A suit was brought to recover from T. possession of a tract of
land of about 35 acres, part of a larger tract of 186 acres which
the plaintiff claimed to own. The lessor of T. of the 35 acres was
made defendant, and answered, claiming to own the land sued for and
also the rest of the 186 acres. The plaintiff recovered a judgment
for the 35 acres, their value not exceeding $2,000. The value of
the 186 acres was about $10,000. The lessor having brought the case
to this Court by a writ of error, it was dismissed on the ground
that the amount involved was not sufficient to give this Court
jurisdiction, because it did not exceed $5,000, exclusive of
costs.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action at law, brought in the Circuit Court of the
United States for the Western District of Louisiana by
Page 135 U. S. 196
Robert N. Smith, Elizabeth A. Smith (wife of Marine Duvall,
joined, authorized, and assisted by her husband), William L. Smith,
Elizabeth W. Smith (widow of James F. Smith), citizens of Kentucky,
and John S. Smith, a citizen of Colorado, as legal heirs of William
W. Smith, deceased, against George A. Turner, a citizen of
Louisiana.
The petition avers that the State of Louisiana, on the 14th of
May, 1853, sold to William W. Smith a certain tract of land known
as "Silver Lake," situated in section 31, township 18, ranges 13
and 14, in the Parish of Caddo, in the State of Louisiana,
containing an area of 186.57 acres at the maximum price of $1.25
per acre, which at the same time was paid into the treasury of the
state by said Smith; that after that sale, and on the 24th of
February, 1855, the state issued a patent for said tract of land to
Smith; that it acquired said tract as swamp and overflowed land,
granted to it by the acts of Congress of 1849 and 1850, and sold
the land to Smith as swamp and overflowed land; that all sales of
land in Louisiana, claimed by the state as swamp and overflowed
lands, whether made by the United States or by the state, and
whether the land sold was of that character or not, were confirmed
by the Act of Congress of March 2, 1855, entitled "An act for the
relief of purchasers and locators of swamp and overflowed lands;"
that the act of 1855 was extended to sales made after its passage,
and was continued in force, by the Act of March 3, 1857, to confirm
all selections of swamp and overflowed lands by the several states
under the acts of 1849 and 1850; that the act of 1855 confirmed the
title of Smith to the tract of land known as "Silver Lake," whether
it belonged to the state under the swamp land acts of Congress or
whether it belonged to the United States; that Smith acquired a
title to the land both from the state and the United States by
purchase and by confirmation by act of Congress; that that title is
paramount to all subsequent claims from the government, and is
indefeasible under the act of confirmation of March 2, 1855; that
the plaintiffs are the owners of the tract of land known as "Silver
Lake," which is illegally withheld from them, and a part of it,
containing 40 acres or more, is
Page 135 U. S. 197
in the possession of George A. Turner, a citizen of Louisiana,
who refuses to deliver to the plaintiffs that part of the land, and
that the part in the possession of Turner is worth at least $600.
The prayer of the petition is for a citation to Turner, and for
judgment for the recovery of said tract of land in his possession,
with its revenues from judicial demand.
Turner was served with a citation, and put in an answer alleging
that he was in the possession of a portion of the property
described in the petition, as a tenant of the Vicksburg, Shreveport
& Pacific Railroad Company, and praying that his said lessor
and the owner of the property be made defendant, and he be
discharged. An order was made by the court that the company be made
a defendant in his place, and a citation was issued to it, with
which its president was duly served. It was a Louisiana
corporation.
The company first filed an exception to the capacity of the
plaintiffs to sue, on the ground that they were not the legal heirs
of Smith, and, if they were, were not his sole heirs. This
exception was tried and overruled. A plea and exception of
res
adjudicata to the suit was then filed by the company, on the
ground that, in a suit entitled "
The State of Louisiana v. W.
W. Smith," in the District Court of Caddo Parish, Smith put at
issue the validity and legality of his title to the land described
in the plaintiffs' petition under the certificate and patent
described therein; that upon a final hearing, judgment was rendered
in that suit decreeing said certificate and patent null and void,
and that they be cancelled and delivered to the State of Louisiana,
and that the plaintiffs, the heirs of Smith, were bound by the
judgment in that suit.
The company also put in an answer to the petition denying its
allegations, and alleging that the sale or entry of the land, as
set forth in the petition, was cancelled by the register of the
state land office on the 10th of June, 1853, and the cancellation
was duly notified to Smith; that the sale, entry, and patent were
without authority of law, for reasons set forth in the answer; that
the land was never selected by the State of Louisiana as swamp and
overflowed lands, and never reported to the Commissioner of the
General Land Office, and never
Page 135 U. S. 198
approved as such by the Surveyor General, the Secretary of the
Interior, or the Commissioner of the General Land Office, and never
listed or returned by the Secretary of the Interior to the state as
swamp and overflowed lands; that the state had never claimed or
acquired the land as such; that the land did not belong to that
class of lands, but to the other class, known or designated as
"shallow lakes," and therefore was not embraced in the grant from
the United States of swamp and overflowed lands under the acts of
Congress of 1849 and 1850; that the company was the owner of the
land, by grant from the United States to the state, under the Act
of Congress of June 3, 1856, to aid in the construction of
railroads in the state, and which was accepted by the state for
that purpose; that, all the requirements of said grant having been
complied with by the state and by the Vicksburg, Shreveport and
Texas Railroad Company, the land described in the petition, being
embraced in that grant, was acquired by that company and duly
certified or patented by the United States as belonging to that
company, and had been legally sold or transferred by it to the
defendant company, and that the land described in the petition, and
sought to be recovered in the suit, was worth at least $10,000. The
answer prayed that the plaintiffs' demand be rejected, and for
judgment decreeing the company "to be the owner of said land, and
quieted in possession thereof, and for general relief."
The case was tried by a jury, which rendered the following
verdict: "We, the jury, find for plaintiffs, and that the land sued
for is described in the plat made by W. R. Devoe, and filed in
evidence." A motion for a new trial was made and overruled, and a
judgment was entered against Turner and the company, adjudging that
the plaintiffs were the owners of the land in controversy, and
entitled to its possession, the land "being known and described as
follows," and then giving a description of it by courses and
distances,
"containing thirty-five 18/100 acres, situated in the Parish of
Caddo, Louisiana, and as shown and described on map and survey of
same made by W. R. Devoe, civil engineer, on file and of record in
said cause."
The judgment also ordered that writs
Page 135 U. S. 199
of possession issue in favor of the plaintiffs, and against the
defendants; that the plaintiffs have judgment against the
defendants for costs, and that the plea of
res adjudicata
be overruled. The railroad company has brought a writ of error to
review the judgment.
There are six bills of exceptions found in the record. One of
them states that on the trial the company offered three persons as
competent witnesses to prove that the land described and claimed by
the plaintiffs in their petition, under a certificate and patent
from the State of Louisiana,
"and which is claimed by defendant under a grant from the United
States government to the State of Louisiana to aid said railroad,
and for which defendant prays judgment, recognizing their
ownership,"
etc., was worth $10,000; that the plaintiffs' counsel objected
on the ground that the only part of the Silver Lake tract of 186.57
acres that was in controversy in this suit was the part alleged to
be in the possession of Turner, "and it was admitted by counsel for
defendant that said part or parcel of land was not worth exceeding
two thousand dollars." The bill of exceptions states that the
objection of the plaintiffs was sustained by the court, on the
ground that the petition claimed only the number of acres in the
possession of Turner; that the judgment in this case, if for the
plaintiffs, could affect only the land held by him, and that the
claim set up by him or by the railroad company did not make this a
suit for more than the number of acres of land claimed by the
plaintiffs, "which is about forty acres, more or less, and is shown
by admission of counsel not to be worth more than two thousand
dollars." The plaintiffs move to dismiss the writ of error on the
ground that the matter in dispute does not exceed the sum of
$5,000, exclusive of costs. The railroad company contends that the
plaintiffs, by their petition, claim to be the owners of the entire
Silver Lake tract of 186.57 acres; that the company by its answer
also claims title to the entire tract; that it is stated by the
court, in one of the bills of exceptions, that, if the suit
involves title to the 186.57 acres, the land "is worth about
$10,000, as is admitted by counsel for plaintiffs;" and that
therefore this Court has jurisdiction of the writ of error.
Page 135 U. S. 200
But we are of opinion that this Court is without jurisdiction of
the case. All that the plaintiffs, in their petition, claimed to
recover was the part of the land which was in the possession of
Turner, alleged therein to contain 40 acres or more. The answer
alleged that the land sought to be recovered in the suit was worth
at least $10,000, and prayed that the plaintiffs' demand be
rejected, and for judgment decreeing the company "to be the owner
of said land." This put in issue only the land in the possession of
Turner. The judgment is limited to a piece of land described by
metes and bounds, and containing 35 18/100 acres, as shown by a map
and survey of the same on file and of record in the cause. The
value of that parcel of land is shown clearly to be not over
$2,000, and this is conclusive as to our jurisdiction.
Elgin v.
Marshall, 106 U. S. 578, and
cases there cited;
Opelika City v. Daniel, 109 U.
S. 108;
Bruce v. Manchester & Keene
Railroad, 117 U. S. 514;
Gibson v. Shufeldt, 122 U. S. 24.
Writ of error dismissed.