The plaintiffs sued the defendant before a justice of the peace. The following was the cause of action filed, to-wit:
“Rezin Iams to Falkner and Reading, Dr. To destroying and damaging the pasture land of the plaintiffs, by turning and suffering his cattle and horses on the same,.....................$10 00
“ To destroying and damaging ten acres of meadow land, by turning his horses thereon,...........$20 00
*201“Also for damages by turning Ms horses, cattle and sheep on sixty acres of corn land and tramping down the same,........................ $70 00
“ Also for that the said lams on the 30th of March, 1852, at Delaibare county, rented his farm to the plaintiffs, and then and there delivered them possession thereof, which renting was not to expire until the 1st of December, 1852. And the said lams hath ever since the day on which said agreement was made, without authority from the plaintiffs, turned his horses, hogs, sheep and cattle on said land, and suffered them to remain thereon. By means whereof the said horses, hogs, sheep and cattle tramped up said land, destroying the meadow of the plaintiffs, to their damage 100 dollars.”
Before the justice, the defendant moved to dismiss the suit. The justice overruled the motion, tried the cause, and gave judgment for the plaintiffs. The defendant appealed.
In the Circuit Court, the defendant renewed his motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction in the justice, the action being founded in tort, and the damages claimed over 50 dollar’s. Upon intimation from the Court that the motion would be sustained, the plaintiffs asked leave to amend by adding to the first count or charge these words: “which pasture land and meadow were rented of defendant by the plaintiffs;” and to the second count these words: “which corn land the defendant rented to the plaintiffs.” The Court refused leave to amend, sustained the defendant’s motion, and dismissed the suit.
We infer from the brief of the plaintiffs that the amendments, if allowed, would have changed the form of action from ex delicto to ex contractu. That being the object, the Court, by refusing leave to amend, ruled correctly. R. S. 1843, c. 47, s. 171.
The cause of action charges a direct trespass upon land, which obviously brings the foundation of the suit within the legal defimtion of a tort. The damage claimed is 100 dollars; a sum to which the jurisdiction of a justice, in *202actions founded in tort, does not extend. R. S. 1843, p. 862.
J. H. Swaar, for the plaintiffs. T. J. Sample, for the defendant.Per Curiam.—The judgment is affirmed with costs.