Northfield Savings Bank v. Sanders
Northfield Savings Bank v. Sanders
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The only exception, now seriously insisted npon by the plaintiff, is in regard to the action of the County Court in holding the plea to the jurisdiction insufficient. This raises the question whether the cause, as it was presented and appeared in the justice court, was appealable. The ad damnum in the writ is fifty dollars. The declaration contains the common counts in assumpsit, declaring for the same sum, and also a special count on a promissory note for twenty-five dollars. The statute — K. L. s. 1061 — in general terms gives the right of appeal from a justice'judgment except in certain cases named, under three subdivisions. The plaintiff admits that if this is an action of assumpsit on the common counts, it is appealable. It is that, with the special count on a note added. The common counts in assumpsit were not waived, nor in any manner eliminated from the declaration, in the justice court. Although the plaintiff in that
In the appellate court the plaintiff is not necessarily confined to the same claims and specifications which he used before the justice court. By its declaration, the plaintiff summoned the ■defendant to a controversy which gave him the right of appeal to the County Court.' He did not narrow its scope by waiving any of the counts before the justice. The plaintiff with, or without trial, obtained judgment before the justice. In the County Court the defendant on a trial before the jury, prevailed. The plaintiff now attempts to-hold the justice judgment by pleading, that it only sought to recover on a note for twenty-five dollars, and for that reason the cause of action which it now presents was not appealable. To allow this contention, would open a door for an unscrupulous plaintiff to obtain an unjust advantage, by holding out before a justice a cause appealable, and having thereby obtained judgment there without trial, to hold such judgment, by showing in the appellate court that he only held, and intended to recover upon, a claim which if properly declared for, gave no right of appeal. The statute makes the declaration and ad damnum determinative of the right of appeal as well as the proof on trial. The proof, as well as the declaration, and ad damnum under the common counts, gave the defendant the right, of appeal. We do not think by adding the special count
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- NORTHFIELD SAVINGS BANK v. J. G. SANDERS
- Status
- Published