46 W. Va. 754 | W. Va. | 1899
On March 20, 1897, the Mountain City Mill Company, a corporation, by its attorney, filed before L. G. Bennington, a justice of Marion County, its complaint, and a demand for
The first three assignments raise substantially the same question, — whether a plea to the jurisdiction, in the nature of a plea in abatement, can be filed before a justice; and whether, on appeal to the circuit court, such plea could be filed. The pleadings in justice’s court are prescribed by statute, which provides that “the answer of the defendant may contain — First, a denial of the complaint or some part thereof; second, a statement of the facts constituting a defense or counterclaim. Such pleadings are not required to be in any particular form, but must be such as to enable a person of common understanding to know what is intended.” In Todd v. Gates, 20 W. Va. 464, Judge Snyder, in delivering the opinion of the Court, says (page 470): “No provision is made for pleas in abatement, as is the case in courts of record; and, as a substitute for such pleas to the jurisdiction of the justice, it is provided in section 49 that the plaintiff’s action shall be dismissed, at his costs, 'whenever it appears that the justice has no jurisdiction thereof.’ This obviously means, if it appears at any time during the
It is contended'by plaintiff in error that there was no pleading on the part of plaintiff which disclosed the nature of plaintiff’s claim, as required by section 50, chapter 50, Code, and upon which pleading judgment could be entered for the plaintiff, and therefore it was error to enter judgment in the absence of such pleading. Clause 5 of said section says: “Such pleadings are not required to be in any particular form, but must be such as to enable a person of common understanding ito know what is intended;” and clause 6 says: “Either party may except to a pleading of his adversary when it is not sufficiently explicit to be understood, or if it contains no cause of action or defense.” In case at bar it. appears that on March 20, 1897, plaintiff, by its attorney, B. L. Butcher, Esq., filed its complaint and a demand for one hundred and ninety-four dollars and seventy cents; and summons was issued on the same day, returnable on the 27th of the same month; and on the 27th day of March the parties appeared, when plaintiff filed its account showing a balance due it from defendant of one hundred and eighty-eight dollars and twenty-four cents; to which the defendant entered the plea that he did not owe the debt, and asked leave to file special pleas, and made the statutory affidavit to secure a continuance, which was had. There was no exception to the pleading that it was not sufficiently explicit to be understood or that it contained no cause of action. While no formal complaint appears in the record, the record shows that a complaint was filed on the day that the action was commenced, and the complaint must have be’en in writing. A verbal or oral complaint could be entered, but could not be filed, and that complaint must have been deemed sufficient, or. the defendant would have excepted to it. And, further, clause 8 of said section provides that, “in an action or defense founded upon an account, note, or other writing for the payment of money it shall be sufficient for the party to deliver the account, note or other writing to the justice, and to state that there is due to him thereon from the adverse party a specific sum which he claims to recover or set off in the action.” This provision makes the
As to the fourth assignment, that it was error to overrule defendant’s exceptions to plaintiff’s testimony introduced before the jury at the hearing at said circuit court, I find no action of the court overruling objections by defendant to evidence introduced by the plaintiff. On the cross-examination of witness A. F. Wagner, introduced by defendant in a deposition taken to be used before the justice when the witness was deposing concerning two certain bills handed him by defendant, or which came to him by mail, plaintiff asked him to “tell us how the handwriting of the signature and receipt differs from that in the body of the bill,” which was excepted to by defendant, While the answer to the question seems to be harmless, if not wholly immaterial there is nothing in the record to show that this deposition was read at the trial in the circuit court, and, if it was, the exception does not appear to have been called to the attention of the court to require a ruling thereon. The only other objection I find made by defendant was to a question asked plaintiff’s witness Watson, which objection was sustained by the court, and to a question propounded by plaintiff to its witness Shain on rebuttal, which objection was also sustained. I fail to see any error for which the judgment'should be reversed, and the same is accordingly affirmed.
Affirmed.