205 Mo. 176 | Mo. | 1907
Defendant appeals here from a judgment against it for $5,789.30.
Plaintiff 'held a contract to reconstruct a certain power station belonging to defendant, for so much money — a day being set for full performance and $50 per diem named for failure in time. Alleging performance, it sued for $7,043.97, the balance due on that contract.
Defendant answered, denying owing plaintiff that sum or any other sum. Eeferring to the contract counted on, defendant pleaded full payment of the contract price. Further referring to the contract, defendant pleaded a counterclaim in two items. First, for $4,300 damages for eighty-six days’ delay in performing
The reply put in issue the new matter.
With cross-claims and pleadings in this fix (both parties denying liability), the amount in dispute at the beginning was the amount claimed in the petition plus the two items of the counterclaim, aggregating $11,-486.71. '
Presently the ease came on for trial before Judge Hough, sitting as a jury, and the parties litigant did not stand on the amount in dispute outlined in the pleadings. To the contrary, defendant admitted it owed plaintiff on the building contract the sum sued for; and plaintiff admitted it owed defendant the smaller of the two items of the counterclaim. This left the amount in dispute the first item of defendant’s counterclaim, to-wit, $4,300. That issue was threshed out at the "trial. To that issue the evidence was limited. To that issue the instructions were directed. On that issue the court made its finding. It found that defendant was entitled to damages at $50 a day for thirty-seven days ’ delay, aggregating $1,850. To this sum it added the admitted item of $142.74 with interest, aggregating $2,006. It deducted the ascertained and determined amount of defendant’s counterclaim from the amount admitted to be due plaintiff and rendered judgment for the difference. Prom that judgment plaintiff took no appeal, defendant alone appealing, as said. So much for the amount in dispute below.
In this court the case is presented by abstracts, statements and briefs on both sides on the theory that the balance on the contract price is not in dispute; that the smaller item in defendant’s counterclaim is not in dispute; and that (as plaintiff took no appeal) the allowance of damages in the sum of $1,850 for thirty-seven days’ delay on the larger item of the counterclaim is no longer in dispute. The single bone of con
As there is no federal or constitutional question raised and the title to real estate is not involved, our jurisdiction must hinge on the amount in dispute. [Laws 1901, p. 107.]
We are given jurisdiction in all cases where the amount in dispute, exclusive of costs, shall exceed the sum of $4,500. In determining the amount in dispute we may look within the mere shell of the pleadings and judgment — the mere colorable amount in dispute — and seek out the real amount. [Vanderberg v. Gras Co., 199 Mo. 455.] In that case it was said: “Frequently the amount in dispute is materially affected by eliminating items and elements at the trial, and the record shows this. Would' it not be an act sounding to folly for us to say that, for the purposes of jurisdiction on appeal, we must continue to consider such eliminated matters?”
In Wilson v. Russler, 162 Mo. 1. c. 567, it was said: “It is now the settled law that in determining whether the jurisdiction of an appeal is vested in this court or one of the courts of appeals, the court will look into the record and ascertain the sum actually in dispute and will not be governed by the prayers of the petition and answer alone.” In that case the record was looked into and by a process of inclusion and exclusion, considering the petition, the counterclaim and the admissions at the trial, it was ascertained that this court had no jurisdiction, and the cause was remanded to the Kansas City Court of Appeals.
In State ex rel. Lingenfelder v. Lewis, 96 Mo. 146, two amounts were in dispute, viz., the amount claimed by the plaintiffs on their cause of action and the amount claimed by the defendant on his counterclaim; and
In Conrad v. DeMontcourt, 138 Mo. 311, a judgment went for plaintiff and against defendant on a counterclaim; and it was- held that his court would look into the counterclaim to ascertain the amount in dispute. [Page 321, et seq.]
In In re Burke’s Estate, Green, Executor, v. Hussey, 169 Mo. 212, an executor makes final settlement in the probate court. After taking certain credits he charges himself with a balance of $3,530.85. A distributee, Hussey, files exceptions. These exceptions are disallowed and Hussey appeals to the circuit court. That court increases the amount of the executor’s indebtedness by $2,979.97 and adjudges him to stand indebted to the estate in the sum of $6,510.82. Thereupon the executor appeals here. This court looked beneath the mere surface of the judgment and into the record and there ascertains that the only amount in dispute is the increase made by the circuit court, to-wit, $2,979.97.
In the case at bar, the amount in dispute on the surface is the amount of the judgment against defendant. -That amount would be sufficient to give this court jurisdiction. But looking deeper into the record for the kernel of the thing, it is not so; and applying the settled rule of construction as shown in the cases cited, it will be seen that if the real amount in dispute is considered to be the first item of the counterclaim, $4,300, yet we have no jurisdiction. And, a fortiori, have we no jurisdiction if we come nearer to the real amount in dispute, to-wit, plaintiff’s liability for damages for the number of days’ delay after deducting the thirty-seven days allowed by the court, to-wit, forty-nine days at fifty dollars per day, say, $2,450'.
Having no jurisdiction, the cause is transferred to the St. Louis Court of Appeals for determination.