4 Indian Terr. 233 | Ct. App. Ind. Terr. | 1902
The plaintiff, R. S. Dennee, brought his suit before a United States Commissioner in the Southern District of the Indian Territory, and filed a complaint therein on November 8, 1898, as follows: “In the United States Commissioner's Court for the Indian Territory, Southern District of the Indian Territory'', at Ardmore. The petition of R. Stewart Dennee, a citizen of the United States, domiciled in Ardmore, Southern district, Indian Territory, respectfully represents that Nelson H. McCoy, also a citizen of the United States, domiciled in the town, district, and territory aforesaid, is justly and truly indebted to him in the full sum of two hundred and thirty-nine dollars ($239), with judicial interest from the 27th day of April, 1897, for this, to wit, :(1) Petitioner alleges: As an attorney he was employed by the said N. H. McCoy to defend him in suit No. 2,343, entitled ‘J. A. Bivins et al vs N. H. McCoy 'on the docket of the United States court, Indian Territory, Southern District, which said record is made a part hereof, and in all things said defense was successful for the purposes of said McCoy, and the profesfessional services so rendered by said petitioner were well worth ■the sum of seventy-five dollars, and that said sum is due and unpaid. (2) Petitioner further alleges that the said McCoy employed him in his professional capacity to defend him, said McCoy in suit No. 1,993, entitled 'S. M. Stansbury vs J. J. Chandler et al.’ on the docket of the United States Court, Indian Territory, Southern District, which said record is made a part hereof, wherein the sum of $820 and upwards was involved, and the making of. said defense is well worth the sum of 10 per cent, on the amount in question, to wit, the sum of $82, -and that said amount is due and unpaid. (3) Petitioner further alleges that said McCoy employed him in his professional capacity to defend him, said McCoy, in suit No. 2,185, entitled ‘S. M. Stansbury vs J. J. Chandler et al.’ on the docket of the United States Court Southern District, Indian Territory, which said record is made
Section 4 of the act of congress approved March 1, 1895, (chapter 3, Ind. Ter. Ann. St. 1899), and entitled “An act to provide for the appointment of additional judges of the United States Court in the Indian Territory, and for other purposes,” among other things, provides: “The original jurisdiction of such commissioners .as justices of the peace in civil cases, shall in all those classes of cases where jurisdiction is by this act conferred upon the United States Court in the Indian Territory, be exclusive, where the amount or value of the demand, or of the property
■ United States commissioners in the Indian Territory have the same jurisdiction in civil cases that justices of the peace have in the State of Arkansas, and the law governing them is the ■same as the law governing justices of the peace in that state. They have the power to impanel a jury of six men, and no more. It is not for them to instruct the jury on matters of law, nor can they grant a motion for a new trial. Mr. Justice Clayton, in delivering the opinoin of this court in passing upon a similar question in Luce vs Garrett, p.--herein (64 S. W. 613), says: ■“A trial before a jury, even of twelve men, in a commissioner’s court, by this decision, by which we are bound, is not a trial by jury in the sense of the seventh amendment to the constitution of the United States, and, inasmuch as the amount in controversy in this case is more than twenty dollars, it is clear that appellant, having the constitutional right of a trial by'jury, and oniy being ■enabled by statute to secure that right by an appeal, is entitled to his appeal, and thereby to have his case tried by a jury in a court having the power to impanel a constitutional jury. And as this is a constitutional right, it cannot be taken away from him by statute. But the statute of March 1, 1895, makes the amount of the judgment, and not the amount in controversy, as provided by the ■constitution, the test. It is true that the constitution makes the right of a trial by jury depend upon the amount in contro
For the error indicated, the judgment of the lower court is reversed, and the cause remanded.