Chase v. Bernier
Chase v. Bernier
Opinion of the Court
The questions arise under V. S. 1298, regulating appeals from justice judgments. The action was commenced before a justice of the peace, from whose judgment the defendant appealed. In County Court the plaintiff moved that the appeal be dismissed, “for that the case is not appealable, as appears by the justice copy of record and appeal.” The appeal was dismissed, and the defendant excepted. The justice copy
The defendant now insists that the judgment must be reversed for error in dismissing the appeal, and the question is, Does error appear ? He makes two claims: first, “that the case is appealable as appears of record;” second, that, if not, it must be presumed to be so, because the justice allowed the appeal,
It is said that the sum demanded by the new count is more than twenty dollars, which, if true, makes the case appealable. But it is not true. The sum demanded is expressly fourteen dollars and ninety-four cents. Even if the count be treated as a special declaration upon the contract, it cannot be held to demand more. A declaration expressly demanding in damages a sum less than twenty dollars cannot be held to demand more, merely because it proceeds upon the breach of an ex-ecutory contract which, if the plaintiff had been permitted to perform and had performed it, would have entitled him to a larger sum. Such is the fair result of the cases. Church v. Vanduzee, 4 Vt. 195, 198; Wightman v. Carlisle, 14 Vt. 296; Warren v. Newfane, 25 Vt. 250; Crosby v. Enterprise Cheese Co., 67 Vt. 638. The cases cited by the defendant— Connecticut & Passumpsic Rivers R. Co. v. Bates, 32 Vt. 420; Williams v. Mason, 45 Vt. 372; Concord v. National Bank of Derby Line, 51 Vt. 144 — do not hold otherwise, but only that a case is appealable, under another clause of the statute, when the plantiff’s specifications exceed twenty dollars, or when the plaintiff, to recover, must introduce an exhibit in writing exceeding that sum. Here it is not claimed that the case shows an exhibit within the meaning of the statute, and, as we have seen,, neither the specification nor the sum demanded by the declaration exceeded twenty dollars.
So much for the first claim; now foir the second. The defendant insists that the County Court was bound to- presume, in favor of the regularity of the justice’s allowance, that the plaintiff did present an exhibit exceeding twenty dollars, — to presume, if necessary, that the liquor cure contract was in writing and presented as an exhibit, or that the defendant pleaded -in offset demands exceeding twenty dollars and filed an affi
The justice record not being before us, the bill of exceptions must be taken in one of two ways — either as containing, or as not containing, a complete account of the justice’s proceedings. If the former, the judgment was right for reasons already given. If the latter, it must be presumed, in favor of the judgment of the County Court, that the justice record there shown did profess to recite the whole proceeding, and that it showed no ground for an appeal.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- William A. Chase v. John Bernier
- Status
- Published