Court Opinion

ID: 6622123
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:31:16.51145+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:58:45.366782
License: Public Domain

JOHNSON, J.
-The petition, when filed, contained two counts. An action in tort was pleaded in the first and one on contract in the second. No demurrer was filed, but defendant answered to the merits. During the trial plaintiff dismissed the cause of action stated in the first count. At the conclusion of all the evidence defendant asked an instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, which was refused. Plaintiff recovered judgment on the second count in the sum of $26, the amount prayed for in the petition and defendant appealed.
It is argued by defendant that the circuit court had no jurisdiction over the action stated in the second count because the amount of the recovery sought therein was less than $50. The suit was brought in the circuit court of Jackson county, a county having over fifty thousand inhabitants, and it is provided in Revised Statutes 1899, section 3836, that in all such counties “justices of the peace shall have original jurisdiction *305of all actions and proceedings for the recovery of money . . . when the snm demanded exclusive of interest and costs does not exceed three hundred dollars.” In the third subdivision of section 1674, Revised Statutes 1899, it is provided that circuit courts shall have “concurrent original jurisdiction with justices of the peace in all counties and cities, in all civil actions for the recovery of money . . . when the sum demanded exclusive of interest and costs shall exceed fifty dollars.”
Had the suit, when brought, embraced no other cause of action than that pleaded in the second count, the judgment would be void for want of original jurisdiction in the circuit court over the subject-matter, the exclusive original jurisdiction of such actions being vested in justices of the peace. [Bradley v. Asher, 65 Mo. App. 589; Bay v. Trusdell, 92 Mo. App. 377.]
In the first count the damages were laid at $10,000 and the important questions before us for solution relate to the effect of joining in one suit these two causes of action. It has been held in this State that “where the aggregate amount claimed in all of the counts brought the cause within the jurisdiction of the court, it was sufficient to confer jurisdiction over the subject-matter” notwithstanding the amount claimed in each count was below the sum of fifty dollars. [Smith v. County of Clark, 54 Mo. 58; Fickle v. Railroad, 54 Mo. 219; Hunt v. Hopkins, 66 Mo. 99; Needles v. Burke, 27 Mo. App. 211.] It is the amount claimed in the petition that determines the question of jurisdiction and not the amount of the recovery. When the jurisdiction of the circuit court has once attached, it will not be divested by the fact alone that the plaintiff has failed to establish a part of his demands and has recovered on all of them a sum less than fifty dollars. [Vineyard v. Lynch, 86 Mo. 684.]
It is urged by defendant that the dismissal by plaintiff of the first count was the voluntary abandonment *306of the cause pleaded therein and therefore that cause could not serve to confer jurisdiction where none could exist without it. That would, be true had plaintiff voluntarily dismissed the first count, for it would amount to a fraud on the jurisdiction of the court for a plaintiff to use an alleged cause of action for the sole purpose of bringing another within the jurisdiction of the court and, after that purpose had been accomplished, on his own motion to abandon the cause so employed. But the facts in the record before us disclose no such fraudulent purpose on the part of the plaintiff, but.show that he acted in good faith in the prosecution of the cause pleaded in the first count. He went to trial and introduced his evidence to support the allegations of that count, but was compelled to dismiss, owing to adverse rulings of the. trial court. The fact that he failed to establish his cause was of itself .no indication of bad faith in its prosecution and consequently was without effect on the subject of jurisdiction.
But the serious question is, could the cause pleaded in the first count serve at any stage of the proceeding to confer jurisdiction over the subject-matter of the second count? In the cases we have cited, where it was held that the aggregate amount of the sums claimed in all the counts determines the question of jurisdiction, the suits involved none but causes that could be properly joined in one petition under the provisions of section 593, Revised Statutes 1899. But here we find an action ex delicto joined with one ex contractu. The statute does not permit this to be done. [Jamison v. Copher, 35 Mo. 483; Southworth Co. v. Lamb, 82 Mo. 242; Sumner v. Rogers, 90 Mo. 324; O’Riley v. Diss, 48 Mo. App. 62.]
Defendant did not demur to the petition, nor did it in any manner raise the question of a misjoinder of causes of action before verdict. It waived the objection that two causes of action were improperly united in one *307suit. [Fadley v. Smith, 23 Mo. App. 87; House v. Lowell, 45 Mo. 381; Southworth v. Lamb, supra.]
But by such waiver it did not confer jurisdiction where none before existed. Jurisdiction over the subject-matter of an action cannot be given by consent of the parties. The law alone prescribes the matters each court may determine. [Brown v. Woody, 64 Mo. 547; Tippack v. Briant, 63 Mo. 580; 12 Am. and Eng. Ency. of Law, 305.] In order that two or more claims may be united to make the jurisdictional amount, they must belong to a class that under the statute will permit them to be properly joined in one suit and not such as should be made the subject of independent suits. [1 Am. and Eng. Ency. Pl. and Pr., 722.]
Had defendant, instead of answering to the merits, demurred to the petition on the ground of misjoinder of causes of action, plaintiff would have been compelled to elect between them and, had he chosen to dismiss the first count, it cannot be denied that the court then would have had no jurisdiction over the cause pleaded in the second count and so it is clear that no jurisdiction thereof attached by the mere bringing of the suit, as it does in cases where the several causes properly may be united.
It must follow that as jurisdiction over the cause asserted in the second count did not vest in the circuit court prior to defendant’s waiver of the objection to the misjoinder and as jurisdiction over the subject-matter cannot be conferred by consent, nor acquired through any subsequent act of either of the parties, defendant’s failure to object in proper and timely manner to the misjoinder was without effect on the subject of jurisdiction. [Sumner v. Rogers, 90 Mo. 1. c. 330; Wells on Jurisdiction of Courts, sec. 107.] And the judgment entered on the second count must be declared void for want of jurisdiction over the subject-matter.
The judgment is reversed.
All concur.