
    Case No. 13,876.
    THECKER et al. v. MILBURN.
    [Hayw. & H. 271.] 
    
    Circuit Court, District of Columbia.
    Oct. 17, 1847.
    Actions — Cumulation—Justice of Peace-Jurisdiction.
    The holder of several notes, made by the same party, may elect to bring separate action in a justice’s court on each note, and the fact that the amount of all the notes combined exceeds the jurisdiction of the justice will not oust the justice of jurisdiction.
    Appeal from Henry Reaves, justice of the peace.
    [This was an action on promissory notes by Thomas Milburn against James Thecker and James A. Thecker.]
    Robert Ould, for appellants.
    Mr. Laurence, for appellee.
    The Theekers had given two joint promissory notes, bearing the same date, to T. M. Milburn, each note for $36 with interest, one payable in four and the other in six months. After both of the notes had fallen due, a warrant was issued on each, and Milburn obtained judgment on each. The Theekers appealed, on the ground that both notes ought to have been embraced in one suit, and that then the amount would have exceeded the magistrate’s jurisdiction.
    For the appellee, it was contended that each note constituted a separate cause of action, and that the magistrate was right in giving a separate judgment on each.
   THE COURT

sustained the appellee’s point, and affirmed the magistrate’s judgment, with costs.  