Longacre Colliery Co. v. Creel
Longacre Colliery Co. v. Creel
Opinion of the Court
On the 14th day of August, 1901, the plaintiff brought an action before a justice of the peace against the defendant, for the recovery of $100.00, claimed to be due on contract. The c.ase was tried on the 6th day of September, 1901, and, on the next day, judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $81.87. The defendant appealed from the judgment of the justice to the circuit court, and, on the 18th day of December, 1903, judgment was rendered in favor of the defendant for $63.05, and the plaintiff has brought the case here on writ of error. I find copied into the record an account in favor of the plaintiff and against the defendant, showing a balance of $78.45, claimed by the plaintiff, and also an account showing a balance of $63.05, in favor of the defendant against the plaintiff, but there is nothing in the transcript of the justice, or the record made in the circuit court, to show how either of these accounts got into the record of this case. There is nothing in the record to show that they were filed, or, in any way made part of the record.
As will be noted from the statement made, this case is without pleadings. Section 50, chapter,50, of the Code, provides for the rules of procedure before justices, as follows: “The pleadings in tliese courts are, first, the complaint by the plaintiff; second, the answer by the defendant. ” “The pleadings may be oral or in writing; if oral, the substance of them shall be entered by the justice in his docket; if in writing they shall be filed by him and a reference to them be made in the docket. In either case if the parties appear and the defendant make a defense they shall be made up on the return dajr of the summons, unless good cause be shown to the contrary. ”
While pleadings before justices of the peace are informal, and the same strictness is not required as in courts of record, yet, before a case can be properly tried, there should be something before the justice by which the conflicting claims of the parties can be determined. , In this case there was no complaint,, no pleadings made up, and no issue to be tried, either before the justice of the peace or in the circuit court. “A judgment is the conclusion of law from the pleadings and evidence, and, if there are no pleadings, on which to found a judgment, .there can be no judgment.” Morses. Sector, 44 W. Va. 202; and in the case of Riely v. Jarvis, 43 W. Va. 43, Judge BraNNON says: “When the circuit court came to enter judgment on the verdict, if it had looked back on the whole record, it would have seen that that verdict stood on evidence without pleading to support it, and so it could not give judgment for the plaintiff, but ought either to give judgment for defendants non obstante veredicto, because no case was proven against defendants on the pleadings, or award a new trial to let the plaintiff restore his count to receive that evidence.” And, on page 46, he says: “Though you have ever so strong a case for recovery under the evidence, you cannot recover without a declaration to admit that evidence.”
It may be said that the summons could have been treated as a complaint, because it demands the recovery of a certain sum of money, due on contract, and, in the case of O’ Connor v. Dills, 43 W. Va. 56, this view is sustained, wherein the
In order for the defendant to have taken a recovery, there should have been some account'or claim filed by him, upon which to base it. He is entitled, under the statute, to file an off-set, which, when done, is treated as an action brought by him against the plaintiff; but would certainly have no more right to recover against the plaintiff without doing so than the plaintiff would have to take a recoverv against him withhout suit.
For these reasons, the judgment of the circuit court is erroneous; the same is reversed, and this case is remanded to the circuit court, in order that proper pleadings may be filed therein, and the case properly heard and determined.
Reversed.
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