delivered the opinion of the court.
The exercise of jurisdiction in a case such as the one now before us, is considered by the profession to be a vexed question. The exercise of jurisdiction by justices on sums above twenty dollars, has repeatedly been called in question. Under the act of 1794, which was in force when the constitution of Tennessee was’framed, justices of the peace out of court, had jurisdiction to the amount of twenty dollars, and no more. The act extending that jurisdiction to fifty dollars, (act of 1801,) was directly made the determining point. In the case of Stephens vs. Henderson, supreme court, Knoxville, Overton and White presiding, shortly after the organization of that
This construction of the act has been followed ever since. It is not speaking too largely to say, that hundreds of cases have been before the circuit and supreme courts, where this question of jurisdiction necessarily arose, and when judgments conformably to the opinion in Stephens vs. Henderson, have been rendered.
In the case of Thompson vs. Gibson, (2 Tennessee Reports 285,) the same doctrine is held, and a decision in the former superior court is referred to, as authority to support the opinion. In the present state of the question, the propriety of lessening or increasing the jurisdiction of the justices of the peace, rests with the legislature. What the true policy is, remains not for this .court to determine. If any question in the State is settled, this ought to be considered the one. This assumption gains strength from the consideration, that the late convention has not, in the amended constitution, made any change, limiting this power of legislation; on the contrary, it is declared, the laws in being and in force, (and these have always been so considered,) are to remain in force, until altered or repealed by the legislature.
This is the only view we can take of the subject, for the act of 1831, chap. 59, sec. 2, is no more in conflict
The judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded for another trial, to be had in accordance with this opinion.
Judgment reversed.
