Citation Numbers: 3 Pen. & W. 469
Judges: Kennedy
Filed Date: 6/15/1832
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This suit was commenced before a Justice of the Peace, by the defendant in error, against the plaintiff in error, to recover a demand which he had against him, not exceeding one hundred dollars. . Fi'om the record returned-of the proceedings had before the Justice, it appears that the plaintiff in error had a claim,founded upon a book account,against the defendantin error, which he produced at the time of trial before the Justice, and claimed to have it allowed and set-off. It, however, exceeded one hundred dollars, and the Justice, for that reason, believing that he could not take cognizance of it, dismissed it from his consideration, and rendered a judgment in favor of the plaintiff before him, for thirty-six dollars and twenty-seven and a half cents, besides costs of suit. From this judgment the plaintiff in error appealed, and brought the cause into the Court of Common Pleas of the county. ’While pending there, the plaintiff below entéred a rule of arbitration, under the compulsory arbitration law, and had the cause referred to the decision of arbitrators, who, after' hearing the proofs and allegations of the parties, made an award in favor of the plaintiff below', for fifty-six dollars and eighty-four cents, with costs of suit. They also appended to their report a taemorandum which they signed, in the following words: “The defendant’s claim exceeding the plaintiff’s three hundred and thirty-two dollars,' was excluded, as out of our jurisdiction.”
Justices of the Peace in this State have no jurisdiction in civil cases; other than that which isexpx-essly given to them by statute. This suit was brought before the Justice under the Act of Assembly, passed the 20th of March, 1810, which gives Justices of the Peace “jurisdiction of all causes of action arising from contract, either
The first error assigned is, that the plaintiff below entered a rule of arbitration before he filed a statement of his demand. ' .To this it may be answered, that the record of the Justice, of the proceedings had before him in the case, which he transmitted with the appeal to the Court of Common Pleas, shews that the plaintiff’s demand was a book 'account, amounting to nmety-eight dollars, which he; claimed to be due to him from the defendant. This statement, although not very explicit, as it dops not appear from it what the nature of the items charged in the account was, yet is nearly as satisfactory, and affords about as much information as a declaration in indebitatus assumpsit would do. Take, for instance, the count for money had and received; what information does it furnish of the nature and origin of the many claims that-may be given in evidence under it? A stranger to the transaction could not even form a conjecture, with any degree of certainty, of what" they might consist. The claim might be for money received by the defendant, upon sales made by him of the property of the plaintiff, consisting of horses, cows, sheep, swine or articles of merchandize to A. B. C. D. &c. or different sums of money received from each of these persons, which were owing to the plaintiff by them respectively. It is considered that this statement made by the Justice, would have been deemed sufficient, in case his judgment and proceeding had been brought .before the proper tribunal by writ of certiorari for revision, and may, therefore, be considered sufficient to supply the place of a statement, in the Court of Common Pleas, upon an appeal. Indeed it seems to be a rule of practice^ in many of the county courts within the state, and among the number, is said to prevail in Bradford county, into .which this cause was taken by appeal, to. consider and adopt the transcript , of the Justice, returned with the appeal, as the statement of the plaintiff’s cause of action in court. Beside,' it must be considered as a part of the proceedings in the cause; and the court would be bound to notice it, if the objections were made, so
The second, error is, that the transcript of the Justice does not shew any cause of action within his jurisdiction. This, from th’e answer given to the first error, must appear not to be tenable. We think that it does sufficiently appear.- Indeed, I cannot at this moment think of a claim, wh'ich.is properly the subject of a book account, that could not fall within: the jurisdiction, given to the justices of'the peace by the act alre'ady mentioned) provided it does not exceed in amount one'hundred dollars.
' The third and last error is,- that the Juátice and arbitrators refused to allow any part of defendant’s-set off, because the whole together amounted to more than one hundred dollars. Now by the express terms of the seventh section of the act already recited in part, the demand which the defendant before the Justice offered to set off against the demand of the plaintiff; must not exceed one hundred dollars; so that if the demand of the defendant below in this casé, which the arbitrators state, exceeded the amount of the plaintiff’s three hundred and thirty-two dollars, was entire in its nature, it was clearly without the jurisdiction of .the justice, and, as I shall shew, likewise of the arbitrators, it is evident from the spirit of this act of Assembly, as well as the express provision o fit, that the Legislature did not intend or think it adviseable, to give J uslices of the peace jurisd iction in any case, when the claim should, at the time of commencing the suit," exceed one hundred dollars. But if the.act had been silent in limiting the amount of the claim of the defendant, which he should be permitted to set-off against the plaintiff’s, demand before the justice, a reasonable construction of the act must have limited it to one hundred dollars, and likewise to claims.of the same nature with those for which plaintiffs are authorized to bring their suits before Justices of the peace* For it is impossible to conceive any reason, why the legislature should not pei-mit Justices to take cognizance of, .and pass judgment upon de-' mands of plaintiffs exceeding one hundred dollars, that does not apply at least with as much force to prevent their taking cognizance of claims of defendants, exceeding that sum, against the plaintiffs, when they are offered to he set off. It is perfectly clear and manifest, that the legislature did not intend to give justices, in the one "way or the .other, jurisdiction in cases where the demand exceeded one hundred dollars, unless by the consent of the parties, which is specially provided for in the fourteenth, section of the act. ' Hence I conclude, that the Justice from any thing that appears upon the
For the same reasons I also think, that the arbitrators were precluded from investigating and deciding upon the defendant’s demand against the plaintiff,' before them. For although it is declared by the fourth section of the act, that when a suit is regularly brought from a-Justice of the Peace, by appeal from his judgment, to the county court of Common Pleas, and entered on the Prothonotary’s docket, that “it shall from thence take grade with, and be subject to the same rules as other actions, where the parties are considered to be in court,” yet this clause must receive such a construction as will render it consistent with the preceding parts of the same section, by which it is provided, that if the defendant before the Justice be the appellant, and shall succeed in procuring a reversal or an abatement of the amount of the judgment on the appeal, that he shall be entitled to recover from the plaintiff the costs of the appeal, with four dollars as a counsel fee, and fifty cents per day for every day that he shall attend upon such appeal; but to entitle the defendant to these costs, counsel fee and daily pay, he must produce no other evidence before the court on the trial of the appeal, than that which he exhibited before the Justice or referees, (if tried by referees, while pending before the Justice.) Now it is obvious, that the Legislature intended by this provision, on the one hand, to induce and encourage the defendant to bring forward all the testimony that he had of an admissible character, and intended to rely on in any event for his defence against the plaintiff, in order that there might be a full hearing of the whole case upon its merits, before the Justice, and at the same time, to afford the plaintiff an opportunity óf knowing the nature and the extent of the testimony which the defendant had to support his defence; and then upon the other hand again, to punish the plaintiff, if he should, after all this knowledge given to him, persist in demanding of the defendant more than should,ultimately be found to be due to him, by making him, not only pay the .costs df the appeal, but the counsel fee of four dollars, and the fifty cents per day to the defendant, for. attending upon the appeal. To carry, then, all these different provisions of the act into full effect, according to the true meaning and intention of the legislature, the parties must be bound to try the cause, after the appeal has been taken, upon the same principles, and subject to the same rules of evidence; the plaintiff being at liberty to make the same claim and the defendant the same defence and none other, than what ought or could have been lawfully made upon the trial before the Justice. It is well understood, and has been decided upon the construction ofithis act, that the plaintiff can
It is possible that the plaintiff in error might have defeated the recovery of the plaintiff below, if the fact be, that his book-account, mentioned by the Justice of the Peace, and again by the arbitrators, which exceeded the amount of the plaintiff’s claim, three hundred and thirty-two dollars, consisted of a series of charges, founded upon as many substantial and independent contracts made between them. If such were the case, then .1 think that it was competent for the defendant, either before'the Justice, or afterwards upon the appeal, before the arbitrators, to have selected one or more of such charges, growing out of separate and distinct contracts, as would have come up to one hundred dollars in the aggregate, or to any less sum that he might have found sufficient to have met the whole of the plaintiff’s claim, and to have set them off ¿gainst his demand, after establishing, by due proof, that he was justly entitled to them. But whether his account was made up of charges originating in this way, does not appear from the return of the Justice; nor yet from the award of the arbitrators. This court cannot presume that it was so; .nor can we, as a court of error, enquire into facts and errors not appearing upon the face of the award of the arbitrators. See Harker v. Elliott, 7 Serg. & Rawle, 284. Thompson v. White, 4 Serg. & Rawle, 135. Commonwealth v. La Fit, a Serg. &
Judgment affirmed.