69 Pa. Super. 86 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1918
Opinion by
On June 12,1912, when the legal plaintiff was fourteen years of age, he was bicycling on one of the popular thoroughfares in Fairmount Park. While riding about five feet from the right-hand curb of the road he noticed two automobiles approaching on the opposite side of the avenue. The first one signalled by horn, and the second machine, without giving any signal took a sharp turn
It is urged that the Municipal Court was without jurisdiction, for the reason that the plaintiff’s statement of claim laid the damages claimed at $10,000, — a sum admittedly beyond the jurisdiction of the Municipal Court.
This action was instituted by filing, under the rules of the Municipal Court, an affidavit to hold to bail, in which the damages claimed were fixed at $1,500. A summons capias was specially allowed by a judge of that court, issued and served, and after preliminary pleadings affecting only the personnel of the parties, a statement of claim was filed in which the damages were set out at $10,000. This apparent error was called to the attention of the court at the opening of the trial, when leave of court was granted, under objection, to amend the plaintiff’s statement by reducing the amount to $1,500, and the triai proceeded. The rules of the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County govern the practice and procedure in the Municipal Court, except as modified by the act of assembly approved July 12, 1913, P. L. 711, and it is manifest that after fixing the amount of bail in the specially allowed writ at $1,500, the court had jurisdiction in this action of trespass to that amount and that the inadvertent error in naming the damages
We find no reversible error in this record, and affirm the judgment.