30 Vt. 262 | Vt. | 1858
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The defendant’s motion to dismiss the plaintiffs new declaration, being filed after he had pleaded pleas of nul tiel record, and the statute of limitation to the same declaration was clearly out of time, if it was to be regarded as a mere dilatory objection ; as such objections, whether raised by plea, or motion merely, are waived by pleading to the merits. The county court treated the motion as of this character, and overruled it upon that ground. The defendant claims, however, that his motion really raised a question as to the jurisdiction of the court, and that the plaintiff’s new declaration presented a claim, over which the court had no right to take jurisdiction, and that therefore his motion was in season. If it properly raised such a question, then it was not too late to make it, for objections to the jurisdiction of the court over the subject matter of the suit are always in season, and indeed, such objections cannot be cured, for the judgment itself is void, if the court had not jurisdiction of the cause in which it was rendered. What was the real character of the defendant’s motion ? The plaintiff had by leave of the court filed a new declaration in lieu of the one used before the justice, setting forth the cause of action more fully and formally, and in some particulars differently, from the original declaration. The justice declaration described a judgment rendered by J. G. Newell, justice of the peace, on the 29th of May, 1837, for fourteen dollars and forty-nine cents, and alleged that
Upon the trial of the issues to the court, the defendant objected to the record offered by the plaintiff, because the record did not contain copies of the executions, which were alleged to have been issued. But the executions were no part .of the record, and the plaintiff was under no necessity to make them a part of it. The plea only denied and put in issue the existence of the judgment, and the production of the record of the judgment established that issue. The allegation of the issuing of the executions, was no part of the description of the judgment, nor was the plaintiff, under that issue, hound to produce them. It has been said, sometimes, that where the record shew an execution issued, and the
But we have already shown that this assumption is without any just foundation, and the county court, in allowing the new declaration to be filed, must have found that the judgment described in that declaration was really the same that was litigated before the justice.
Whether the admission made by the defendant, at the justice trial, was in reference to the same judgment produced in the county court, was a question of fact for the county court to decide, and we could not revise their finding, if we thought it possibly erroneous.
In examining the decision of the county court, upon an issue of fact tried by the court, this court can only go far enough to see whether the evidence which the county court had before them, was such as had a legal tendency to support their finding, for, as to the credence to be given to it, the judgment of the county court stands as the verdict of a jury. The question is the same, as whether the county court would have been legally correct in submitting the same evidence to the jury, on an issue of a new promise. And that the evidence was sufficient for that purpose, we have no doubt. Nor do we think that what the defendant said was accompanied with the expression of any unwillingness, or disinclination, to pay the debt, or remain liable for it, or that it was clogged witli any condition, so as to bring it within the class of cases referred to, where the promise, or acknowledgment, has been held inoperative on such grounds. The defendant admitted, say the exceptions, “ that the plaintiff had an old judgment against him, which was
We think the evidence was legally sufficient to authorize the county court to find an unequivocal admission by the defendant, that the debt was due, from which the law would raise a new promise.
The judgment of the county court is affirmed.