57 P. 374 | Or. | 1899
delivered the opinion.
This action was originally commenced in the Justice’s Court of Elgin District, Union County, to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by reason óf defendant’s sheep breaking into plaintiff’s inclosure and destroying his hay of the reasonable value of $24. The answer, after denying upon information and belief the material allegations of the complaint, avers that, if the
The. only question presented for consideration is whether the trial court had jurisdiction of the appeal. The statute, as far as applicable to the case at bar, reads as follows : “Either party may appeal from a judgment given in a justice’s court in a civil action, when the sum in controversy is not less than $10, or for the recovery of personal property of the value of not less than $10, exclusive of costs in either case:” Hill’s Ann. Laws, § 2117. No counterclaim having been interposed, plaintiff’s counsel contend that the sum in controversy, as far as defendant is concerned, is $6, the amount for which judgment was given, while defendant’s counsel insist that the sum in controversy is the amount demanded in the complaint. It is impossible to reconcile the conflict in the decisions upon the subject under consideration ; some courts holding that when an appeal is taken by the defendant, provided he has filed no counterclaim and sought no affirmative relief in the trial court, the judgment there rendered is the amount in controversy: 1 Enc. Pl. & Prac. 732 ; Hilton v. Dickinson, 108 U. S. 165 (2 Sup. Ct. 424). In Lord v. Goldberg, 81 Cal. 597 (15 Am. St. Rep. 82, 22 Pac. 1126), an action having been instituted to recover the sum of $6,000, the defendant denied the material allegations of the complaint, and set
In Perry v. Conger, 65 Iowa, 588 (22 N. W. 688), an action having been commenced in the justice’s court to recover the sum of $24.50, the answer contained a general denial, and also set up a counter-claim of $30, and upon a trial of the cause defendant recovered judgment for costs, from which plaintiff appealed. The circuit court dismissed the appeal on the ground that the amount in controversy did not exceed the sum of $25, and plaintiff appealed to the supreme court, which, in reversing the judgment, say: “The trial, of course, is upon all the issues raised by the pleadings. The case therefore stood upon the appeal, as to the amount in controversy, just as it did before the justice of the peace. In each court the defendant could have recovered a judgment for $30. By appealing the plaintiff recognized the right of defendant to recover such a judgment in the circuit court, if the proof should demand it: Lundak v. Chicago & N. W. Ry. Co., 65 Iowa, 473 (21 N. W. 783).
If, on an appeal from a judgment given in a justice’s court, the appellate tribunal were limited to a consideration of the errors alleged to have been committed, there might be some reason for holding that the judgment rendered was the measure of the sum in controversy, for in such case the court would be powerless to modify the judgment except by reversal, whereupon the cause would be remanded for a new trial; but in this state, when an appeal is perfected, the circuit court is required to hear, try, and determine the cause anew, without regarding any error of the justice in relation to the trial of the case : Hill’s Ann. Laws, § 2127. This being so, when an appeal is taken by a defendant from a judgment rendered in the justice’s court in favor of plaintiff for a part only of his demand the circuit court is empowered, upon a retrial of the cause, to award the whole amount of his demand, and this confirms us in the belief that the sum