68 Wash. 474 | Wash. | 1912
Respondent moves to dismiss the appeal upon the ground of lack of jurisdiction in this court, the jurisdictional defect being that the amount originally involved is less than $200. The facts, .in so far as they may be considered upon this motion, are these: In September, 1911, James Peterson brought an action against M. Leites, before a justice of the peace at Seattle, in which he recovered judg
The motion to dismiss is resisted upon the ground that this is a suit in equity, in which the question to be determined is, not the original amount in controversy between the parties, but the validity of a judgment. It is also contended that we cannot determine the facts without a review of the complaint, which means a determination of the merits of the appeal, and hence the motion must fail. There is no merit in either of these contentions. We cannot, upon a motion to dismiss an appeal for want of jurisdiction, determine any question affecting the merits of the controversy submitted by the appeal, but we may examine the complaint to ascertain the character of the action. To ascertain the character of an action, is not to determine nor decide any question involving its merits. We may ascertain the relief sought by a complaint, and the facts upon which such relief is predicated, without in any wise determining whether the relief is well prayed and should be granted. Otherwise, no court could pass upon a jurisdictional question which is to be determined by the character of the relief sought and the facts upon which it is based, since in all such questions the answer must be
“In other words, it matters not whether' that court decides that it has jurisdiction when it has not, or whether it erroneously decides some other matter of law, its judgment is final in all causes not within the appellate jurisdiction of this court.”
The same rule is laid down in State ex rel. Wallace v. Superior Court, 24 Wash. 605, 64 Pac. 778, and in numerous other cases. It is immaterial, then, in what way such a case is presented to this court, whether by direct appeal or in some roundabout way. So long as the question to be determined is the act or jurisdiction of the court below in an action involving less than $200, it must fail for want of • jurisdiction here. What difference does it make whether, in
Appellants contend that the motion should be denied, citing Trumbull v. Jefferson County, 37 Wash. 604, 79 Pac. 1105; Horrell v. California etc. Assn., 40 Wash. 531, 82 Pac. 889, and other like holdings. Nothing is said in any of those cases which disturbs the rule we are here asserting. In the Trumbull case, it is said that, in actions of equitable cognizance, the jurisdiction of this court does not depend upon the amount in controversy. As applied to the case in which it is said — to enjoin a tax foreclosure sale — that is undoubtedly true, since at no time is there in such a case any question of the right of judgment in an action involving a money demand. In the Horrell case, it is likewise said that the constitutional provision as to the amount in controversy has no application to causes of equitable cognizance, the action being one to cancel contracts of a building and loan association. It was, however, also said in the Horrell case that,
For these reasons, the motion must be granted, and the appeal is dismissed.
Dunbar, C. J., Ellis, and Mount, JJ., concur.