Rice v. Alley
Rice v. Alley
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action is debt; the defense is set-off, which being denied in the court below, the defendant appealed in error.
The matter of set-off is imperfectly stated in the record; but it seems that, by order of the county court of Marion, Alley was permitted to open a road
It is now argued for defendant Nice, that no statute of limitation will apply, because it is a liability founded upon a record. -
That is true as a matter of fact but not as a matter of law. For the county court had no jurisdiction to make such an order upon its record. If a public road were intended in that case, the private indemnity was due from the public, and the county court as a court of police, had power to order it to be paid bj the county; 1804, ch. 1, § 19; but no power, even by consent, to make a valid order that it be paid by a private person; for consent in general, cannot confer jurisdiction. If a private way were intended, in that case we have held, that the right can only exist by prescription or convention between the parties, and not by judicial compulsion, under the act of 1811, C. 60, and this act was considered repugnant to the constitution, as being in violation of private right. White vs. Settle, at Nashville, 1852. In any view of the case it must be true that the county court had no jurisdiction to order that Alley pay Nice the indemnity in question; and its order to that effect, must be considered as merely void.
Let tbe judgment be affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Geo. W. Rice v. E. Alley, assignee of Thos. Calloway
- Status
- Published