Spencer v. Dixie Finance Co.

327 S.W.2d 301, 205 Tenn. 485, 9 McCanless 485, 1959 Tenn. LEXIS 387
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 27, 1959
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 327 S.W.2d 301 (Spencer v. Dixie Finance Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spencer v. Dixie Finance Co., 327 S.W.2d 301, 205 Tenn. 485, 9 McCanless 485, 1959 Tenn. LEXIS 387 (Tenn. 1959).

Opinions

Me. Justice Burnett,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The sole question involved in this case is whether or not it is necessary for the one cast in a lawsuit before the General Sessions Judge to pray and be granted an appeal by the General Sessions Judge before the appeal is valid, and the Circuit Court, where the case is appealed to, must try it on its merits.

The defendant in error sued the plaintiff in error on a note in the General Sessions Court and was awarded a judgment by that court on September 17, 1958. On September 19,1958, the defendant filed with the Clerk of the General Sessions Court a pauper’s oath in lieu of an appeal bond in which it is stated that the defendant is unable to bear the expense “of an appeal this day prayed for and granted him from a judgment rendered against him.”

When the case was reached in the Circuit Court the defendant in error moved to dismiss the appeal because no appeal was prayed for and granted by the Judge of the General Sessions Court. It was conceded by counsel for the plaintiff in error that he did not formally appear before the Judge and pray an appeal but that he only filed the pauper’s oath in lieu of an appeal bond within two days from the time the judgment was rendered against his client. The Circuit Judge after reviewing [488]*488many1 of onr old cases held that the appeal must be dismissed because there was no appeal prayed and granted by the Judge of the General Sessions Court. The case has been seasonably appealed to this Court and we now have the matter for determination.

In an appeal from a court of record it must be shown by the minutes of the court that an appeal has been prayed and granted. This Court in Teasdale & Co. v. Manchester Produce Co., 104 Tenn. 267, 56 S.W 853, said:

“It has been held in a number of reported cases that an appeal, to be effective, must not only be prayed, but granted, and the minute entry must so show. * * * (Citing authorities) A different rule prevails in appeals from Justices of the Peace, and in such appeals the bond is prima facie evidence of the grant of appeal. Shannon’s Code, sec. 5990.” (Now Section 19-426, T.C.A.)

The rules governing procedure and appeals in General Sessions Courts are the same as those in the court of a Justice of the Peace, with certain exceptions not here material. Hancock v. Davidson County, 171 Tenn. 420, 104 S.W.2d 824. Thus it is that our Statutes governing appeals and the trial of cases before Justices of the Peace are applicable to the trials in the Sessions Court. Section 27-501, T.C.A., gives the right to any person dissatisfied with the Justice of the Peace’s judgment and others two entire days, exclusive of Sundays, to appeal to the next term of the Circuit Court. Section 27-503, T.C.A., provides that before the appeal is granted the person appealing shall give a bond with good security or otherwise take the pauper’s oath. In neither of these [489]*489Sections is it required that the appeal must be prayed and granted by the Justice of the Peace. When we look to the Statutes in cases tried in courts of record such as Section 27-310, T.C.A., we find that where the parties there are dissatisfied with a judgment or decree that the statute requires that the party “may pray and obtain an appeal therefrom”. Some such language is used in the various Statutes in appeals from courts of record. The appeal obviously “is a judicial act”. Andrews v. Page, 49 Tenn. 634, 638; Childress v. Marks, 61 Tenn. 12, 14. Thus is the reason for the statement made by the Court in the Teasdale case, supra, and which is followed down through the years as to the requirement in cases appealed from a court of record.

Pleadings before a Justice of the Peace may be by word of mouth in all cases with the single exception of pleas in abatement. A rather interesting article on proceedings before a Justice of the Peace appears in 10 Tennessee Law Review, at Page 180. It was prepared by the Honorable Richard N. Ivins, who at the time was a practicing attorney in Athens.

This article shows how the practitioner acts on appeals from an adverse judgment before a Justice of the Peace. In other words he files his bond or Ms pauper’s oath and then the Justice on whatever form he has, if it is filed within time, takes the papers to the Circuit Court where any defect, question of the sufficiency of the bond or whether or not the man should be depauperized or things of that kind, are treated on proper motion, that is, on motion made in the Circuit Court.

One reading the numerous old cases on the practice before a Justice of the Peace gathers from statements [490]*490made in the these cases that for the appeal to he effective it mnst not only be prayed bnt mnst also be granted, and the fact mnst appear on the papers. Jackson v. Baxter, 73 Tenn. 344; Douglass v. Neguelona, 88 Tenn. 769, 771, 14 S.W. 283; Bailey v. State, 95 Tenn. 391, 32 S.W. 250; and see likewise G-ilreath and Caruthers ’ History of a Lawsuit, 7th Edition, Sec. 509, Page 555; and Higgens & Crownover, Tennessee’s Procedure and Law Oases, Secs. 1648, 1649, where the author states that if the papers returned into court do not contain the statement by the Justice that an appeal was prayed for and granted the appeal would be dismissed. In each of these texts though it is shown that this defect may be cured in the Circuit Court and that when the appeal bond or the pauper’s oath which is returned by the Justice of the Peace shows that the appeal was prayed and granted then this is prima facie true that it has been done. See McAnally v. Stansell, 177 Tenn. 376, 150 S.W.2d 724; McCarver v. Jenkins, 49 Tenn. 629, and others.

By examination of these cases it is found that this statement that the appeal must be prayed and granted by the Justice of the Peace is more or less the statement that a lawyer or a judge would use and that it is not determinative of the lawsuit. As for instance in Jackson v. Baxter, supra, the court there makes the statement, it is true, that the appeal must be prayed and granted, but it is found upon reading the opinion that there really had been no appeal granted and if there had been no appeal granted the defects then could not be cured in Circuit Court. In other words in this case there was no bond or pauper’s oath consequently there was no appeal granted. It is to be noted that in reading each of these cases that they primarily went off on the proposition that no bond [491]*491was given or no pauper’s oath, filed within time, though the language here under discussion was used in part of the language of the court.

It is the duty of the courts, and as provided by Statute (Section 19-424, T.C.A.), in reviewing proceedings had before a Justice of the Peace to regard them with unusual indulgence and with great liberality so that the ends of justice may be reached. The Statute referred to in this instance (Section 19-424, T.C.A.) says in effect that every intendment in favor of the sufficiency, etc., of these proceedings shall be indulged in by the court. Ross v. Bandy, 165 Tenn. 499, 56 S.W.2d 754.

Following this line of reasoning Section 19-425, T.C.A., provides for trials de novo and among other things says:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
327 S.W.2d 301, 205 Tenn. 485, 9 McCanless 485, 1959 Tenn. LEXIS 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spencer-v-dixie-finance-co-tenn-1959.