20 S.E. 178 | N.C. | 1894
The two actions were brought before the justice of the peace, not to enforce a contract by recovering judgment for an ascertained amount of indebtedness, but for the recovery of the possession of distinct articles of property, to wit, corn of the value of $35 made upon certain land, in the first, and cotton and fodder raised thereon, of the value of $15, in the second action. The court of the justice unquestionably had jurisdiction, under the principle laid down in Bell v. Howerton,
Reversed. *25
(36)