57 Mo. 414 | Mo. | 1874
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action commenced before a justice, of the peace and taken by appeal to the Circuit Court.
This action was founded on the first section of the Trespass Act (Wagn. Stat., 1345). The statement of the plaintiff's causes of action filed with the justice, was for wrongfully and unlawfully entering by the defendant upon plaintiff’s land ; and for cutting and carrying away therefrom timber trees, to the value of thirty dollars; for which several trespasses, the plaintiff in his statement claimed damages to the amount of thirty dollars, and asked judgment that his damages should be trebled according to the provision of the statute.
The jury found a general verdict for two dollars in favor of the plaintiff, and did not specify in their verdict that the damages found were for the value of the timber cut and carried away. A judgment was rendered for the single damages. The defendant afterwards moved in arrest, for the alleged
Certainly actions for trespass under the Trespass Act may be brought before a justice of the peace; and therefore, we must consider both laws together to ascertain the extent-of his jurisdiction.
There seems to be no other reasonable construction that can be given to these two acts. Any other construction would require the amount of single damages before a justice to be less than seventeen dollars.
These statutes are remedial and must be literally construed so far as the jurisdiction of the courts is involved.
It was certainly not the intention of the legislature to abridge the jurisdiction of justices in such eases. The question of trebling the damages is as easy of solution in a case of fifty dollars as for any less amount.
Under this view, the motion in ai’rest was properly overruled. Judgment affirmed.