Mowry v. Cheesman
Mowry v. Cheesman
Opinion of the Court
This is an action on a judgment of a justice of the peace in Rhode Island, and was commenced about eleven years after the judgment was rendered. Is the action barred by our statute of limitations, (Rev. Sts. c. 120, § 1,) which requires
In some of the states of the Union, judges have said that the courts of justices of the peace, in those states, are courts of record. In several of the other states it is held, either that such courts are not courts of record, or that they are presumed not to be. unless they are shown to be such by the law of the state where they are rendered. Scott v. Rushman, 1 Cow. 212. Thompson v. Robinson, 3 Wend. 268. Snyder v. Wise, 10 Barr, 158. Silver Lake Bank v. Harding, 5 Ohio, 545. M’Gee v. Sheffield, 3 Stew. & Port. 351. Ellis v. White, 25 Alab. 540. In this commonwealth, a justice’s court is not a court of record, within our statute of limitations, and an action on a judgment of such court is barred by that statute, if not commenced within six years. Smith v. Morrison, 22 Pick. 430. And upon examining the statutes of the State of Rhode Island, to which we were referred by counsel, we find nothing in the jurisdiction and authority there conferred on justices of the peace, nor in the duties there required of them, which gives to the courts held by them any higher claim, than justices’ courts have in this commonwealth, to be regarded as courts of record. Nor is it shown, nor even suggested in argument, that they are so regarded by the courts of that state.
In Ex parte Gladhill, 8 Met. 170, it was said by Shaw, C. J. that probably justices’ courts might be regarded, to some purposes, as courts of record, but not so in all respects. See also Thayer v. Commonwealth, 12 Met. 11, 12. So it was said, in Wheaton v. Fellows, 23 Wend. 375, that the justice’s court of
Reference
- Full Case Name
- George W. Mowry v. Nathaniel Cheesman
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- Published