On Motion to Dismiss.
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Bermudez, C. J.The plaintiff asks the dismissal of the appeal for want of jurisdiction.
The plaintiff has enjoined the execution of a judgment for $703 with interest and costs against him, on the ground of extinction, by compromise with defendant’s transferrer, previous to the transfer. He claimed three hundred dollars damages for trespass on his property, and two hundred dollars for costs and legal expenses in the assertion and defense of his claim, in this proceeding. The defendant asked a dissolution of the injunction, praying for statutory damages. The injunction was perpetuated, but without damages.
The matter in dispute is the existence or extinction of the judgment enjoined.
It is settled that, in actions to enjoin and annul judgments between the parties thereto, the jurisdiction of this Court is to be tested by the amount of the judgment, and, as a corollary, that damages, claimed in such cases, are not always an element to determine that jurisdiction. 30 An. 425; 12 An. 784; 14 An. 73; Schmidt & Ziegler vs. Brown, Lemle vs. Routon, 33 An., p. _.
A case may perhaps be presented, in which — to a claim to, or against a judgment for, less than $1000 — a demand for proportioned, connected and reasonable damages may be superadded; but when such a claim arises, and damages, on their face improbable, are asked, jurisdiction will not attach.
It is true that, in the present instance, the damages claimed were asserted before the adoption of the Constitution in force, in a case which was then clearly appealable. Although it cannot, therefore, be pretended that they were then demanded to give this Court jurisdiction, it is manifest that they are now insisted upon, as set up in good faith, for the same purpose.
*1073It cannot be claimed that the plaintiff is estopped from denying the appealable character of his suit, because consent cannot give jurisdiction to a court which has none ratlone materice. Neither can it be claimed that the case is appealable on defendant’s reconventional demand, for the reason that, in reality, it is for no more than the statutory damages* which do not amount to one-fourth of the sum necessary to give us jurisdiction. A plaintiff 'in reeonvention cannot by incorporating into his demand the matter in dispute in the main action, and by adding thereto a claim in damages, give jurisdiction to this Court, over his suit. - The two claims are distinct; they are sometimes connected, or contradictory; but each stands on its own merits. Just as the plaintiff cannot cumulate with his demand that set up by the defendant, so is the latter precluded from adding to his claim that of plaintiff.
In the absence of any specification in the petition of the circumstances from which the damages spring, we are at a loss to conceive how the execution of a judgment for $708 can have occasioned and is likely to inflict injury to the extent of $500.
The judgment which the lower court might have awarded in favor of plaintiff, can no more be urged, as a test of our jurisdiction, than could an adverse judgment. If the judgment, the existence of which is assailed, has not been satisfied, the foundation upon which the superstructure rests gives way and the accessory follows the principal.
We think that plaintiff’s demand in damages is mostly fictitious, and that it cannot be relied upon to give this Court jurisdiction.
It is, therefore, ordered that this appeal be dismissed at the cost of appellant.