuit court of Kanawha county, where on the 13th of June, 1905, the case was heard and the following order entered: “This action came up on appeal taken by the deft, from the judgment of a Justice of Kanawha Co. and neither party desiring a jury the same is submitted to the Court, and the same was heard upon the pleadings made up before the justice, to-wit: The complaint of the plaintiff, the answer of the deft, and the replication of the plff., all in writing and filed herein. That the evidence adduced by the deft, was the record of the case of the Empire Colliery Co. v. William Roberts, tried before Justice Champe, in Fayette county, W. Va., in which record is herein filed, and the evidence adduced by the plaintiff was the affidavit of W. Roberts sworn to Feb. 17, 1905. which is filed herein, and by agreement between the parties to this cause said affidavit was read ás the testimony of said Roberts herein, and this was the only testimony adduced on the trial. The deft, objected to the testimony of Roberts, not because its form in affidavit, but to the illegality thereof, which objection was overruled by the Court, to which ruling the deft, excepted. ’ That this action was for the sum of $283.25, and the deft, admitted that it had been indebted to the plaintiff in that amount but claims that it had paid the sum of $272.20 on 23 Aug., 1904, on a suggestion issued in the said case of the Empire Colliery Co. v. W. Roberts, on a judgment rendered by the justice in Fayette county, and which payment it was claimed by the [279]*279plaintiff was no payment whatever. This court, upon consideration of the pleading's, the evidence and the argument of counsel of both plaintiff and defendant, is of opinion that the said payment claimed to have been made was valid payment, and the cleft’s, indebtedness to the plaintiff should be reduced to that extent.” Then follows judgment in favor of the plaintiff Roberts against the Hickory Camp Coal and Coke Co. and Citizens’ Trust and Guaranty Co. of West Virginia, parties to the appeal bond, the sum of $11.05, balance due plaintiff after deducting the sum of $272.20. To which finding and judgment of the court plaintiff excepted and procured a writ of error to said judgment from one of the judges of this Court.

The crucial question involved in this case is whether Justice Champe had jurisdiction to enter judgment in the action of the Imperial Colliery Co. against Roberts, in Fayette county. “The jurisdiction of justices of the peace is purely statutory. They have only such judicial powers as have been expressly conferred upon them by statute. The courts of justices not being courts of record or of general jurisdiction, there is no presumption in favor of jurisdiction when the record does not disclose it.” 18 Am. & E. E. L. (2d Ed.) 17, and cases there cited. Sec. 16, ch. 50, Code, clearly defines the civil jurisdiction of justices in which it provides “shall not extend to any action unless the cause of action arose in his county, or the defendant, or one of the defendants, resides therein, or being a non-resident of the State, is found, or has property or effects within the county.” The return of the officer on the original summons shows that Roberts was not found in Fayette county, as also the return of the second summons, and the record contains not a word with reference to the residence of Roberts in Fayette county, or that the cause of action accruing to the Imperial Colliery Co. against Roberts, or any p>art of it, arose in said county. The testimony of Roberts is, and the fact is conceded that he resides and has resided for the last eight or nine years in Kanawha' county, and that he was never a non-resident of the State of West Virginia; that no summons was served upon him in the suit, and he testified that he had no notice of the action against him in Fayette county; that the Imperial Colliery Company had its office and place of business in Kanawha county, and [280]*280at which place he made a contract with said Imperial Colliery Company, which contract was the basis of its action.

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Bluebook (online)
52 S.E. 182, 58 W. Va. 276, 1905 W. Va. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-hickory-camp-coal-coke-co-wva-1905.