Branger v. Buttrick
Branger v. Buttrick
Opinion of the Court
We have nothing before us but the pleadings, verdict and judgment, and the only question presented or which can be upon the record, is whether the counter-claim set up in the answer of the defendant Hill, and which was nob replied to or traversed by the plaintiff, was allowed by the jury or deducted from the amount for which they found a verdict for the plaintiff, upon the cause of action set forth in the complaint. The jury found for the plaintiff and assessed his damages at the sum of $16,470. The judgment recites that “the defendants having in the answer of Edward J. Hill, one of said defendants, set up a counter-claim amounting to less than the claim of the plaintiff, to wit, for the sum of fifteen hundred dollars,” thereupon the issue of fact was tried by a jury who found for the plaintiff and assessed his damages, etc.; and it then proceeds to adjudge that the plaintiff recover, etc., “the sum of fifteen thousand four hundred and seventy dollars, the excess oj Ms, the said plaintiff's, claim over the counter-claim of the said defendant," with costs and disbursements of the action.
The first count of the complaint was for $3,600, with interest from the 16th of March, 1867. The interest upon that sum from the day of trial and judgment, April 7, 1870, would be $745, and the whole sum claimed in that count, $4,245. The second cause of action was for $12,000 and interest from the same date, March 16, 1867, which with the interest, $2,555, amounted at the date of trial to $14,555. The sum total claimed by the plaintiff in his complaint at the time of trial was $18,800, at which sum, according to the allegations of the complaint, the jury might have assessed his damages, less the counter-claim of $1,500 and interest which the plaintiff had admitted by failure to reply. The counter-claim drew interest from
By the Court. — It is so ordered.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Branger v. Buttrick, and another
- Status
- Published