State ex rel. Krause v. Dayton
State ex rel. Krause v. Dayton
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
If the judge of the District Court had no power to grant a new trial in cases of forcible entry and de
The jurisdiction of District Courts over cases of forcible entry and detainer was conferred by subdivision XV. of the above mentioned act. The original act did not provide for a new trial in any case. But by section 10 of a supplement thereto, approved April 11th, 1884 (Rev. Sup., p. 259), as amended by a further supplement approved April 23d, 1888 (Pamph. L., p. 470), the judge of a District Court was empowered to order a new trial in every case thereafter tried in any of those courts.
The proceeding before us was commenced after the last mentioned supplement took effect. If, therefore, it constituted a case tried in the District Court, the judge had a right to grant a new trial.
The provisions in the District Court act on the subject of forcible entry and detainer were largely copied from the “Act concerning forcible entries and detainers,” approved April 16th, 1846 {Rev., p. 439), whereby jurisdiction over complaints and proceedings thereon was conferred on justices of the peace.
The jurisdiction thus acquired was vested not in the courts for the trial of small causes, but in the justice of the peace in his official capacity. So it has been held that the power of amendment possessed by courts for the trial of small causes cannot be exercised by a justice in proceedings under the Forcible Entry and Detainer act. Wilson v. Bayley, 13 Vroom 132.
But the provisions of the District Court act on the subject of forcible entry and detainer must be construed as conferring jurisdiction on the court. The complaint is required to be delivered to the judge of that court, who has no other official
The District Court having jurisdiction over complaints of forcible entry and detainer and the issues joined thereon, the trial of such issues is the trial of a case in that court.
The judge of the District Court in the case before us had, therefore, full power to grant a new trial, and for this reason the mandamus applied for must be refused, with costs
Reference
- Full Case Name
- THE STATE, EX REL. DANIEL KRAUSE v. ALFRED B. DAYTON, JUDGE OF THE DISTRICT COURT OF JERSEY CITY
- Status
- Published