16 Minn. 51 | Minn. | 1870
Action of replevin commenced in justice court. The complaint alleged the property in controversy to be of the value of one hundred dollars, which allegation is admitted by the form of so much of the answer as relates to it, i. e., by a denial of “each and every allegation in the plaintiff’s complaint mentioned and set forth.” Lynd vs. Picket et al., 7 Minn., 184; 9 Minn., 190. Upon a jury trial on the right of' possession, a verdict was returned for the plaintiff, and judgment was entered thereon, from which defendant appealed to the district court. The appeal was taken upon questions both of law and fact. Upon a jury trial in the district court, the plaintiff being called as a witness, testified that the value of all the property described in the complaint was $133, and that the value of what was taken upon the writ was about eighty dollars, which was all the evidence offered by him as to value.
Defendant thereupon moved for a non-suit, on the ground that the justice had no jurisdiction of the subject of the action, which motion was overruled.
The jury found for the plaintiff, that he was entitled to the possession of the property mentioned in the complaint and taken on the writ, and assessed its value at $156.50; that taken at $80.50 ; the rest at $76.
Defendant moved in arrest of judgment and for a return of the property for the alleged -reason that the court below had no jurisdiction of the subject of the action, which motion was denied, and judgment entered on the verdict, from which defendant appeals to this court.
A justice has jurisdiction in replevin, if the value of the property in controversy does not exceed one hundred dollars. Qen. 8'tat., ch. 65, sec. 5, sub. 2.
The defendant contends that jurisdiction must be made to appear affirmatively by the complaint, by an allegation that
But the complaint is not the basis of the proceedings. The pleadings are made up on the return of the writ. Before the writ can issue, plaintiff must file the affidavit and bond specified in secs. 81, 82, 83 of the same chapter. Thg affidavit must state the value of the property according to the best knowledge and belief of the affiant. “ That it did not exceed $100,” evidently, would not answer this requirement. A specific value must be stated.
If, therefore, the principles of law require, to confer jurisdiction, that it “ should appear affirmatively that it does not exceed $100,” we must conclude that the legislature thought, that stating it to be, in the best knowledge and belief of the affiant, of a given value, ($100 or any less sum,) was an affirmation that it did not exceed $100 For, upon the filing of the affidavit and bond, the justice is required to issue the writ, sec. 81. If he must do it, it must be within his jurisdiction to do it. The law intends that the justice acquires jurisdiction upon the filing of such affidavit and bond.
In the present case, the transcript from the justice’s docket- shows that an affidavit and bond were duly filed, but neither is set out in the return. As the appellant has not seen fit to bring it up, we are to presume that the affidavit was in due form, and that the value specified therein did not exceed $100.
Having acquired jurisdiction, the justice must necessarily retain it, till something appears to oust him of it. The defendant might have pleaded, in bar to the jurisdiction, and proved, if it were so, the fact that the property was worth
And the value was no more in issue in the district court than in the justice’s court, and it is, therefore, too plain for argument, that proof in the district court on that point could have no effect on the justice’s jurisdiction, if he had acquired any. Nor do we understand the defendant to say so. His argument is, that nothing had yet occurred whereby the justice had acquired jurisdiction, and that of the district court being merely appellate, it should have dismissed the action on proof that its subject matter was beyond the justice’s jurisdiction: a view of the case which, as we have seen, rests upon.the assumption (incorrect, in our opinion,) that it is the complaint which must give jurisdiction.
As to the verdict and judgment, the law provides that when the property has not been delivered to the plaintiff and the jury find that he is entitled to its possession, the jury shall assess its value,; but that, whenever the verdict is in favor of the party having possession of the property, the value thereof shall not be found; and that when the prevailing party is in possession of the property, its value shall not be included in the judgment. The finding of the jury, therefore, as to the value of all the property, and of that part taken on the writ, was unnecessary and unwarranted. It may, however, be disregarded as surplusage. If plaintiff had not obtained possession of any of the property, the question would come up whether any evidence tending to show that it was worth more than $100, would be admissible, the averment that it was of the value of $100, which, we think, is. an allegation that it is worth, that specific sum being admitted' by the answer. But under the statute, the jury were to find the value of so much of the property only, as had not then been delivered to the plaintiff. This the ad