69 F. 421 | D. Alaska | 1895
This cáse comes up by writ of review prosecuted by said plaintiff for the purpose of testing the proceedings and judgment of said commissioner’s court in the certain action therein tried in which said Charles Forrest was plaintiff and said William M. Bennett was defendant. In that action the complaint charges that the defendant is indebted to plaintiff on a balance due for wages in the sum of $198 for labor and services performed by plaintiff for defendant, at his special instance and request, between the 3d day of May, 1893, and the 22d day of July, 1893. This complaint was filed August 7, 1893, and on the 16th day of the same month the defendant filed his answer, in which he admits that the plaintiff did perform labor and services for him at his quartz mill and mine, situated in Silver Bow Basin, Alaska, for' the term of 70 days, at $4 per day, but denies that any settlement in relation to the same was ever had, or any payment for said services made, for the reason that, while the plaintiff was so employed'by'defendant in and about said quartz mill and mine, he, in company with others, unlawfully and without authority did on or about the 24th day of July, 1893, take all the gold and amalgam, of the value of $1,000, then cleaned up and contained in said quartz mill, and appropriated the same to his own use. The answer then alleges that plaintiff has not accounted to defendant nor
“Motion denied on the ground that the defendant is limited in his counterclaim to the jurisdiction of this court in the sum of $250.00, and, if more is claimed by his counterclaim than the jurisdiction of this court, his remedy.is by suit against the plaintiff, and cannot be adjudicated by this court. The defendant offers no evidence, ¿nd, after reading and considering the plaintiff’s complaint and all the pleadings in this action, the court finds that defendant is indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of one hundred and ninety-eight dollars. Therefore, it is adjudged and determined that the plaintiff, Charles Forrest, do have and recover from defendant, William M. Bennett, the sum of one hundred and ninety-eight dollars damages and five dollars costs.”
The organic act providing a civil government for Alaska confers upon United States commissioners the civil jurisdiction of a justice of the peace in Oregon, and that is limited to $250 in actions for the recovery of money of damages. In the case at bar the plaintiff brought his action regularly by filing his complaint against defendant for a balance due him for wages in the sum of $198. This was clearly within the jurisdiction of the commissioner’s court. A summons was issued and served, and the defendant ap
“The motion to dismiss this action in the court below was without merit, and was properly overruled. The plaintiff claimed in his complaint that the value of the property in’controversy was $365; the defendant, that it was of the value of $1,060. In this class of cases the county court has jurisdiction where the claim or subject of controversy does not exceed the value of $500. Hill’s Ann.Code Or. § 894 [868]. Of course, by simply alleging in the answer that the value was greater than $500, the jurisdiction of the court could not be ousted. The plaintiff’s action on the face of the complaint appeared to be within the jurisdiction of the court. If jurisdiction existed in fact, no difference what the answer contained, the plaintiff had a right to a trial, and in such case the question of jurisdiction could not be summarily determined on motion.”
Though not directly in point, I think the principle of law announced in this case applies with great force to the one at bar. In an action in a commissioner’s court, a plaintiff is entitled to the benefit of the provisional remedies of arrest, attachment, and delivery of personal property claimed in an action; but, if a defendant could oust its jurisdiction and procure the dismissal of the action by trumping up a fictitious counterclaim or inflating the value of the property involved, these remedies would be delusive and vain. In this case the defendant had the right to set up the counterclaim that he did in his answer. “The defendant may set forth, by answer, as many defences and counterclaims as he may have.” Hill’s Ann.Code Or. § 73 (72). It is true that the value of this counterclaim as alleged exceeds the amount for which the court could render judgment, but that fact should not prevent him from setting it up, and if put in issue by the reply, as it was in this case, then he had the right to go to trial, and if his counterclaim had been established in the amount alleged by the preponderance of evidence it would have defeated the plaintiff’s cause of action, and judgment to the amount of the jurisdiction of the court — $250—should have been given to defendant. In