There is no such thing as an action for claim and delivery. Under our Constitution, Art. IV, sec. 1, there is but one form of action in civil cases. In that, many ancillary remedies may be asked, i.e., arrest and bail, claim and delivery, injunction, attachment, and appointment of receivers. These need not be asked, even if the party is entitled to them, Wilson v. Hughes,
The gist of the present action is that the defendant was indebted to the plaintiff $75, due for rent. Incidentally the plaintiff asked, or might be construed as asking, for claim and delivery of the crop, which is not alleged to be worth "not more than fifty dollars." The justice of *Page 227
the peace properly ignored the ancillary remedy of which he would have had no jurisdiction, and rendered judgment for the amount of rent found to be due, $36.87. Starke v. Cotten,
In the present case the court below erred in dismissing the action, and that is the only point before us. To prevent misconception, however, we notice that the justice not only gave judgment for the debt and adjudged that it was due for rent — as he might have adjudged that it was due by open account, or on a bond, or on a promissory (421) note — but he went further and adjudged that it was a lien on the crop. This was unnecessary, and must be held mere harmless surplusage, as the statute made it a lien. Code, sec. 1754. The lien was the result, and no valid part, of the judgment declaring the amount of the indebtedness and that it was due for rent. Code, sec. 1754; Wilson v.Respass,
Reversed. *Page 228
Cited: Holden v. Warren,
(422)