This was an action commenced by appellants against appellees, before a justice of the peace, and taken by appeal to the county court, and from that court to this court.
In the county court, a motion was made by appellees and sustained by the court, to dismiss the suit for want of jurisdiction of the justice of the peace.
The suit was brought under section 15 of the Statute1 of Frauds and Perjuries, chapter 59, page 542 Revised Statutes of 1874, which provides, “ if no person shall administer on the goods and chattels of a deceased person, for the space of one year after his death, a separate suit or action may be maintained ao-ainst the heirs or devisees on all the contracts and under-O takings of such deceased person.”
The facts as shown by the record are, that the defendants are the heirs of William Walker, deceased. That plaintiffs sold and delivered to the deceased ,in his lifetime, and at his request, goods at the price ofseventeen dollars, and that he died more than a year before the commencement of this suit, without having paid for the goods so purchased by him. That he left a considerable amount of property, both real and personal, and more than enough to pay the sum claimed, which descended to, and was received by, and taken into the possession of the defendants, and the personal property sold, and the proceeds received •by them. Eo person administered on the goods and chattels of the deceased for the space of more than one year after his death, nr has yet administered thereon.
The only question presented by the parties for our determination is, whether in such a case, a justice of the peace has jurisdiction. This, we think, is settled affirmatively by Sec. 13, of chapter 79 of Revised. Statutes of 1874, page 639, sixth clause, which provides that justices of the peace, shall have jurisdiction in their respective counties, “in all cases where the action of debt or assumpsit will lie, if the damages claimed do not exceed $200.”
It is clear that debt or assumpsit would lie in an action brought before a justice of the peace, for the recovery of the price of the goods sold, if brought against the deceased in his lifetime, and we see no reason why the suit or action which the law declares, as we have seen, may be maintained against the heirs or devisees, on all the contracts and undertakings of the deceased person, in case no person shall administer on his goods and chattels, for the space of one year after his death, cannot be brought before a justice of the peace, when that court has jurisdiction of actions of assumpsit and debt. We are not called upon to say what kind of case must be proved to sustain such an action against heirs or devisees. It is sufficient for us to determine that on the facts as presented by the record, the justice of the peace had jurisdiction.
The court below having erred in sustaining the motion to dismiss the suit, the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.
Judgment reversed.