Plaintiff appealed. This action was begun before a justice of the peace, and dismissed, on appeal, in the Superior Court, upon the motion of the defendant, for want of jurisdiction in the justice's court.
The complaint of the plaintiff, as set out in the summons, was (690) "for the nonpayment of the sum of $200, with interest on $938.18 from 22 February, 1907, due by promissory note, being the balance unpaid, and demanded by said plaintiff."
The demand for interest on a greater sum than two hundred dollars defeats the jurisdiction of the justice.
In Hedgecock v. Davis, 64 N.C. 650, where the interest is held to be "a mere legal incident," it is evident that interest on the jurisdictional *Page 566 amount of $200, or less, is meant, and not on any sum in excess of $200; and, therefore, that case has no application where interest on a larger sum is claimed.
The constitutional limit of the jurisdiction of a justice of the peace in civil action founded on contract is "wherein the sum demanded shall not exceed $200." Constitution, Art. IV, sec. 27, and Revisal, 1419 (1), limit such jurisdiction in such cases "wherein the sum demanded, exclusive of interest," does not exceed $200. This does not include interest on a larger sum.
The note here was $938.18. As the payment amounts to $738.39, the interest should have been calculated and added to the principal and the payment deducted, leaving the difference as a new principal. As this new principal was much in excess of $200, it was necessary to remit such excess if the plaintiff desired to bring action before a justice of the peace. The plaintiff conceived the idea that he could avoid that requirement by applying all the payment to the principal, leaving the balance due on principal $199.80. He therefore sued for "$200 principal and interest on $918.33." This was beyond the jurisdiction of a justice of the peace, who can not adjudge recovery of interest on a sum greater than $200. Besides, a payment must always be applied first to extinguish the interest, and the remainder only upon the principal.
It is the "demand," i. e., what the plaintiff could recover on the face of the summons if there is no defense, which determines the jurisdiction.Knight v. Taylor, 131 N.C. 85; Noville v. Dew, 94 N.C. 45; Allen v.Jackson, 86 N.C. 321. There being no remitter of the excess before the justice, he had no jurisdiction, and the action was properly dismissed on appeal.
Affirmed.
(691)