STATE ex rel. ROY E. SHAWVER, et al. v. CLAUDE H. CASTO, J. P., et al.
No. 10448
Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia
Submitted January 9, 1952. Decided January 29, 1952.
797
J. Raymond Gordon, for relators.
Lee M. Kenna, for respondents.
LOVINS, JUDGE:
This Court awarded Roy E. Shawver and Alma M. Shawver a rule in prohibition requiring Claude H. Casto, Justice of Union District, Kanawha County, West Vir-
There is no dispute in this proceeding as to the facts. Petitioners purchased various articles of merchandise from Comstock on open account. The dealings extended from August 9, 1949, to and including November 30, 1950. The total amount of such purchases was $834.92. Petitioners made payments on the account up to and including November 30, 1950, amounting to $102.92, leaving a balance due on the account of $732.00.
On November 30, 1950, Comstock went to Casto, the justice, and brought three actions for the recovery of the balance due on the account—two for $300.00 each, and one for $132.00. Though personally served with process concerning such actions, the Shawvers made no appearance. The justice, on December 7, 1950, attempted to render two judgments against petitioners for $300.00 each and costs, and one judgment for $132.00 and costs. One of the alleged judgments for $300.00 was recorded in the justice‘s docket at page seven, another for $300.00 was recorded at page eight of the docket, and one for $132.00 was recorded at page nine thereof. It seems that the alleged judgment recorded at page seven of the docket, together with $14.19 costs, has been paid.
The answers of defendants allege that the Shawvers, on August 9, 1949, purchased a refrigerator, the total charge for which was $264.69, after deducting an allowance for certain goods traded in; that on August 17, 1949, they purchased a washing machine on which there was a balance owing of $173.34; that on November 25, 1949, they purchased a range and heater amounting to $192.20; that on December 1, 1949, they purchased various articles of merchandise amounting to $22.73; and that there was an additional charge of $30.60 for other merchandise purchased by them on January 6, 1950. The total cost of merchandise purchased, together with other charges, amounted to $828.26.
It seems that after this arrangement was made, on or about the first of August, 1951, a controversy arose between petitioners and Comstock and a short time after such controversy arose the justice was directed to issue executions. After December 7, 1950, petitioners made various payments to the justice, which they did not direct to be applied to any one of the alleged judgments.
No appeal was taken to the judgments, nor was any objection interposed as to the three actions mentioned above.
Petitioners contend that the alleged judgment, recorded at page seven of the justice‘s docket, is valid; that they have paid the costs; and that the other two alleged judgments of $300.00 and $132.00 each are void, the justice having been without jurisdiction to render them.
The Shawvers inferentially contend that they are discharged from payment of the residue of the account on the ground that Comstock waived the payment thereof by taking void judgments.
Comstock and the justice contend that the petitioners, by their conduct, in failing to appear to the three actions and objecting thereto, consented to the splitting of the account into three parts, and that when such account was
These contentions raise the following questions: (1) Did the justice have jurisdiction of the subject matter? (2) Was the implied consent by the debtors to splitting the cause of action sufficient to confer jurisdiction on the justice? (3) Is one of the judgments valid and are the others void, or are they all void?
Jurisdiction of a court consists of three elements—venue, jurisdiction of the person, and jurisdiction of the subject matter. In this proceeding there is no question about venue being proper, nor is jurisdiction of the persons of the Shawvers challenged. Hence, we are concerned solely with the question of whether the justice had jurisdiction of the subject matter.
The civil jurisdiction of a justice rests upon the provisions of
If the principal amount claimed by the plaintiff exceeds three hundred dollars, the action must be dismissed and the costs adjudged against the plaintiff unless the plaintiff remits the excess of principal above three hundred dollars in writing in form and effect as follows: “The plaintiff, in this action, forgives and remits to the defendant so much of the principal of this claim as is in excess of three hundred dollars, together with the interest on said excess.”
In Mitchell v. Davis, 73 W.Va. 352, 80 S.E. 491, it was
Opinions of this Court disclose that in some instances litigants have attempted to confer jurisdiction on justices by giving fictitious credits or by dividing or splitting the cause of action. There is no question as to fictitious credits in the instant case. Here, defendants in their brief admit that Comstock had a single cause of action.
Splitting of a cause of action and bringing a suit for part thereof was forbidden at common law. In such instances the creditor holding such claim was precluded from recovering the balance of his demand. McDowell County Bank v. Wood, 60 W.Va. 617, 55 S.E. 753. Formerly, a plaintiff was required to bring an action for all due him in certain instances, and if he brought his suit for part only, whether the judgment was for or against him, he was barred from recovering the remainder.
Where there are two or more separate demands against the defendant, as in Grocery Co. v. McClaugherty, 46 W.Va. 419, 33 S.E. 252, and McDowell County Bank v. Wood, supra, separate actions are permitted. The opinions of this Court in Grocery Co. v. McClaugherty, supra, and
The case of Stickel v. Steel (Mich.), 1 N.W. 1046, is cited with approval in the cases decided by this Court. It was held in the Stickel case that separate suits may be maintained to recover the amounts due on two bills of goods sold by the plaintiff to defendant on the same day, one on terms of credit of four months from the fifteenth day of September following, and the other on terms of credit of four months from the first day of October following. We have no question of separate demands in this proceeding. Comstock and the Shawvers, after the debt was contracted and all merchandise delivered, seem to have treated it as a single open account.
We are of the opinion that Comstock, having one inseparable demand against the Shawvers, split the cause of action for the purpose of giving the justice jurisdiction. See Hale v. Town of Weston, 40 W.Va. 313, 21 S.E. 742; Wells v. Life Ins. Co., 41 W.Va. 131, 23 S. E. 527; Richmond v. Henderson, 48 W.Va. 389, 37 S.E. 653.
Comstock and the justice in their brief contend that this is not a question of jurisdiction of the justice, but is a question of the splitting of the cause of action by consent of the debtors. We are cited to the case of Fentress, et al. v. Pruden (Va.), 39 S.E. 2d 240, which, in effect, holds that consent to splitting of a cause of action is for the benefit of the defendant who may waive or renounce, the benefits of the rule by expressly or impliedly consenting to institution of separate actions on a single demand or cause, and such waiver will be presumed, unless timely and proper objection is made. We are not disposed to follow that principle. A consent to splitting a cause of action so as to bring it within the jurisdiction of a justice amounts to conferring jurisdiction on a court by consent of one or both of the parties, which it otherwise would not have. This Court has held that while jurisdiction of a person may be conferred by consent, jurisdiction of the
We note that the alleged consent to splitting the cause of action rests in part upon the conduct of the Shawvers after the alleged judgments were rendered, and the consent is implied from such conduct. We hold that consent to splitting of a cause of action will not and does not confer jurisdiction on a justice denied him by the organic and statutory law of this state as well as the holdings of this Court.
We are of opinion that the justice had no jurisdiction to render any of the three alleged judgments and therefore that all three judgments rendered by him are void. The judgments being void, Comstock is not entitled to collect any costs from the Shawvers. The account due Comstock remains at $732.00, subject to credits since that balance was ascertained. The payment of costs, if any, made by the Shawvers should be credited on the account rather than on the costs. We express no opinion, however, as to the respective rights of Comstock and the Shawvers relative to the amount and collection of the alleged debt.
From what has been said, it follows that the writ of prohibition will issue prohibiting the justice and the creditor from enforcing any of the three judgments rendered by the justice on December 7, 1950.
Writ awarded.
GIVEN, JUDGE, dissenting:
I would award the writ as to the second and third judgments, but deny it as to the first.
The record clearly discloses that the first judgment was fully satisfied, final payment thereon having been obtained by way of suggestee execution. To permit a plain-
I can not agree that the claim of Comstock for seven hundred and thirty two dollars constituted a single cause of action. As indicated in the majority opinion, several purchases were made on different dates, merely on an open account.
The provision of
Being of these views, I respectfully dissent.
