100 Iowa 750 | Iowa | 1896
The first question to be considered is, whether a certificate is necessary to give us jurisdiction.
The plaintiff asks judgment for eighty dollars, the balance which he claims is due him on the lease executed by defendant.
In his original answer the defendant admitted the execution of the lease, but claimed that he was damaged by failure to get possession of the premises at the time agreed upon in the sum of one hundred and fifty dollars, and he asked judgment against plaintiff for costs.
In an amended answer and counter-claim, filed after the verdict was returned, and at the same time the certificate hereinafter referred to was granted, defendant asked “judgment for the said sum of one hundred and fifty dollars in addition to the eighty dollars still alleged to be due by the plaintiff.”
It is manifest that when the ease was tried, there was but eighty dollars involved, and it further appears that there was no issue taken on the amended answer and counter-claim. Indeed, it seems to ha e been disregarded by the parties and by the court, for the court proceeded to grant a certificate for an appeal to this court. Moreover, the pleadings, as amended, show that under the facts as stated, the defendant could not have obtained judgment for more than the difference between the rent received, eighty dollars, and the amount of the damages, one hundred and fifty dollars — or seventy dollars. We have frequently held that the amount in controversy is to be determined from the allegations of the pleadings rather than from the prayer thereof. Cooper v. Dillon, 56 Iowa, 367 (9 N. W. Rep. 302).
The certificate, in so far as material, is as follows:
“I, A. R. Dewey, judge, * * * do hereby certify that there is a question of law which arose in the trial of this cause, upon which it is desirable to have the opinion of the supreme court. Said question is as follows:”
The certificate does not state that the question certified is involved in the case, and it is therefore, insufficient. Lamb v. Ross, 84 Iowa, 578 (51 N. W. Rep. 48); Connor v. Bennke, 100 Iowa, 747 (69 N. W. Rep. 414).
II. If it should be conceded that a certificate was not necessary to give us jurisdiction, yet we could not consider the case on its merits, for the reason that appellee states in his amended abstract “that the amended abstract, together with the abstract of appellant, does not contain all the evidence.” This statement is not denied by appellant
The questions argued involve a consideration of the evidence, and, as we do not have it all, they cannot be considered. We do not have ■jurisdiction: and the case is dismissed.