Smead v. Sutherland

111 A.2d 335, 118 Vt. 361, 1955 Vt. LEXIS 94
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJanuary 4, 1955
Docket1263
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 111 A.2d 335 (Smead v. Sutherland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smead v. Sutherland, 111 A.2d 335, 118 Vt. 361, 1955 Vt. LEXIS 94 (Vt. 1955).

Opinion

Sherbume, C. J.

This cause was commenced before a justice of the peace and appealed to the county court. It is an action for a breach of an automobile purchase contract with an ad damnum of $200.00. Trial was by court, resulting in a judgment for the plaintiff to recover $217.85 of the defendant. The cause is here upon the defendant’s exceptions to the findings of fact and the judgment.

*363 We quote the findings material to the consideration of the questions briefed, “1. The plaintiff is a dealer in cars but has neither showroom nor new cars on hand for sale, and this fact was known to the defendant. “2. On June 1, 1952, a written contract was entered into between the parties to this action, by which the defendant agreed to buy a 1952 gray and black, four-cylinder Henry J. Vagabond, with heater and undercoating. “3. That the price of the car itself was $1,494.33 and the charge for undercoating was $20.00 and the price of the heater was $70.00, making a total amount due of $1,584.33, and the defendant was to turn in on said order a 1940 Mercury automobile, owned by her, and was to receive for the same an allowance of $275.00. “5. That the said Henry J. Vagabond was ordered by the plaintiff, to meet the defendant’s specifications, and it was of a type not readily marketable. “13. That the plaintiff would have received a profit of $155.30 on the sale of the new Henry J. Vagabond to the defendant, and that he would have made an additional profit of $50.00 on the resale of the used Mercury. “14. That the plaintiff is entitled to recover from the defendant $205.30 and interest in the sum of $12.55, or a total of $217.85 and costs.” The defendant has briefed exceptions to findings numbered 5 and 13, which were on the grounds that finding 5 is contrary to the evidence and that finding 13 is not supported by the evidence.

Defendant first argues that the part of finding 5 “That the said Henry J. Vagabond was ordered by the plaintiff to meet the defendant’s specifications,” is unsupported by the evidence as shown by the contract between the parties, because the contract contains only a description of the car, its color “gray or black” and that it was to have the usual equipment of a heater and be undercoated. The exception to this part of the finding cannot be sustained. If the defendant thought there was any discrepancy between the contract and the.automobile described in finding 2 he should have excepted to that finding. The first part of finding 5 merely means that the plaintiff ordered the car specified in finding 2, with equipment specified in finding 3.

*364 Since finding 5 is in part sound as against the ground stated in the exception the exception is without avail. Petition of Citizens Utilities Co., 117 Vt 285, 293, 91 A2d 687; Little v. Loud, 112 Vt 299, 303, 23 A2d 628. However, we think that the evidence supports the finding that the Henry J. Vagabond was of a type not readily marketable. The evidence on this all came from the plaintiff who testified on direct in effect that the defendant refused delivery of the car on July 13 or 14, 1952; that he attempted to resell it, and encountered difficulty, and was able to sell it on June 11, 1953; and that he attributed the difficulty in selling it to the fact that this four cylinder model is a very slow mover. He further testified that he had sold two other four cylinder Henry J’s, and that he ascertained that the buyer wanted a four cylinder car before he ordered it. On cross-examination, in answer to leading questions, he tendered a price list and testified to the effect that the price to the defendant was the same he would have asked of any customer, and that that price was the market price in Bethel, Vermont, which is the town of his residence. The court could have reasonably inferred from this cross-examination that by market price the plaintiff only meant the dealer’s delivery price of this model car with the same equipment.

Finding 13 shows the profits the plaintiff would have made had the sale gone through. The profit on the new car was based on the difference in cost to the plaintiff and the price he would have received, and the profit on the used car was the difference between the sum allowed for it and the amount he could have sold it for. Under his exception to this finding on the ground that it is not supported by the evidence the defendant does not here question that the evidence so shows. His only claim is that the measure of damages with respect to the new car was the difference between the contract price and the market price, instead of the difference between the cost to the plaintiff and the price he would have received. This claim is without the scope of the exception. The exceptions to the findings are overruled.

The exception to finding 14 on the ground that the total sum of $217.85 exceeds the jurisdiction of the court has not *365 been briefed. Judgment was entered for such total sum and costs, and the defendant excepted to the judgment in the sum as entered. This exception only questions the jurisdiction of the court to enter a judgment for damages in excess of $200.00.

A justice of the peace has jurisdiction of actions of a civil nature where the debt or other matter in demand does not exceed $200.00, except in certain actions not here material. V. S. 47, §1472. When the action is in contract, it is the ad damnum which usually determines the question of jurisdiction, though it is otherwise where it appears from the declaration that the matter in demand exceeds the jurisdictional limit. Luce v. Menard, 87 Vt 177, 180, 88 A 728, and cases cited. The plaintiff in an action for breach of contract is not bound to ask for all that he is entitled to recover. He may demand less, and thereby confer jurisdiction upon a justice court, though the case upon its merits would properly belong to a higher jurisdiction. Wightman v. Carlisle, 14 Vt 296, 298; Danforth v. Streeter, 28 Vt 490, 494.

Under the provisions of V. S. 47, §1513 the effect of the appeal in this case, when entered in the county court, was to vacate the justice judgment and to bring the case entire and de novo before the county court, there to be proceeded with in the same manner as if it had been originally returnable to that court. American Electric Service & Maintenance Co. v. Harman, 103 Vt 263, 265, 153 A 217. On appeal that court had no jurisdiction beyond that of the justice court. Heath v. Robinson, 75 Vt 133, 136, 53 A 995; Danforth v. Streeter, supra. Consequently it could not enter a valid judgment in excess of $200.00, and its judgment for the plaintiff to recover $217.85 is void, although it had jurisdiction over the parties and the subject matter. 31 Am Jur, Judgments §407.

The absence of jurisdiction of a court to render a particular judgment constitutes sufficient ground for such court to vacate a judgment so rendered. 31 Am Jr, Judgments §764; 49 CJS, Judgments, §267. When the judgment of a court having jurisdiction over the parties and subject matter is *366

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Bluebook (online)
111 A.2d 335, 118 Vt. 361, 1955 Vt. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smead-v-sutherland-vt-1955.