124 P.3d 550 | Nev. | 2005
Lead Opinion
OPINION
In this original writ proceeding, we consider whether Nevada’s Constitution includes a right to a jury trial in small claims court. We conclude that it does not and therefore issue a writ of mandamus directing the district court to vacate its order that reversed a small claims judgment and remanded the matter for a jury trial.
FACTS
Amber Schlauder and Amy Cheung were involved in a two-car accident. Cheung retained counsel and sued Schlauder, filing a small claims “Affidavit of Complaint” in the Las Vegas Township Justice Court. Cheung sought $5,000 for medical expenses.
Schlauder retained counsel and filed a motion to “remove” the case “from small claims court to justice’s court,” so that she could request a jury trial. A small claims referee denied the motion, ruling that removal was not possible because “small claims court” and the justice court are the same court. The referee also found Schlauder liable for Cheung’s medical expenses and court costs.
Schlauder then filed a jury trial demand, arguing that she had a constitutional right to a jury trial to test the legitimacy of Cheung’s medical expenses. The justice of the peace rejected Schlauder’s argument, reviewed Cheung’s medical bills and a letter from Cheung’s treating physician, and awarded Cheung $5,000 and court costs after Schlauder admitted liability.
Schlauder subsequently appealed to the district court, which reversed the judgment and remanded the case for a jury trial, reasoning that Schlauder had a constitutional right to trial by jury. Cheung then filed in this court the instant petition for a writ of mandamus or prohibition, arguing that no constitutional right to a jury trial exists in a small claims action. Schlauder answered the petition.
DISCUSSION
A writ of mandamus is available to compel the performance of an act that the law requires as a duty resulting from an “of
As a writ petition seeks an extraordinary remedy, we will exercise our discretion to consider such a petition only when there is no “plain, speedy and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law”
As recognized by the Justice Court Rules of Civil Procedure (JCRCP), small claims trials are intended to be “informal, with the sole object of dispensing fair and speedy justice between the parties.”
Preliminarily, we note that the lack of a statutory or rule-based mechanism for obtaining a jury trial does not impact a plaintiff. Any jury trial rights held by a plaintiff are not infringed by a bench trial in a small claims action because the plaintiff could have pur
The Nevada Constitution guarantees the right to trial by jury and that the jury trial right shall remain inviolate forever.
When reviewing the historical aspects of jury trial rights, “most states look to the jury trial practice in their own territory or colony before statehood, in addition to the English practice, recognizing that the course of the common law may have been modified by territorial or colonial statute.”
In reaching its decision, the Aftercare court made four observations about the right to a jury trial in justice court at the time of the founding of our great state. First, in 1861, Nevada’s territorial legislature mandated jury trials in justice court for factual issues, without regard to any minimum monetary threshold.
Applying the historical test adopted in Aftercare, we note at the outset that the English common law, as statutorily modified in this country in 1864, provided for juryless small claims tribunals.
And in Nevada, there is a fundamental difference between a justice court civil action, existent at the time of statehood, and small claims court, which was created almost sixty years after the adoption of the Nevada Constitution. Established by our Legislature in 1923,
Thus, the first and second observations made by the court in Aftercare, that a minimum monetary threshold was not historically required for a jury trial in justice court actions, is inapplicable to small claims court. Summary small claims actions like those established in 1923 simply did not exist in Nevada in 1864 and thus were not considered during the adoption of the State Constitution.
The third observation in Aftercare, that the delegates simply assumed that the right to a jury trial existed in justice court actions, can be distinguished from small claims actions because that summary procedure was not considered by the delegates as part of the justice court system at the time of the constitutional convention. The delegates to the constitutional convention in 1864 did not discuss jurisdictional monetary threshold for justice court actions in the context of one’s right to a jury trial in justice court. Rather, the delegates debated excluding from the jurisdiction of the justice
Finally, the fourth observation in Aftercare, that California allowed justice court jury trials without imposing a monetary minimum, cannot logically be applied to the question of whether Nevada’s jury trial right extends to small claims actions. California, however, has rejected jury trial rights in small claims court.
The United States Supreme Court has stated, “It never could be the intention of the constitution to tie up the hands of the legislature, so that no change of jurisdiction could be made, and no regulation even of the right of trial by jury could be had.”
Finally, we point out that this conclusion simply makes sense in light of other proceedings within the justice system. As the dissent in Aftercare noted,
Analogous to the criminal distinction between “petty” and “serious” offenses, the Nevada Legislature established, by the enactment of NRS 73.010, the amount for “small claims” civil actions where “the amount claimed does not exceed $5,000.” This limitation, distinguishing actions with jury trial rights from those without such rights, is based on an objective criterion. To conclude otherwise would mean that in Nevada a defendant sued for one dollar has a right to a jury trial, but a citizen who could be incarcerated for up to six months in jail does not. It would be unreasonable to suggest that the founders of our Constitution intended such an imbalance to exist within Nevada’s justice system. Given the historical debate in this case, we conclude our Constitution should not be read to deny citizens the right to similarly speedy and less expensive trials in small claims civil cases.
CONCLUSION
Historically, there is a distinct difference between justice court and small claims court, and this difference is found in the sole reason for small claims courts’ existence: to provide an avenue for speedy and effective remedies in civil actions involving minimal sums. Like specialized courts under the common law, historically, Nevada small claims court law demands a party be able to bring his case to justice quickly and affordably. Therefore, we hold that a jury trial right does not exist under our Constitution in actions filed in small claims court. Accordingly, we grant this petition and direct the clerk of this court to issue a writ of mandamus directing
NRS 34.160.
See Round Hill Gen. Imp. Dist. v. Newman, 97 Nev. 601, 637 P.2d 534 (1981).
NRS 34.320.
NRS 34.170; NRS 34.330.
State, Div. Child & Fam. Servs. v. Dist. Ct., 120 Nev. 445, 449, 92 P.3d 1239, 1242 (2004).
Nev. Const. art. 6, § 6; Lippis v. Peters, 112 Nev. 1008, 1010-11, 921 P.2d 1248, 1249-50 (1996).
JCRCP 96. See generally Nancy M. King, Annotation, Small Claims: Jury Trial Rights in, and on Appeal From, Small Claims Court Proceeding, 70 A.L.R. 4th 1119, 1121 (1989) (“[T]he basic purpose of small claims courts is to provide a less costly and protracted summary procedure for the litigation of claims not exceeding a specified, relatively low maximum amount. Thus, certain legal technicalities which may encumber an ordinary proceeding are generally dispensed with in a small claims proceeding”).
Compare NRS ch. 67 (trial by jury), with NRS ch. 73 (small claims).
Aftercare of Clark County v. Justice Ct., 120 Nev. 1, 4, 82 P.3d 931, 932 (2004); see also State ex rel. McCool v. Small Claims Court, 532 P.2d 1191, 1194 (Wash. Ct. App. 1975) (stating that a small claims plaintiff “waives the [jury trial] right by his choice of the forum”); Legislation, Small Claims Courts, 34 Colum. L. Rev. 932, 939-40 (1934); Comment, Courts: Jurisdiction of Small-Claims Courts, 11 Cal. L. Rev. 276, 279 (1923); e.g., Robb v. Matthews Buick-Pontiac, Inc., 516 N.E.2d 1110 (Ind. Ct. App. 1987).
See, e.g., JCRCP 76A (stating that “[a] case appealed must not be tried anew”).
Nev. Const. art. 1, § 3.
E.g., Hudson v. City of Las Vegas, 81 Nev. 677, 409 P.2d 245 (1965); Wainwright v. Bartlett, Judge, 51 Nev. 170, 271 P. 689 (1928).
120 Nev. 1, 4, 82 P.3d 931, 932 (2004).
Id. at 6, 82 P.3d at 933.
Crouchman v. Superior Court, 755 P.2d 1075, 1078 (Cal. 1988).
Aftercare, 120 Nev. at 5, 82 P.3d at 933; accord Margreth Barrett, The Constitutional Right to Jury Trial: A Historical Exception for Small Monetary Claims, 39 Hastings L.J. 125, 130-33 (1987); Kirkland v. Blaine County Medical Center, 4 P.3d 1115, 1118 (Idaho 2000); People ex rel. Daley v. Joyce, 533 N.E.2d 873, 878 (Ill. 1988); Ela v. Pelletier, 495 A.2d 1225, 1228 (Me. 1985); Bell v. State, 176 N.W. 544, 544 (Neb. 1920); Gonzales v.
Aftercare, 120 Nev. at 5, 82 P.3d at 933.
Id. at 8, 82 P.3d at 935.
Id.
Id. at 6, 82 P.3d at 934.
Id.
Id.
Id. at 7-8, 82 P.3d at 935.
See Roscoe Pound, Organization of Courts 47-52 (1940).
John Proffatt, A Treatise on Trial by Jury § 99, at 142 (1877), quoted in Wings of the World v. Small Claims Court, 987 P.2d 642, 644 (Wash. Ct. App. 1999).
Pound, supra note 24, at 30-32, 41-42, and 43-46.
1923 Nev. Stat., ch. 149, § 1, at 260-64 (approving a small claims court in Nevada).
NRS 73.010.
JCRCP 96.
JCRCP 92; JCRCP 95.
NRS 73.040.
NRS 73.020.
JCRCP 96.
JCRCP97.
See 1861 Nev. Laws, ch. 103, § 527, at 404; id. §§ 648-50, at 424.
Crouchman v. Superior Court, 755 P.2d 1075, 1077 (Cal. 1988).
Iowa Nat. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Mitchell, 305 N.W.2d 724, 727 (Iowa 1981), cited with approval in Crouchman, 775 P.2d at 1080.
Capital Traction Company v. Hof, 174 U.S. 1, 27 (1899).
See Barrett, supra note 16, at 159.
O’Banion v. Simpson, 44 Nev. 188, 193, 191 P. 1083, 1084 (1920).
120 Nev. at 12, 82 P.3d at 938 (Gibbons, J., dissenting).
Blanton v. North Las Vegas Mun. Ct., 103 Nev. 623, 633, 748 P.2d 494, 500 (1987), aff’d sub nom. Blanton v. North Las Vegas, 489 U.S. 538 (1989).
State v. Smith, 99 Nev. 806, 809, 672 P.2d 631, 633 (1983).
Id.
Blanton, 489 U.S. at 542 (citing Baldwin v. New York, 399 U.S. 66, 69 (1970) (plurality opinion)).
Id. (quoting Baldwin, 399 U.S. at 73 (plurality opinion)).
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
Although I concur in the majority opinion’s holding that a jury trial is not required in small claims proceedings, I write separately to address my reasons for distinguishing this case from our decision in Aftercare of Clark County v. Justice Court.
In Aftercare, we addressed whether a local justice court policy violated Article 1, Section 3 of the Nevada Constitution. We concluded that it did and that the Nevada Constitution guaranteed a right to trial by jury in justice court civil actions regardless of the amount in controversy.
We are now asked to determine whether litigants in a small claims proceeding are entitled to a jury trial, either initially or on appeal, in a trial de novo. I conclude that they are not and that the framers of the Nevada Constitution did not contemplate otherwise.
There is a distinction between a formal civil action and an informal small claims proceeding, and this distinction was recognized at common law, both in England and the United States, before the Nevada Constitution was adopted in 1864.
I distinguish this case from Aftercare on four primary grounds: (1) the records of Nevada’s constitutional debates, (2) the history of small claims proceedings in England and the United States, (3) the California Supreme Court’s interpretation of an identical jury trial provision in the California Constitution, and (4) the 1978 amendments to the judicial article of the Nevada Constitution.
Beginning with our constitutional debates, the drafters of the Nevada Constitution envisioned that English common law, as modified by the practices in the United States at the time of the adop
The representatives to Nevada’s constitutional convention were familiar with the common-law history of a civil jury trial.
The objection suggested by the gentleman from Washoe arises, possibly, from the difficulty of determining what constitutes a jury. Under the Constitution of the United States, and under the Constitutions of most of the States — probably every State in the Union where the right of trial by jury is provided for . . . resort must be had for construction to what is understood by the common law right of jury trial. . . . [I]t would be necessary, under a constitutional provision simply declaring that the right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate, that resort should be had to that common law rule in order to ascertain and determine what number constitutes a jury.8
Our constitutional drafters clearly intended that the right to a jury trial be interpreted with reference to common law, and jury trials did not exist under common law for small claims cases.
In addition, when they intended to depart from the common law, the drafters included express language to that effect in Nevada’s Constitution.
Finally, the delegates who drafted Nevada’s Constitution were concerned with preserving a system that afforded litigants an informal, cost-effective method of handling small claims. In debating why justice court jurisdiction should not include title to real property, Mr. Charles E. DeLong stated:
Justices’ Courts are not Courts of Record; they are courts instituted for the trial of cases involving small sums of money,*877 or damages in small amounts, and their proceedings are not surrounded with that degree of dignity and solemnity which causes the judgments of a court to be referred to subsequently for the matters determined therein. It is a court where the pleadings need not be made in writing, where the allegations and answers may be stated orally, and not placed on any record, and where nearly all the formalities which are observed in the higher courts may be dispensed with.11
Mr. DeLong then expressed his objections to expanding either the monetary jurisdiction of the justice courts or their substantive jurisdiction because he feared justices of the peace might not have the requisite learning to handle more complex cases.
Although delegate Lloyd Frizell commented that people would have a right to a jury trial in all cases,
I see no reason why, if a justice is capable of deciding in an action of assumpsit, he may not also take the testimony and balance evenly the scales of justice in an action of this kind. If he can decide justly between man and man in the one case, he can in the other.14
Of course one can argue that by not including a monetary threshold, especially given the existing example of the United States Constitution’s twenty-dollar limit, the drafters intended that parties have some method of obtaining a jury trial at some stage of a small claims case. But the debates do not support such a conclusion, and one can equally argue that the framers intended no greater right than those granted under the United States Constitution. In light of the drafters’ concern for preserving informal and cost-effective methods of resolving monetarily small disputes, I submit a more harmonious reading is to require jury trials only in civil actions, which are already more complex and subject to additional costs and fees.
The long history of small claims proceedings at common law supports the conclusion that jury trials are not required in any stage of small claims proceedings. In the mid-1800s, the threshold for ju-
It is undisputed that, under English common law in 1864, cases involving small monetary claims were tried by judges in informal, inexpensive proceedings.
While Aftercare contains some language suggesting that territorial law altered English common law,
The territorial statutes governing jury trials discussed in Aftercare
There appears to be no equivalent in the territorial laws to our modem small claims proceeding. Actions involving claims for money could be commenced formally in writing or informally upon an oral statement.
Based upon the history of small claims proceedings in England and the United States as well as the provisions of the territorial laws relating to trial of civil action cases, I conclude that the framers of the Nevada Constitution did not contemplate eliminating the jury trial distinction between civil actions and small claims proceedings, and the Legislature was free to create a nonjury small claims trial and appellate proceedings without violating the Nevada Constitution.
In addition to the history of small claims proceedings, another rale of constitutional construction is helpful in resolving this issue. When a constitutional provision or statute is taken from another state, we look to the construction given that provision by the originating state when construing the Nevada equivalent provision.
Nevada’s Constitution, particularly its judicial articles, were taken nearly word for word from the California Constitution.
The California Supreme Court has stated that the California Constitution “preserves the right to a jury in those actions in which there was a right to a jury trial at common law at the time the Constitution was first adopted.”
The principle established by the English common law as it existed in 1850 was that small claims, as legislatively defined within limits reasonably related to the value of money and the cost of litigation in the contemporary economy, were to be resolved expeditiously, without a jury and without recourse to appeal.
. . . [W]e conclude that [defendant] has neither a constitutional nor a statutory right to jury trial in this proceeding.33
In reaching its conclusion, the court also referenced section 592 of the California Code of Civil Procedure, which provided that “an issue of fact must be tried by a jury.”
Given that Nevada’s constitutional drafters were so heavily influenced by practices and procedures in California and the California Constitution, I agree with the majority’s application of Crouchman to our construction of Nevada’s jury trial provision. The creation of a small claims proceeding that does not provide for a jury trial, either through a trial de novo or some method of transfer to a civil docket, does not violate Nevada’s Constitution.
In addition to the reasons set forth above, I believe that the court should also consider the 1978 amendments to Nevada’s Constitu
Passage of this proposed constitutional amendment would remove the $300 maximum limit of jurisdiction for Nevada’s justice courts and permit the legislature to adjust the limits as changing times may require. On the assumption that the legislature would raise this limit, established in 1864, to a realistic and modern figure, more matters could be heard at the less formal and less expensive level of the peoples’ court.38
Nonjury small claims proceedings had existed in justice courts since 1923. The Legislature and the voters in 1978 intended to preserve this forum, while giving the Legislature greater flexibility to adjust justice court jurisdiction. The statement is consistent with common-law practice in 1864, utilizing less expensive, informal nonjury proceedings to resolve small claim civil disputes.
For the reasons cited herein, I conclude that the Nevada Constitution does not require jury trials in small claims actions, either initially, on trial de novo or through some type of docket transfer. There is nothing inconsistent with treating justice court civil actions differently from small claims proceedings — this is the issue specifically left undecided in Aftercare. I concur with the majority that the trial court acted improperly in ordering the justice of the peace to conduct a jury trial in a small claims action and would grant the petition.
120 Nev. 1, 82 P.3d 931 (2004).
Id. at 8, 82 P.3d at 935.
Margreth Barrett, The Constitutional Right to Jury Trial: A Historical Exception for Small Monetary Claims, 39 Hastings L.J. 125, 129 (1987).
Id. at 142-44.
Id. at 144.
Aftercare, 120 Nev. at 4, 82 P.3d at 932.
Debates of Proceedings of the Nevada State Constitutional Convention of 1864, at 57, 198 (Andrew J. Marsh off. rep., 1866) [hereinafter Report of the Debates] (statements of delegates Cornelius M. Brosnan and J. Neely Johnson).
Id. at 198 (statement of delegate J. Neely Johnson).
Id. at 53-58 (debate regarding departure from common-law rule for unanimous verdicts in civil cases to new rule of three-fourth’s majority verdict).
Id.
Id. at 679-70.
Id. at 680.
Id. at 684.
Id. at 683.
1 Sir William Holdsworth, A History of English Law 192 (7th ed. 1956); Barrett, supra note 3, at 143.
Barrett, supra note 3, at 154.
Id.
U.S. Const. amend. VII.
Holdsworth, supra note 15, at 186-87.
Aftercare, 120 Nev. at 6, 82 P.3d at 934.
1861 Nev. Laws, ch. 1, § 1, at 1.
Aftercare, 120 Nev. at 6 n.24, 82 P.3d at 934 n.24.
1861 Nev. Laws, ch. 103, § 155, at 339.
The provision is not located in Title XVI, which is captioned “Of Proceedings in Civil Cases in Justice Courts.” Id. at 394.
Id. § 181, at 344.
Id. §§ 182-83, at 344.
C & K Engineering v. Amber Steel Co., Inc., 587 P.2d 1136, 1139-41 (Cal. 1978).
1861 Nev. Laws, ch. 103, §§ 511-12, at 401.
Harvey v. Dist. Ct., 117 Nev. 754, 763, 32 P.3d 1263, 1269 (2001).
Report of the Debates, supra note 7, at 17 (statement of delegate J. Neely Johnson).
Cal. Const. art. I, § 3 (1849) (replaced 1879).
Crouchman v. Superior Court, 755 P.2d 1075, 1079 (Cal. 1988).
Id. at 1080-81.
Id. at 1078.
Aftercare, 120 Nev. at 6 n.24, 82 P.3d at 934 n.24.
Crouchman, 755 P.2d at 1078.
Hearing on A.J.R. 36 Before Assembly Judiciary Comm., 58th Leg. (Nev., February 16, 1977).
1978 General Election Sample Ballot, Argument for Passage of Ballot Question No. 2, at 6.
The real party in interest did not argue below, and therefore I do not address, whether the $5,000 limit on small claims actions is equivalent to fifty pounds or twenty dollars in 1864.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
The majority opinion has fashioned a result that appears to be both a practical and politically popular solution. Unfortunately, it completely fails to recognize the Nevada Constitution’s unqualified guaranty that “the right of trial by Jury shall be secured to all.”
The Nevada Constitution guarantees the right to a jury trial and states that the right shall always remain inviolate,
And third, the small claims procedure is part of our justice courts, and justice courts are created and bound by the Nevada Constitution. The small claims procedure authorized in 1923 is an informal process to be used in justice courts and handled by justices of the peace. The small claims procedure exists today primarily in the Justice Court Rules of Civil Procedure,
The majority opinion baldly declares that “[gjiven the historical examination of our Constitution, we hold that courts added to the governmental and judicial structure after the Constitution’s ratification in 1864 do not implicate the right to jury trials absent specific legislative enumeration.’ ’ This reasoning would mean that if the Legislature creates a construction defect process to be handled
In fact, Article 6, Section 1 of the Nevada Constitution expressly provides that “[t]he Judicial power of this State shall be vested in a court system, comprising a Supreme Court, District Courts, and Justices of the Peace.” This provision goes on to state that “[t]he Legislature may also establish, as part of the system, Courts for municipal purposes only in incorporated cities and towns.” This constitutional provision does not allow the Legislature to create any other types of courts. The creation of small claims courts in justice court was either the addition of an informal process to settle minor complaints or was the illegal creation of a court outside that permitted by the Nevada Constitution. Obviously, the answer is the former.
In Aftercare, a five-justice majority concluded “that the Nevada constitutional guaranty of trial by jury covers justice court civil actions even when small amounts are in controversy.”
Our Aftercare decision also pointed out that Nevada’s territorial legislature crafted a jury trial guaranty without any minimum mon
In Aftercare, we stated that when states construe the jury trial right, ‘ ‘most states look to the jury trial practice in their own territory or colony prior to statehood.”
Finally, the concurrence concludes that we should be influenced by the 1978 amendments to Nevada’s Constitution. It states that because nonjury small claims proceedings had existed in justice courts since 1923, it was the intent of the Legislature and the voters to preserve this forum. However, one key fact is forgotten — that in 1978 all justice court actions, not just small claims proceedings, were nonjury actions. The constitutional right to a jury trial in justice court was not enforced until some twenty-six years later, in
One final point must be made regarding the result produced today by the majority and that reached in Aftercare over a year ago. The majority and concurring opinions have now created a situation where a plaintiff in justice court with a claim under $5,000 can elect to file the action on the justice court civil docket and request a jury trial pursuant to Aftercare. But a defendant sued in a small claims proceeding in the very same type of action in justice court has no such right to demand a jury trial. This results in treating a plaintiff and a defendant unequally, providing one with the election to have a jury trial and the other without. The United States and Nevada Constitutions require equal protection under the law for all parties,
The majority opinion ignores two fundamental legal concepts: the difference between a constitutional provision and a statute, and that the creation of a small claims process to be handled by justice courts was not the creation of a new court, but rather the authorization of the use of an informal process in justice court for cases under $5,000. While the majority opinion opines that there is a difference between a justice court civil action and small claims court, we do know that they are both part of the justice courts and that justice courts, whatever the specific court dockets or procedures within them, are subject to the Nevada Constitution. The majority opinion has reached a pragmatic result, but ignores the Nevada Constitution in the process.
I dissent for the reasons stated.
Nev. Const, art. 1, § 3.
Id.
See JCRCP 88-100.
NRS 73.010.
Aftercare of Clark County v. Justice Court, 120 Nev. 1, 8, 82 P.3d 931, 935 (2004).
Id. at 6, 82 P.3d at 933.
See Capital Traction Company v. Hof, 174 U.S. 1, 17, 22, 25 (1899) (listing state statutes that authorized a jury trial at some stage of a small claims proceeding).
Aftercare, 120 Nev. at 6-7, 82 P.3d at 934.
Id. at 4, 82 P.3d at 932.
Id. at 5, 82 P.3d at 933.
Margreth Barrett, The Constitutional Right to Jury Trial: A Historical Exception for Small Monetary Claims, 39 Hastings L.J. 125, 145-50 (1987) (discussing the historical right to a jury in American colonies and territories during the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries and describing how the colonies and territories did not allow small monetary claims to be tried by a jury). The very title of this article, which the concurrence cites as support for her position, describes a history of the jury trial right that is vastly dissimilar from Nevada’s.
U.S. Const, amend. XTV, § 1; Nev. Const, art. 4, § 21.
It appears that no court that has concluded that jury trials are not required in small claims actions has been confronted with the discrepancy between plaintiffs and defendants that now exists in Nevada. A majority of courts have concluded that denying jury trials to small claims defendants violates the constitutional right to a jury trial or to due process unless there is some mechanism for obtaining a jury trial in another tribunal. E.g., Windholz v. Willis, 573 P.2d 1100 (Kan. Ct. App. 1977); Ela v. Pelletier, 495 A.2d 1225 (Me. 1985); Flour City Fuel Transfer Co. v. Young, 185 N.W. 934 (Minn. 1921); North Central Services, Inc. v. Hafdahl, 625 P.2d 56 (Mont. 1981); Kneeland v. Matz, 388 N.W.2d 890 (S.D. 1986); State Ex Rel. McCool v. Small Claims Court, 532 P.2d 1191 (Wash. Ct. App. 1975).
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I join Justice Rose in his dissent. I write separately to address a comment made by the Chief Justice in her separate concurrence with the majority. The concurrence concludes that the framers of the Nevada Constitution did not intend to grant jury trials in small
Only the people of this state may change the Nevada Constitution. The majority today has usurped this critical prerogative.
120 Nev. 1, 8, 82 P.3d 931, 935 (2004).