Court Opinion

ID: 5467747
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-09 20:05:09.542787+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:33:10.934418
License: Public Domain

Mullett, Justice.
The 45th section of the Code of 1848, expressly repealed the 2d section of the Revised Statutes concerning the jurisdiction of justices of the peace, and the statute of 1840 amending the same. These were the only statutes empowering a justice to take judgment by confession for any greater amount than was embraced in his general jurisdiction. At the time the judgment in question was confessed the justice had no jurisdiction to enter judgment for that amount. The judgment was therefore a nullity and can form nor ba to the plaintiffs’ right to recover upon the notes. It is true the Code of 1849 restores to a justice the jurisdiction which had been taken away from him by the Code of 1848; but this does not help the case; the amendment of 1849 can not have a restroactive effect. The last section of the Code of 1849 can not give it that effeqt. All there is of that it happened to be a part of the Code of 1848 which was not amended. The plaintiffs must therefore have judgment for the amount claimed in the complaint with costs.