delivered the opinion of the court:
First—A motion has been made herein to dismiss the writ of error upon the ground that the sum involved is less than $1000.00. No certificate of importance was granted by the judges of the Appellate Court. The judgment of the trial court was for $866.29. The motion to dismiss was reserved to the hearing, and will now be disposed of.
Although the judgment is for less than $1000.00, yet the amount involved is more than $1000.00. The claim of the defendant in error was founded, not only upon the items made up of the amounts due upon the notes and the amounts paid out for taxes and special assessments, but also upon various items consisting of moneys expended for and advanced to plaintiff in error, and for goods, wares, and merchandise sold to her, and for board, lodging, and nursing. The plaintiff in error filed a plea of set-off for $2500.00. It is concéded by the defendant in error, that the plaintiff in error introduced testimony, tending to establish items of set-off amounting to $55.00. We think that there is also testimony, tending fairly to establish another item of set-off than those admitted by the defendant in error, which amounts to $150.00. These items of set off, aggregating about $200.00, when added to the amount of the judgment, $866.29, make the total amount involved more than $1000.00.
The legislature has provided that in all cases determined in the Appellate Court in actions ex contractu, wherein the amount involved is less than $1000.00 ex-elusive of costs, the judgment, order or decree of the Appellate Court shall be final, etc. That provision would be evaded if nothing more is necessary than a mere averment of an amount, without regard to the actual sum in controversy. A plaintiff cannot, by merely alleging in his declaration that a trilling matter is of the value of over $1000.00, or by adding the common counts claiming more than that sum, secure the right of appeal or writ of error, where the amount actually involved may be only a few dollars. Nor can the defendant, by filing a plea of set-off and therein claiming a greater amount than $1000.00, secure a right of appeal or a writ of error, where the amount-actually involved is much less than $1000.00. (Lewis v. Shear,
In Lake Erie and Western Railroad Co. v. Faught,
Second—The plaintiff in error, upon the trial below, asked the court to hold as law certain propositions substantially to the effect, that the decree in the chancery litigation between the parties to this suit was an adjudication of the matters here in controversy. In other words, the bill, answer, and decree in said former chancery suit are presented in said propositions as constituting res judicata. We are of the opinion, that the defense of former adjudication was not sustained, and that, therefore, the trial court committed no error in refusing to hold as law the propositions submitted upon the subject.
Where a plea of former adjudication is relied upon, the burden of proving such plea is upon the defendant; it must be shown what was determined by the former judgment so relied upon, and such proof must be clear, certain, and convincing. (Sawyer v. Nelson,
An application of the foreg'oing rules to the facts of this case shows conclusively, that the matter here in controversy is not the same as the matter in controversy in the chancery suit, which is relied upon as a former adjudication. The issues involved in the chancery suit may be seen by reference to the case of Rountree v. Smith,
On the contrary, the issue in thé present case is as to the amount of indebtedness due from plaintiff in error to defendant in error for moneys advanced by the latter to the former, and for work and services performed by the latter for the former. No issue was tendered, or determined in the chancery suit as to any indebtedness between the parties.
Third—Plaintiff in error complains of the modification of the first proposition, which it submitted to the court below, and of the giving of such proposition as thus modified. The proposition, as given, told the jury that, under the stipulation between the parties, the Statute of Limitations was a defense to all of the demands of the defendant in error proven by the evidence, which accrued prior to October 12, 1890, except the two promissory notes, and that, if the evidence failed to show an express promise on the part of the plaintiff in error, “or facts and circumstances from which a promise may be implied,” to pay such demands, or one or more of them since October 12, 1890, the defendant in error must fail in her suit as to each one of said demands other than said notes. The modification, made in the .instruction as originally asked, consisted in conditioning the right of the defendant in error to recover upon her showing “facts and circumstances from which a promise may be implied.”
Counsel for plaintiff in error invokes the rule, that there can be no ground for supporting the count for money paid, unless the payment is made at the express or implied request of the defendant, and that here there could have been no implied request by Mrs. Smith to Mrs. Rountree for the payment of any of the demands referred to in the instruction. (Chitty’s Pl. p. 350; Briscoe v. Power,
We perceive no substantial error in the judgment of the court below. Accordingly, the judgment of the Appellate Court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
