Court Opinion

ID: 7058863
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 07:14:11.828822+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:12:05.501355
License: Public Domain

Jackson, J.
— This is an appeal from the Sullivan Circuit Court. The action originated in the Yigo Circuit Court and was venued to Sullivan County.
An action was brought by Wilbur Eustace Davis, Jr. to recover damages for injury to appellant’s minor child for injuries alleged to have been sustained as a *312result of having been struck by an automobile wantonly operated by the appellees.
The complaint herein was filed December 4, 1959; thereafter, various and sundry motions and pleadings were filed by the parties, among the last of which was a ruling by the court on January 10, 1961, requiring appellant to plead over and file an amended complaint on or before January 23,1961.
On February 7, 1961, appellees filed their motion for default and to dismiss appellant’s action. Such motion was sustained on February 14, 1961, and the trial court on that date entered judgment striking appellant’s second amended complaint from the record, denying recovery to appellant, and assessing costs against him.
Page three of appellant’s brief sets forth quite concisely the questions he attempts to present to this court on appeal and I am therefore incorporating said page in full here.
“This case presents a question of compulsory or involuntary non-suit in contravention of the rights guaranteed by the Constitution of the State of Indiana that every man shall have remedy by due course of law for injury done to him and that justice shall be administered without denial. It also involves a question of deprivation of appellant’s property rights without due process of law or just compensation in violation of the guarari.ties. of the constitutions of the United States and the State of Indiana. It is on the premise of duly presented questions of denial and deprivation of rights guaranteed by the Constitution of the State of Indiana and the Constitution of' the United States that appellant submits the Supreme Court of Indiana has direct jurisdiction of this appeal.”
The only question presented is whether or not the trial court erred in certain rulings on the pleadings *313filed in this cause and in entering the judgment complained of. Those questions can and should be determined by the Appellate Court as there is no constitutional question here that could not be averred in every case that might be decided in the courts below. Fechtman v. Stover (1963), 244 Ind. 541, 194 N. E. 2d 623.
The case is accordingly transferred to the Appellate Court.
Achor, and Myers, JJ., concur.
Arterburn, J., concurs in result.
Landis, C. J., concurs in result with opinion.