Court Opinion

ID: 6584637
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:41:26.811008+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:57:25.260306
License: Public Domain

MUNSON, J.
This is an action of book account, brought originally to the county court, in which the plaintiff declares for fifty dollars to balance accounts, and places the ad damnum at fifty dollars. The county court dismissed the suit on motion. This disposition of the case was in accordance with the holding in Bates v. Downer, 4 Vt. 178. This case was unfavorably commented upon in Paul v. Burton, 32 Vt. 148, and we think it should now be overruled.
The county court has “original and exclusive jurisdiction of all original civil actions, except those made cognizable by a justice.” Justices are given jurisdiction of all civil actions, with certain exceptions, “where the debt or other matter in demand does not exceed two hundred dollars.” The amount of the demand is thus made the test of jurisdiction. But it is further provided that in actions on book account the “matter in demand” shall be the debtor side of the plaintiff’s book. The statute also prescribes the form of declaration to be used in book account actions, and this declares for the sum which the plaintiff claims is due from the defendant to balance book accounts between them. When this declaration is inserted in the form prescribed for the writ, it is followed by. a statement of the amount of damage which the plaintiff claims to have sustained, and for the recovery of which he brings suit. This clause is so often determinative of the jurisdiction that we ordinarily speak of the ad damnum as the test of jurisdiction ; but the statute does not declaré it to be the test. It frequently becomes such, because of its being taken as a statement of the matter in demand when the amount of the demand is not determined with certainty by the declara*389tion. Bnfc the amount declared for as due, whether derived from the declaration or the ad damnum, is not in this action the test of jurisdiction. The jurisdiction here is to be determined by the debtor side of the plaintiff’s book, an allegation of which is in no way provided for by the forms prescribed. The ad damnum, which is sometimes taken to represent the actual matter in demand, cannot be held to represent what is here arbitrarily declared to bé the matter in demand. It may be that the setting up in a justice writ of sums exceeding the jurisdictional limit would afford ground for iis dismissal; for if over two hundred dollars is required to balance accounts the debtor side of the book must be over two hundred dollars. But the fact that the plaintiff in a county court writ claims less than two hundred dollars is not equivalent to a statement that the debtor side of his book is less than two hundred dollars. So there is nothing in this writ to show that the plaintiff’s claim is not within the jurisdiction of the county court. As to whether the writ should affirmatively show the jurisdiction of the county court, it is sufficient in this case to say that the writ is prescribed by statute, and that no allegation of the jurisdictional fact is required. So it cannot be said that a want of jurisdiction is apparent from the face of the writ, either in the allegations contained or from the want of further allegation; and the writ should not have been dismissed. Of course this apparent jurisdiction is not controlling, and the jurisdiction will ultimately depend upon what may appear as to the debtor side of the plaintiff’s book.

Judgment reversed and cazt.se remanded.