3 Ala. 607 | Ala. | 1842
It is assigned for error: 1. That the amount in controversy, was beyond the jurisdiction of the Justice of the Peace, and his judgment therefore unauthorised.
■ 2. The Circuit Court erred in overruling the motion to reverse the judgment of the Justice and dismiss the appeal.
3. The first judgment should not have been awarded, nor the second rendered nunc pro tunc.
4.' The judgment is for too much damages.
5. The amended judgment was rendered without notice, and is informal, uncertain and insufficient.
That the judgment of the Justice of the Peace was for a sum beyond his jurisdiction, cannot be controverted, but the act cited, is very explicit to show, that the Circuit Court should not have disposed of the case according to the defendants motion. The defendants however, had a plain remedy; they should have pleaded in abatement, that the suit was instituted before a tx-ibunal having no jurisdiction of the case. This they failed to do, and thus impliedly admitted, that they had been brought before the proper Court.
The question whether the want of jurisdiction does not ap- ‘ pear from the statement filed by the plaintiff in the Circuit Court, is not brought directly to our notice by the assignment of erroi’s; but it may be as well to remark that the plaintiff merely declares for fifty dollars, so that that Court could not know, but that the interest had been remitted even before suit brought. This the plaintiff migftt do, according to previous decisions made here. Nibbs, use, &c. v. Moody, 5 Stewart & Porter’s Rep. 198; King v. Dougherty, 2 Stewart Rep. 487.
It is certainly true, that the Judgment is informal- and, unteeb,-nica!, but we thin* it-substantially sufficient.- The names of ajl the parties in the Circuit Court are stated as a part of the-entry, and the judgment is rendered: against the defendants and the surety in-the appeal bond. This was a .final disposition of the ease according to law, and the-judgment is affirmed.