63 So. 689 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1913
The appellant, plaintiff below, instituted this suit in assumpsit against appellee, defendant
One of the questions presented on this appeal, the disposition of which here is such as to render unnecessary the consideration of others is whether or not, on a trial in the circuit court of a case appealed thereto from the justice of the peace court, the defendant can sustain a plea of set-off, filed in the circuit court, by evidence of -a claim or demand in his favor against the plaintiff which was nonexistent at the time of the commencement of plaintiff’s suit in the justice court, and which arose only after judgment there for the plaintiff, and after the defendant had appealed the case to the circuit court, and while it was still pending and undetermined in the latter court.
The right in a defendant to plead set-off, as well as the right on his part to recover judgment upon such plea when the demand proved as a set-off exceeds that of the plaintiff’s claim, is purely of statutory origin — finding no support whatever at the common law. — Drennen v. Gilmore, 132 Ala. 246, 31 South. 90, 90 Am. St. Rep.
This suit, as said, Avas commenced in the justice of the peace court, at the time of Avhich commencement, as seen, the demand, Avhich defendant set off against the plaintiff on the trial of the appeal in the circuit court, was not “subsisting between the parties.” Clearly, then, under the statute cited, the defendant was not entitled to the set-off claimed, but his remedy for his damages was by an original suit against the plaintiff, unless that statute (Code, § 5858) is modified in particulars applicable to this case, Avhich defendant insists is true, by some other statute. As accomplishing this modification, so far as concerns cases appealed from the justice to the circuit court, he urges section 4720 of the Code, Avhich, among other things, provides: “Cases brought by appeal or certiorari from judgments of justices of the peace * * * must be tried de novo and according to equity and justice,” etc.
There is nothing, in our opinion, either in the terms or in the spirit of this statute, or in any construction given it by either of our courts of final review, that Avould warrant a conclusion that thereby the Legislature intended to establish, on the trial of a casé appealed from a justice court to a circuit or city court, a different rule of set-off from that obtaining in the same case while it Avas pending for trial in the justice court,
Section 4720 of the Code cited as said, by defendant— it is also true, as contended by him — declares, not only that the appealed case must be tried “de novo,” but also that it must be tried “according to equity and justice,” But the law knows and recognizes no “equity and justice” except that which it declares through its duly constituted authorities; and, when the Legislature, acting within the sphere wherein it is supreme, declares, as it did do in section 5858 of the Code, that a set-off, to be available to a defendant, must exist in his favor at the time of the commencement of the plaintiff’s suit, the enforcement of this rule by the courts in the course of
If, on the other hand, the Legislature should declare, Avith a qualification, as it did do in said section 4720 of the Code — the section urged, as said, upon our consideration by defendant — that the appealed case must be tried “according to equity and justice ,” it is then necessary to examine the qualification put by it on the Avords quoted, in order to ascertain what limitation, if any, is to be placed on this general meaning Ave have here given those words, “equity and justice.” Immediately after these Avords in the statute, and separated from them by only a comma, are the further words, “without regard to any defect in the summons, or other process, or proceedings before the justice;” hence, the words “according to equity and justice,” as thus qualified in this particular statute by the subsequent words just quoted from it, mean according to the established rules and principles of laAAr, as we have explained, except those relating to the form of pleadings and process and procedure, a failure to comply with the technical requirements of which in the justice court is not to defeat the right to try the case, on appeal to the circuit court,
We are cited to the case of Hagen v. Thompson, 2 Port. 48, wherein it was held that a defendant in a case appealed from a justice court to the circuit court could, in the latter court, sustain a plea of payment there filed by proof of payment made after judgment was rendered against him in the justice court. We cannot see that this decision in any wise conflicts with the conclusion we here reach that a different rule should obtain with respect to a plea of set-off, since the two classes of defenses are different, not only in the origin of the right to assert them, but different in their very nature. Payment is a discharge of the obligation sued upon, and whenever made, whether before or after suit brought, if pleaded, must necessarily have the effect of terminating the plaintiff’s right to recover the debt or demand sued on; else the defendant is without remedy; since the fact of payment is purely defensive matter, waived unless pleaded, and affords the defendant no independent right of action against the plaintiff. — De Sylva v. Henry, 3 Port. 132. If the payment is proved to have been made before the suit brought, the plaintiff recovers nothing; if made after suit brought, then he recovers costs that have accrued up to the time of the filing of the plea. Other than this there is no difference between the effect of payment made before suit brought and payment made after suit brought. — 16 Ency. PI. & Pr. 221. On the other hand, set-off as a defense comes, as before said, only by virtue of the statute, until which demands now available as such could be enforced only by an original action against the plaintiff; and, as to the demands to
As all the other rulings of the trial court assigned as error here have reference to this plea of set-off, which was the only defense, and which we hold, for reasons. stated, was not, and cannot on another trial be, sustained by the proof mentioned, it is not necessary to discuss the other questions raised and argued on this appeal.
The judgment of the lower court is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.