Ryan v. Bindley
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court:
1. The allegation in the declaration must be taken, generally, as fixing the amount or value for the purposes of jurisdiction. But the subsequent pleadings may so change the original character of the suit as to involve an amount or
In this case Ryan interposed a notice of set-off, and insisted that Bindley owed him four thousand dollars, for goods sold and money lent, which he claimed the right to set off against Bindley’s demand, and to recover against Bindley a judgment for the excess. By the laws of Ohio such a defence is permitted, and if the defendant succeeds in proving his set-off, and it is larger than the plaintiff’s claim, he is entitled to a judgment for the excess. The parties are concluded by the judgment, and cannot again litigate the same subject-matter, unless the judgment should be reversed, on appeal or writ of error to the Supreme Court. This law of set-off, or counter claim, and the practice under it, has been adopted as a rule of court, by the Circuit Court of the United States for the districts of Ohio. The plea in this case was therefore proper, and after it was interposed the matter in dispute rightfully exceeded the sum of two thousand dollars, exclusive of costs, and as the plaintiff had judgment, it is plain that the defendant had the right to sue out his writ of error.
2. A reversal of the judgment is claimed, because the Circuit Court refused to permit the defendant to testify as a witness. In Ohio a party to the suit is a competent witness on his own behalf. The rules of evidence prescribed by the laws of a State are rules of decision for the United States courts, while sitting within the limits of such State, under the 34th section of the Judiciary Act.
Judgment accordingly.
Vance v. Campbell, 1 Black, 430; Wright v. Bales, 2 Id., 535.
Reference
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- Syllabus
- 1. Where a declaration claims a sum not sufficiently large to warrant error to this court, but where the plea pleads a set-off of a sum so considerable that the excess between the sum claimed and that pleaded as a set-off would do so, — the amount in controversy is not the sum claimed but the sum in excess, in those circuits where by the law of the State adopted in the Circuit Court, judgment maybe given for the excess as aforesaid. For example: A declaration in assumpsit claimed one thousand dollars damages, — a sum insufficient to give the Supreme Court jurisdiction: more than two thousand being required for that purpose. The plea pleaded a set-off of four thousand, and by the laws of Ohio, adopted in the Federal courts sitting in that State, judgment might be given for the three thousand in excess, if the set-off was proved. Held, that three thousand, and not one thousand, was the amount in dispute; and accordingly, that the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court attached. 2. The rules of evidence prescribed by the laws of a State being rules of decision for the Federal courts while sitting within the limits of such State, they must be obeyed even though they violate the ancient laws of evidence so far as to make the parties to the action witnesses in their own cause; herein adopting a practice in opposition to a specific rule by the Federal court for the circuit.