Vaughan v. Cade

31 S.C.L. 49
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedDecember 15, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 31 S.C.L. 49 (Vaughan v. Cade) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vaughan v. Cade, 31 S.C.L. 49 (S.C. Ct. App. 1845).

Opinions

Curia, per Waudlaw, J.

The process by which the jury attained the sum which they have found for the plaintiff, cannot be discovered, but the court cannot be so sure that the sum found is not due from the defendant, as to interfere with the verdict for that reason.

A discount was filed and not withdrawn ; but the matter of which notice was given could not have been received as a discount in this case, because it was a debt from the plaintiff to the defendant and his partners •, therefore, no evidence of discount was offered, and the case, (as this court knows from the report of the circuit judge,) went to the jury upon the question of payment. The case is then in effect as if no discount had been filed, and presents the question whether a plaintiff shall have judgment, who has sued in the general jurisdiction of the Court of Common Pleas for an amount which was there recoverable, when his demand had been reduced by partial payments before action brought, and upon the trial, involving the questions what was the amount of his demand, and what were those payments, a verdict for him has been rendered for an amount within the exclusive jurisdiction of a magistrate.

According to the practice as settled in Nance vs. Palmer, 2 Bail, 88, a non-suit cannot be ordered after this verdict for the plaintiff. Arrest of judgment, in strict technical propriety, cannot be ordered, if for no other reason, because the discount is yet part of the record. Yet [51]*51supposing it to be ascertained that a verdict has been rendered in a matter not within the jurisdiction of the court, must the court therefore consummate the usurpation by giving judgment 'l Perhaps such a verdict might well be considered as a verdict for the defendant, and upon rule an order to that effect be entered; but confining ourselves here to the motions which are made to arrest the judgment or set aside the verdict, a majority of the court are of opinion that the relief sought may be granted by an order to stay further proceedings, and that the case is a proper one for such an order.

The Act of 1824, 6 Stat. 289, by declaring “that the jurisdiction of justices of the peace,” (now called magistrates) “in matters of contract, to the amount of twenty dollars, shall be exclusive, with the same right of appeal,” as before, in effect, if not in terms, provides that no other court shall have original cognizance of such matters. The judgment of any other court in such a matter would be in disregard of the prohibition of the Act. Such judgment, if rendered by any inferior court, except the magistrate’s, would be examined and restrained by the court which has supervisory control over all inferior ones; and although the superior court may be subject to no restraint but its own sense of law and justice, and the intendments of the law would favor its judgment, yet even its judgment in such a matter would be unlawful, and would be disregarded by itself, if ever afterwards the truth could be made to prevail over the intendments of the law. The superior court is then especially bound to refrain from trespassing within the prohibited limits, and should weigh with scrupulous exactness $he objections to its own jurisdiction.

If this case had been within the summary jurisdiction of the court, and had been heard by the judge alone, and he had, after hearing the evidence on both sides, been of opinion that a sum less than $20 was due to the plaintiff, (not considering the discount,) the case of Sanders vs. Gage, Chev. 165, and cases there cited, shew that no decree for the plaintiff could have been pronounced, but a non-suit might have been ordered. That case establishes that the jurisdiction depends on the sum proved and not [52]*52upon the amount claimed, and confirms the authority of Nance vs. Palmer, before cited, to the point there actually decided — that a non-suit could not be ordered after the verdict. The cases of Levy vs. Roberts, 1 McC. 395, and Smith vs. McMasters, 3 McC. 288, and numerous cases in the English Courts cited in 2 Tidd Pr. (9th ed.) 959, shew that in questions of jurisdiction depending upon the amount involved, the amount proved is not the original debt, but the balance remaining after a reduction by partial payments, not by discount.

All attempts to confine small causes to the inferior courts would be vain, if the plaintiff’s allegation should be conclusive as to the amount sued for. The great complexity and importance of the questions which may be involved in settling a small balance, form no better excuse for taking a balance which is within the prescribed limit out of the exclusive jurisdiction, than would the difficulty of legal questions which might arise under any contract for a small amount, where there had been no payments. The plaintiff must be presumed to know what was originally due and what has been paid, and be held to resort to the proper tribunal accordingly, and every tribunal must be deemed competent to decide every question which may arise in the cases over which its jurisdiction is extended.

It is objected, however, that the verdict cannot be taken as conclusive evidence of the amount involved. The sum proved here depends, not, as in Sanders vs. Gage, upon the opinion of the judge, but upon the verdict of the jury. - The jury is that branch of the court whose province it is, regularly, to judge of the force of testimony, and whose duty is, in the summary process jurisdiction, delegated to. the judge, only by virtue of the consent of parties. ' A verdict is the ascertained truth, to which effect is given by the judgment of the court. If the court cannot, where the judge sits to decide facts as well as law, pronounce a judgment for twenty dollars, or any less sum, in a matter of contract, such judgment cannot be authorized by the intervention of a jury, when the judge has been informed by those whose duty it is by law to make the inquiry, that the sum which was due to the plaintiff, at the commence-[53]*53mcnt of the suit, is, without regard to any discount, less than twenty dollars.

Reference has been made to our Act of 1747, P. L. 214, which is refered to in 3 Stat. 694, but is not to be found in any subsequent volume of the Statutes at Large. It has been supposed that that Act, by taking away costs from recoveries under £20 currency ($12,24,) impliedly permits the recovery in the superior courts of any higher sum with costs. It did so, and perhaps it also authorized the recovery of any smaller sum without costs, but it has been modified by subsequent legislation. I think it is worth while to examine our legislation on this subject, as I am persuaded that from it, it will appear that the verdict is the true test of the amount, and that the Act of 1824 materially altered the former law.

The statutes 43 Bliz. c. 6, and 3 Jac. 1, c. 15, had used the terms, “if it shall appear to the judges that the debt or damages to be recovered shall not amount to 40s.” Under these the verdict was the test of the amount; 2 Tidd Pr. 954.

The Act of 1747 gave to the justices of the peace jurisdiction in matters of contract of every kind whatsoever, and in matters of damages for which the party complaining might have had an action of trespass, trover or slander, and provided that “all suits for the recovery of any debts, dues, damages or demands whatsoever, to the value of £20 or under, or for or by reason of any of the causes of action herein before mentioned, whereby it shall appear to the justices

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69 S.E.2d 236 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1952)

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Bluebook (online)
31 S.C.L. 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vaughan-v-cade-scctapp-1845.