27 Vt. 297 | Vt. | 1855
By the court:
This is an application for a writ of mandamus requiring the defendant, a justice of the peace, to certify in his record of the trial of a cause, in which the petitioner was defendant, that the defendant plead a bona fide offset in the action, so that he can maintain an appeal.
It is admitted in the return of the justice to the alternative writ, or rather his answer to the petition, which the court require him to make, upon oath, that a claim was plead in offset, in the trial of the action, and that he omitted to certify that fact in the copies, because he did not regard it as a bona fide offset, but one settled between the parties. The proper way, undoubtedly, was to certify the facts, as they occurred in his court. But the thing having come to this issue, and this court having a discretion to exercise in the matter, will not issue the writ, to require an amendment, which cannot avail the party. And especially would we decline to do this, in a case, where the matter, bona fide in controversy, was so utterly insignificant as the value of a single cheese, between two and three dollars. For from all the testimony in this case, it is obvious to us, that there is no other bona fide matter in dispute in the case. Everything else was paid, at the time of delivery, and never became a proper matter of account, or if it did, for a time, was folly closed, at the time of the delivery of the last parcel of cheese, except this single cheese, so that neither the other cheese, or the