On a trial involving transactions looking to the sale by the defendant to the plaintiff of a bakery and luncheonette, plaintiff recovered judgment in the Municipal Court for the District of Columbia in the sum of $2,990 as damages re-suiting from the fraudulent misrepresentations of defendant. This was the amount for which plaintiff had sued. But the contract signed by the parties called for the payment by plaintiff of amounts considerably in excess of $3,000, and his complaint included a prayer for its rescission. The jurisdictional problem thus suggested by the pleadings, 1 however, was not raised by defendant in the trial court.
On appeal the Municipal Court of Appeals initially modified the judgment by reducing it to $1,750 and affirmed it as so modified. Hirshon v. Whelan, D.C.Mun.App.,
Since defendant did not raise the jurisdictional question until after the trial and judgment in the Municipal Court, and since the claim asserted in the complaint was ambiguous, we think its .extent should be determined in the light of .the evidence and proceedings. In terms the complaint prayed for rescission, but it also stated that the amount involved was less than $3,000, and alleged facts indicating that plaintiff had already exercised his claimed right to rescind by offering to return .the property to defendant if the defendant would return plaintiff to his status quo.
The Municipal Court in a Memorandum Opinion made a finding, “Contract * * * rescinded”; but the judgment itself contained no adjudication with respect to rescission, being only a money judgment for $2,990, with interest from date of judgment and costs. Thus in the end the claim actually asserted was considered, and we so construe it, as one after a rescission for damages within the jurisdictional limits of the Municipal
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‘Court, and not a suit in equity for a rescission involving more than f3,000. See Weigel v. Cook,
The judgment of the Municipal Court of ’ Appeals on rehearing should < be reversed and the case remanded to that Court for consideration of any questions left undisposed of on the rehearing.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. See § 11-755(a), D.C.Code 1951, which limits the civil jurisdiction of the Municipal Court in such cases to actions “in which the claimed value of 'personal property or the debt or damages claimed” does not exceed $3,000.
