44 W. Va. 546 | W. Va. | 1898
At the threshold we are asked to consider this case no" further than to say that this Court has no jurisdiction of this appeal. Faulconer brought this suit in equity to enforce against a lot of land a mechanic’s lien for building a house upon it, and obtained a decree against it for seventy-five dollars and fifty-six cents, subjecting it to sale. After this decree, Mrs. Stinson, the defendant, filed a petition stating that Faulconer had assigned to one Graham a judgment held by Faulconer against one McCreery, which was worthless from insolvency when assigned, and that Graham had assigned it to her, and claiming that she had right to recourse it upon Faulconer by reason of his liability to Graham as assignor, and praying that it be allowed to her, and set-off against the said seventy-five dollars and fifty-six cents which had been decreed to Faulconer against her and her lot. The petition claimed the judgment to amount to one hundred and five dollars. The decree denied all relief on the petition. Clearly, the decree for seventy-five dollars and fifty-six cents would not give jurisdiction, though land was decreed to sale. It was simply a pecuniary decree less than one hundred dollars. The fact that land is to be sold does not make it one involving title to land, as the debtor can release it by payment. McClaugherty v. Morgan, 36 W. Va. 193, (14 S. E. 992). Where the plaintiff appeals in a controversy merely pecuniary, not what he recovers, but what he claims in his declaration or bill, determines the amount on appeal; but where the defendant appeals it is not the sum sought to be recovered from him, but the sum recovered, that tests the jurisdiction. Arnold v. Lewis County Court, 38 W. Va. 142, (18 S. E. 476); Machine Works v. Craig, 18 W Va. 559; 1 Enc. Pl. & Prac. 731, 732; 1 Bart. Law Prac. 46; Morrison v. Goodwin, 28 W. Va. 328; Rymer v. Hawkins, 18 W. Va. 309. But the defendant filed a set-off, and as to it she was plaintiff, and her right to appeal is tested by its amount. 1 Enc. PI. & Prac. 734. It makes no difference that the claim of the
It is argued that, by filing a setoff, the defendant acknowledged the plaintiff’s demand of seventy-five dollars and fifty-six cents, especially as that demand had been. made final by decree, and therefore the extent of the grievance of the defendant is the difference between the seventy-five dollars and fifty-six cents, and one hundred and five dollars, the amount of the set-off. This could be said if the decree had applied the set-off to discharge the seventy-five dollars and fifty-six cents, and given no surplus to defendant, and she had appealed. But she is ag-grieved, if at all, by refusal to discharge the seventy-five dollars and fifty-six cents, plus the balance of the set-off; in other words, the whole set-off. She lost every cent of her set-off: 1 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 735, note 1, citing Carne v. Russ, 152 U. S. 250, (14 Sup. Ct. 578). Just now I recall Dickey v. Smith, 42 W. Va. 805, (26 S. E. 373), holding that where a set-off is wholly disallowed its amount determines the jurisdiction of this Court. It is also argued that Graham paid only fifty-five dollars and eighty cents for the assignment of the judgment, and Mrs. Stinson could recover only that sum from Faulconer on recourse, it being less than one hundred dollars. • But, as stated above, that is only developed in the outcome, upon inquiry, while the claim of Mrs. Stinson under her set-off is one hundred and five dollars. It is that very question, whether her claim to recover one hundred and five dollars is tenable or not, which she asks this Court to determine. Therefore we conclude that we have jurisdiction, and therefore must investigate the merits of the appeal.
I will not consider the question whether the decree against Mrs. Stinson for seventy-five dollars and fifty-six cents for the mechanic’s lien is right or wrong, because, though wrong, it could not be reversed, being an errorless
Affirmed.