112 Iowa 101 | Iowa | 1900
The real point in controversy is whether the counterclaim pleaded in the justice’s court required the district court to take jurisdiction of the case upon appeal, and to proceed to hear and determine the same- The counterclaim, after alleging negligence on the part of the plaintiff in permitting the horse to run at large, admits the killing, and further alleges that plaintiff refused to remove the carcass from the right of way, and that the company was obliged to and did remove the same”; and adds, “for which service defendant claims of plaintiff the sum of thirty dollars.” The last clause of this pleading-amounts to nothing more than a prayer for the sum therein stated, if, indeed, it may be held to amount to that. Nowhere is the amount of defendant’s damage alleged. If it bo conceded that sufficient is alleged to support a recovery, it could, under this pleading, be nominal only. That the amount in controversy is to be determined by the facts alleged in the pleading, and not by the prayer for judgment, is well settled. Cooper v. Dillon, 56 Iowa, 367; Nash v. Beckman, 86 Iowa, 249; Schullz v. Holbrook, 86 Iowa, 569. While nicety of ¡heading is not required before a justice of the peace, the pleadings are required to be substantially the same as in the district court. Glidden v. Higbee, 31 Iowa, 379. The respondent found as a matter of fact that the counterclaim was a sham, and “hied for the express purpose of avoiding-the effect of the statute limiting’ the right of appeal from a justice’s court, and with no intent or purpose to present a claim for trial or adjudication in either court.” It will bo remembered that this precise question was presented to the