39 Vt. 400 | Vt. | 1867
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The statute provides that no appeal shall be allowed in actions “where neither the ad damnum in the plaintiffs’ writ, nor the sum demanded by the declaration, nor the specifications or exhibits of the plaintiff on trial, shall exceed ten dollars, (with some exceptions which do not affect the question in this case.) The action was not made appealable by the ad damnum, for that did not exceed ten dollars. If appealable, it must be so either because the declaration demanded more than ten dollars by alleging the value of the property to be more than that sum, or by reason of the evidence and claim on trial, amounting to a specification or exhibit on trial of more than ten dollars, within the true meaning of the statute. This provision in the statute should be interpreted in the light of the history of the legislation on this subject, and of the decisions of the courts under the several statutes. Section 5 of the act of 1821,
When the statutes were revised in 1839, the revisors did, with the act of 1821, as they did in many other cases, in order to make the statute more explicit, they changed the phraseology and incorporated the substance of the decisions of the supreme court in expounding it, without any intention of changing it. This they did in reference to this statute by providing in terms that no appeal shall be allowed “in actions where neither the ad damnum in the plaintiffs’ writ, nor the sum demanded by the declaration,’ nor the specifications or exhibits of the plaintiffs on trial, shall exceed ten dollars.” The language is the-same in the general statutes. The same construction should be put upon the provisions of the General Statutes as applicable to this question, that was put upon the act of 1821, and the decisions upon, and the practical construction of the act of 1821, are applicable under the present statute. In this view we think the allegation of the value of the property in the declaration, not being descriptive, but rather matter of form, is not a demanding of more than ten dollars by the declaration within the meaning of the statute ; nor is the evidence and claim at the trial a specification of the plaintiffs’ claim in this form of action, within the intent of the statute.
There is a note of a case in 1 Wash. Dig. 91, Smith v. French, not reported, stated to have been decided in Windsor County, 1833. The action was trespass for personal property, and the plaintiffs’ proof was that the cash value of the property was much above ten dollars. The ad damnum was ten dollars and it was held the action was not appealable. It was in all respects like this case except it appears in that case that the property was not alleged in the declaration to be above the value of ten dollars. If proof on the part of the plaintiffs on trial that the value of the property is above ten
The judgment of the county court is affirmed.