187 Mo. App. 708 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1915
This is a suit on an account. Plaintiff recovered and defendant prosecutes the appeal.
The suit originated before a justice of the peace, and the amount of the account sued for is $154.27. Defendant filed a set-off containing numerous items of account against plaintiff — in all amounting to $294.75, and prayed judgment for this amount. The case was tried before the justice and found its way to the circuit court by appeal, for trial de novo. The parties appeared for trial in the circuit court and no formal objection appears to have been made to defendant’s set-off until he commenced the introduction of evidence with a view of establishing the matters of account therein set forth'. Thereupon plaintiff objected to the court’s hearing evidence on the matters set forth in defendant’s account of $294.75, for the reason the court was without jurisdiction over the subject-matter, because the amount exceeded the jurisdiction of the justice of the peace, where it originated. ' The court sustained this objection and denied defendant’s right to be heard on the set-off, for the reason stated — that is, that the court was without jurisdiction over its subject-matter — and the principal question for consideration here relates to this ruling.
The statute vests jurisdiction in the court of a justice of the peace in suits on account, to the extent of $250, and it is conceded that the justice of the peace
This court has but recently said:
“It is well settled that the jurisdiction of a justice of the peace must affirmatively appear on the face of the proceedings. [See Ruckert v. Richter, 127 Mo. App. 664, 106 S. W. 1081; Severn v. Railroad, 149 Mo. App. 631, 129 S. W. 477; Bucholz v. Insurance Co., 176 Mo. App. 464, 158 S. W. 451.] And, if a justice has no jurisdiction, the circuit .court can acquire none on appeal, for the jurisdiction of the latter is purely derivative and dependent upon the jurisdiction of the justice. [See Brownfield v. Thompson, 96 Mo. App. 340, 70 S. W. 378; Johnson v. Stephens, 107 Mo. App. 629, 82 S. W. 192; Bucholz v. Insurance Co., supra.]” [Trapp v. Mersman, 183 Mo. App. 512, 167 S. W. 612.] [See Guhman v. Dunaway, 183 Mo. App. 659, 167 S. W.
But it is urged the better view is, that where the appellate court has original as well as appellate jurisdiction and the case is to be tried anew, as in the matter of an appeal from the justice of the peace to the circuit court, jurisdiction of the subject-matter should be regarded as vested by the law in the appellate court in such cases and the question treated as one concerning the jurisdiction over the person only, which may be conferred by consent. The proposition appears to be sound in principle, and were the question an open one, we would be inclined to accept it, for such cases may properly be distinguished from those where the justice of the peace is given sole or exclusive jurisdiction in the first instance. But, as has heretofore been said, the rule of decision in this State appears to be established otherwise. [See Hadley v. Bernero, 103 Mo. App. 549, 554, 78 S. W. 64.] In this view, the court did not err in denying defendant a hearing on the set-off, for the reason it was without jurisdiction of the subject-matter on an appeal from the justice of the peace.
But though such be true, we believe the court erred in denying defendant the right to be heard with respect to an item of $72 for clover hay appearing in both plaintiff’s account sued upon and defendant’s set-off. It is true that a party sued before a justice of the peace may not be heard on a set-off exceeding the jurisdiction of the justice but for the fact that it is credited with the amount of plaintiff’s claim. In other words, a defendant may not reduce his set-off, otherwise exceeding the jurisdiction of the justice, by enter
But the propositions adverted to are wholly beside the instant case. Here, it is true the $72 item for clover appeared in plaintiff’s account sued upon, and it is true, too, that defendant preferred a charge in his set-off on the same item in the same amount against plaintiff. On the ruling of the court that defendant could not be heard on his set-off, he then sought to prove, and, indeed, introduced some evidence to that effect, that the $72 for clover was received by him from plaintiff under an agreement that it should be credited on the indebtedness of plaintiff to him. Because this item appeared in the set-off, the court denied defendant the right to show that no indebtedness to plaintiff ever accrued on account of the $72 for clover. Obviously this was error, for such was competent defense under the general denial alone, and the appearance of a defendant before a justice of the peace in and of itself is tantamount to the filing of a general denial and operates, too, to put the plaintiff on the proof of his cause of action. The defendant may show under the general denial anything tending to disprove the plaintiff’s case — that is, as if no debt accrued or ever existed. [See Schmidt v. Rozier, 121 Mo. App. 306, 98 S. W. 791.] It was entirely competent for defendant to show under the general denial that he had received the clover from plaintiff with an understand
Because the court denied defendant’s right to show this fact, the judgment should be reversed and the cause remanded. It is so ordered.-