227 P. 599 | N.M. | 1924
[1] 1. The justice courts of this state possess no equitable jurisdiction. The exclusive, original equity jurisdiction is vested in the district courts of the state. Section 13, art. 6, Constitution. Justice courts are created by the Constitution with jurisdiction limited to actions for debt, where the sum involved is $200 or less. Section 26, art. 6, Constitution. By this constitutional provision, actions at law for the recovery of debt are contemplated. No equitable jurisdiction is thereby vested in the justice court. It is vested exclusively in the several district courts of the state.
[2] 2. So, if the cause of action was one in equity, manifestly the justice court had no jurisdiction to proceed with the trial, and the district court therefore acquired none by virtue of the appeal. It has been *19
held twice by this court that, if a justice court has no jurisdiction in the first instance of the subject-matter involved in a cause of action, the district court acquires none upon appeal, except perhaps to dismiss the cause and render judgment for costs. Pointer v. Lewis,
After the equitable feature of the case was abandoned, there remained in the complaint ample facts to constitute a cause of action at law upon the notes. Clearly the justice court was clothed with jurisdiction over this cause of action, unless by joining the equitable phase it became impossible for that court to entertain such jurisdiction even after the foreclosure was dismissed. Upon this, we think the abandonment of the equitable feature which eliminated everything of an equitable nature, left remaining facts constituting an action at law over which the justice court had and rightly exercised jurisdiction in the first instance, and that the district court acquired the same jurisdiction upon appeal. A case which is similar in principle to this one is Anderson v. Red Metal Mining Co.,
"The contention is made that it is manifest from the complaint filed in the justice's court that the relief sought by the plaintiff is equitable in its nature, and that, since under the Constitution (art. 8, § 21) a justice's court has no equity jurisdiction, it had no power to proceed with the trial, hence the jurisdiction of the district court did not attach by virtue of the appeal, in that its jurisdiction on appeal is the same as that of the justice's court. It has frequently been held by this court that, if the justice's court has no jurisdiction of the subject-matter in a particular case, the district court on appeals acquires none, except to dismiss the appeal and render judgment for costs. Gassert v. Bogk,
[3] The principles there declared are controlling here. There the justice court sustained a demurrer holding that it had no jurisdiction to grant equitable relief, but retained jurisdiction of the case to determine the issues of law remaining after the equitable feature had been eliminated. Here the plaintiff, conceiving that he had fallen into error in the belief that the justice court could grant him a foreclosure of his mortgage lien, abandoned that part of his case and proceeded with the law features remaining. The similarity in the two cases is that in each instance an equitable feature was originally injected into the case but afterwards eliminated and the cause retained to be tried upon the law features remaining; the only difference being in the method adopted to cast out the equitable feature. Here it was removed by the plaintiff's abandonment of it, while in the Montana case it was eliminated by the court's sustaining a demurrer. The justice court had jurisdiction to determine the issues at law which remained after the foreclosure feature was abandoned and ceased to be an issue. And the fact that the plaintiff prayed for a foreclosure of the mortgage and that prayer remained in the pleading does not detract from this conclusion, because the prayer is no part of a pleading, and cannot be considered to determine the nature of the cause of action nor the relief to which a party is entitled. Morgan v. Doughton,
[4] 3. As we have previously suggested, according to its face and tenor, the second note had not matured at the time the suit was filed or at the time judgment was rendered in the justice court. To accelerate its maturity, the appellee relied upon the following provision contained in the chattel mortgage:
"If all the conditions herein expressed shall be complied with this mortgage shall be void, but if the first party shall fail to pay any part of the indebtedness hereby secured when due, or shall fail to comply with the conditions herein expressed, or any of them, or if from any cause the holder thereof shall deem themselves insecure, then all the indebtedness hereby secured shall at the option of the holders thereof become due. * * *"
The authorities dealing with the effect of such a provision in a mortgage, securing a series of notes maturing at different times, are in hopeless conflict, as there may be found among them variant and divergent views. 8 C.J. p. 199; 3 R.C.L. § 436, p. 413. It is held by a very respectable array of courts that such a provision matures the then unmatured notes belonging to the series for the purpose of foreclosure and to exhaust the mortgage security only, and not for the purpose of securing a personal judgment; that the remedy of foreclosure alone is ripened upon such a default (McClelland v. Bishop,
[5] 4. And the conclusion which we have reached with respect to the effect of a provision of this kind in a mortgage does not render such notes nonnegotiable. By the weight of authority, it does not deprive them of their negotiability. Holliday State Bank v. Hoffman,
The judgment of the lower court being correct, should be affirmed, and it is so ordered.
PARKER, C.J., and BOTTS, J., concur.