117 Minn. 206 | Minn. | 1912
This action was brought in the municipal court of the city of Minneapolis to recover the sum of $255, damages alleged to have been
The only question presented is whether the municipal court of the city of Minneapolis has jurisdiction of a counterclaim interposed in an action at law for the recovery of money the amount of which exceeds the sum of $500, the limit of the jurisdiction of the court as fixed by law. We are of the opinion, and so hold, that the question should be answered in the negative.
The statute [Sp. Laws 1889, p. 599, c. 34, § 2] defining the jurisdiction of the court provides: “Said court shall he a court of record and shall have a clerk and a seal, and shall have jurisdiction to hear, try and determine civil actions at law where the amount in controversy does not exceed the sum of five hundred dollars.”
The court is one of inferior or limited authority, with power to exercise the jurisdiction conferred, and no other. It may entertain and determine actions for the recovery of money, where the amount in controversy does not exceed $500. Whether a particular action comes within its jurisdiction is determined by the amount claimed by plaintiff in his complaint, and if within its jurisdiction defendant cannot deprive it thereof by setting up a counterclaim for an amount exceeding its authority. Barber v. Kennedy, 18 Minn. 196 (216). In no case for the recovery of money will the answer of defendant be referred to in determining the question of the court’s jurisdiction of plaintiff’s cause of actiom The action as stated in the complaint controls that question.
Precisely the same rnle applies to defendant where he interposes
We have been cited to no case, save one from New York, where a contrary-conclusion has been reached. Howard v. Buffalo, 176 N. Y. 1, 68 N. E. 66. That case involved the jurisdiction of the county court of New York, and it was held that as an incident of its jurisdiction the court could determine and adjudicate upon a counterclaim, though the amount thereof exceeded its statutory jurisdiction. The decision seems more arbitrary than logical, and is not in harmony with the general trend of authorities elsewhere.
In the case of justice courts, with limited jurisdiction, the courts are practically uniform, so far as our examination of the authorities has extended, in denying the jurisdiction of a counterclaim in excess of the amount fixed by law as the limit of their authority. The analogy between those courts and municipal courts, with a like, though larger in amount, jurisdictional limitation, is real, and not merely apparent. The reason for the rule withholding jurisdiction applies equally to both courts.
The jurisdiction was denied in the following cases: Maxfield v. Johnson, 30 Cal. 546; Seafkas v. Evey, 29 Ill. 178; Clancy v. Neumeyer, 51 N. J. L. 299, 17 Atl. 154; General Electric Co. v. Williams, 123 N. C. 51, 31 S. E. 288; Milliken v. Gardner, 37 Pa. St. 456; Johnson v. Goolsby (Tex. Civ. App.) 121 S. W. 883; Murphy v. Evans, 11 Ind. 517. Nor were the decisions cited predicated upon language like that found in our statutes limiting a justice court counterclaim to a cause of action which could be made the basis of an action before the justice against plaintiff, but rather upon the broad ground that the limitations as to jurisdiction applied to both parties to the action.
The authorities also hold that a counterclaim in excess of the ju
We therefore follow the rule of the authorities cited, and hold that the court below has no jurisdiction of the counterclaim, and the •demurrer thereto should have been sustained. From this it does not follow that defendant is without a remedy. His cause of action, though arising out of the subject-matter of the complaint, is an independent right, and he may maintain a separate action to recover thereon. Jordahl v. Berry, 72 Minn. 119, 75 N. W. 10, 45 L.R.A. 541, 71 Am. St. 469.
Order reversed.