Court Opinion

ID: 6689318
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 21:36:14.544534+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:01:03.860753
License: Public Domain

PORREY, J.
This action was brought in the municipal court of Sioux Falls, to recover $300 for personal injuries resulting from 'an automobile accident. The trial resulted in a verdict *83and judgment in plaintiff’s favor for $60 and costs. From this judgment defendant appealed1 to the circuit court and demanded a new trial in said court. Thereupon plaintiff moved1 to dismiss said appeal upon the ground that the circuit court was without jurisdiction to entertain such appeal. This 'motion was sustained 'by the circuit court and judgment entered dismissing said appeal. From such judgment, defendant appeals to this court.
As stated in appellant’s brief, the sole question in the case is1 whether the jurisdiction on appeal is -determined by the amount claimed by the plaintiff or the amount of the judgment recovered in the municipal i-court.
[1,2] Appeals -from judgments in the municipal courts are provided for in section 26, c. 191, Laws of 1907, as amended -by section 7, -c. 278, Laws of 1913. This section reads, in part, as follows-:
“All appeals from judgments or -orders o-f s-aid'-court shall be taken to the Supreme 'Court in the same manner and under the same restrictions, within the same time, and with the same effect, a® appeals are taken from the circuit court to- the Supreme ‘Court, provided, ho-wever, that in actions which would otherwise be cognizable before a justice of the peace except actions of forcible entry and -detainer -or detainer only, an appeal from1 the judgment of said' -co-urt may -only be taken to the circuit court, in the manner provided by the Justice Code. * * *”
If the jurisdiction is to be determined by the amount, claimed by the plaintiff, then this case was not cognizable by a justice of the peace, and -an appeal' can be taken only to -the Supreme Court. But it is contended by appellant that the jurisdiction is to he -determined by the -amount of the verdict, and as the verdict was for only $60, that the case was cognizable by a justice of the. peace, and that it was appealable to the circuit court. This 'contention is based wholly upon what was said by this court in Laney v. Ingalls, 5 S. D. 183, 58 N. W. 572. But that -case involved the right to tax -costs only. No question of jurisdiction was inv-olVed or intended to be passed upon. The plaintiff in that case sued on a promissory note for the recovery of $150. The verdict was for $36.12 only, and the court allowed -the defendant to tax -costs 'against the plaintiff. This was done by virtue of section 417, -Code Civ. Proc., which provides that the plaintiff *84•may tax costs “of course” in “actions of which a court of justice of the peace has no jurisdiction,” and allows costs, to t'he defendant “of course” where costs are not allowed to the plaintiff; but this rule does not apply to actions in the municipal court. Under the provisions of section 25, c. 191, Laws of 1907, the plaintiff may tax costs in the municipal court in actions that are cognizable by a justice of the peace. It has been settled in this court that, where the jurisdiction of a justice of the peace depends upon die amount of money involved in the case, it is the amount claimed by the plaintiff, and not the amount recovered, that determines the question. Plunkett v. Evans, 2 S. D. 434, 50 N. W. 961; Bank v. Sanderson, 24 S. D. 443, 123 N. W. 873.
To show the inconsistency of appellant’s position, let us suppose that respondent had waived' the question of jurisdiction in the circuit court and permitted the case to proceed to trial, and the jury had returned a verdict for more than $100, as they might have done under the pleadings; would appellant then have claimed the case was cognizable by a justice of the peace? The proposition refutes itself.
Tlie appeal was properly dismissed, and the judgment appealed from is affirmed.