Thompson v. Clopton

31 Ala. 647 | Ala. | 1858

STONE, J.

— If the appellant, at the time he was sued before the justice of the peace in Benton county, Avas a freeholder, and a resident citizen of another county, he had the clear right to plead these facts in abatement of the suit; and upon proving his plea, the necessary result would have been, that the court would have repudiated the cause. Whether, if the defendant had interposed this plea before the justice of the peace, and, failing to obtain a decision upon it in his favor, had there made an unsuccessful attempt to defend before the justice on the merits, he would thereby have abandoned the right to renew his plea in abatement after appealing to the circuit court, is a question which we need not decide in this case. Neither are we called on to decide whether, in a case commenced in a justice’s court, and carried by appeal to the circuit court, the defendant, to entitle himself to make this defense in the latter court, must have interposed the plea in the justice’s court. — See Read v. Coker, 1 Stew. 22; Clough v. Johnson, 9 Ala. 425.

The defendant, after the judgment was rendered against him by the justice, took an appeal, under a statute of force in that county, to a jury to be called before the justice. He there entered into atrial on the merits; and the result Avas, a verdict and judgment against him. This trial on the merits was had at his instance. It was not a proceeding into which he Avas forced by the act of the opposite party; and Ave hold, that this operated a *649waiver by him of all objection to the jurisdiction of the courts of Benton county. — Lampley v. Beavers, 25 Ala. 534; Lea v. Thompson, 28 Ala. 454; Gager v. Gordon, 29 Ala. 344.

The circuit court did not err in striking out the plea in abatement, as the defendant had forfeited his right to interpose that defense.

The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.

midpage