4 Denio 453 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1847
The only question of any moment in this case is, whether the judgment declared on was void, as having been rendered in an action of which the justice who assumed to render it had no jurisdiction. If, as is alleged, the judgment was rendered in an action for an assault and battery, it is clear the justice acted without authority, and the judgment was utterly void. Upon this point we have nothing to guide us but what appears in the transcript given in evi
It is not improbable that the trial of the cause last referred to, showed the matter in controversy to have been an assault and battery, accompanied by an ordinary concomitant, a tearing of clothes on the person. If such was the case tried by the justice, he had no jurisdiction of the injury in the mass, or of any of its parts. The injury, in such a case, would be an assault and battery, aggravated by tearing the clothes, but the justice could no more take cognizance of the damage to the apparel than of that to the person: neither would be within his jurisdiction, whatever form might be given to the declaration. But we have nothing before us to show that this was really such a case, although the form of the declaration and the withdrawal of the second count may induce the suspicion. We however cannot act on such ground merely. The defendants might have shown by evidence, what the case for which judgment had been rendered, really was, and they cannot now complain if the cause is disposed of upon what appears in the transcript, without indulging in any strained presumption in their favor.
Looking then at the transcript alone, it will be seen that the first count was an ordinary charge for trespass to personal property, and contains no intimation that the person had been injured, or that the property was endamaged while on the person. This count was plainly within the jurisdiction of a justice.
Judgment affirmed.