Kirk v. Grant

67 Md. 418 | Md. | 1887

Stone, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appeal in this case must be dismissed, as it is in effect an appeal from the order of Court granting a new trial.

The plain tiff below, Grant, warranted the defendant Kirk, before a justice of the peace for Baltimore City upon an open account for $93.75. Judgment was rendered by the justice for the defendant, and the plaintiff appealed to the Baltimore City Court. The case was tried in that Court before a jury, who rendered a verdict for the plaintiff for $108.75. The defendant then moved for a non pros., and the plaintiff for a new trial. The Court overruled the motion for a non pros, and granted a new trial, and the defendant has appealed to this Court.

It has many times been decided by this Court that no appeal lies from an order of an inferior Court granting or refusing a motion for a new trial. But the defendant seems to be under the impression that as soon as the jury *420rendered their verdict for a sum over the jurisdiction of a justice of the peace, the Court had no' longer any jurisdiction over the case, and had no power to grant a new trial for any cause whatever, however erroneous the verdict might he. This is not so. Baltimore City Court had the undoubted power to grant a new trial if it deemed the verdict an improper one, and as soon as the new trial was granted, the case stood precisely as if no trial had ever taken place, and no verdict had ever been rendered.

(Decided 22nd June, 1887.)

We may concede all the law claimed by the defendant, that in actions ex contractu the amount recovered is the test of the jurisdiction. But in the case before us nothing has been recovered. There is now no verdict and no judgment, as the verdict has been set aside and no judgment entered upon it.

As this case will be tried again, and as "the defendant has argued the question of the allowance of interest on the claim of the plaintiff, we may add that if interest upon his open account (the cause of action in this case) is claimed by the.plaintiff, it is certainly within the power of the jury to allow him such legal interest as they may think right and just. But if no interest is claimed by him, none should be allowed.

Appeal dismissed.