In an action of ejectment the question whether the land in
dispute is of sufficient value to give a circuit court jurisdiction
is purely one of fact, and the statutes regulating jurisdiction
leave the mode of trying such issues to the discretion of the trial
judge.
Whether he elects to submit such issue to a jury, or to himself
hear and determine it without the intervention of a jury, in either
event the parties are not concluded by the judgment of the circuit
court.
In this case, the question was passed upon by the court below on
affidavits, and the judgment dismissing the action for want of
jurisdiction is reviewable here.
A suit cannot properly be dismissed by a circuit court as not
involving a controversy of an amount sufficient to come within its
jurisdiction unless the facts, when made to appear on the record,
create a legal certainty of that conclusion.
This was an action of ejectment, brought in the Circuit Court of
the United States for the Eastern District of Tennessee to recover
a tract of land in Polk County. The declaration alleged that the
land was worth more than $2,000. The defendants disclaimed as to a
portion of the
Page 169 U. S. 116
land and pleaded not guilty and the statute of limitations as to
the remainder.
At the trial, after the plaintiffs' evidence was closed, the
defendants moved the court to dismiss the plaintiffs' suit for want
of jurisdiction, because it appeared that the matter in dispute did
not exceed, exclusive of interest and costs, the sum or value of
$2,000, but the court suspended action on this motion until the
verdict of the jury should be rendered. The defendants then
proceeded to introduce their evidence on the matters put in issue
by the pleadings, and after argument of counsel and the charge of
the court, the jury found a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs and
assessed their damages for the detention of the premises at one
dollar. Thereupon the court rendered judgment on the verdict, and a
writ of possession and execution accordingly.
But immediately upon the rendition of the verdict and judgment,
the court set them aside, entertained the defendants' motion to
dismiss for want of jurisdiction, and gave leave to both parties to
file affidavits showing the value of the land in controversy.
Upon consideration of the evidence heard on the trial, and of
affidavits produced on behalf of the plaintiffs, the court, being
of opinion that the value of the matter in dispute was less than
$2,000, and that there was not a substantial controversy between
the parties of sufficient value to be within the jurisdiction of
the court, dismissed the suit for want of jurisdiction, and
rendered judgment for costs against the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs
excepted to this action of the court. A bill of exceptions was
sealed, and a writ of error was allowed to this Court.
MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
The first question that arises upon this record is whether
Page 169 U. S. 117
the action of the circuit court in dismissing the plaintiffs'
action for the want of jurisdiction is reviewable by us. The court
acted in pursuance of the fifth section of the Act of March 3,
1875, c. 137, 18 Stat. 470, 472, which provided
"that, if, in any suit commenced in a circuit court or removed
from a state court to a circuit court of the United States, it
shall appear to the satisfaction of said circuit court at any time
after such suit has been brought or removed thereto, that such suit
does not really and substantially involve a dispute or controversy
properly within the jurisdiction of said circuit court, or that the
parties to said suit have been improperly or collusively made or
joined, either as plaintiffs or defendants, for the purpose of
creating a case cognizable or removable under this act, the said
circuit court shall proceed no further therein, but shall dismiss
the suit or remand it to the court from which it was removed, as
justice may require, and shall make such order as to costs as shall
be just; but the order of said circuit court dismissing or
remanding said cause to the state court shall be reviewable by the
supreme court on writ of error or appeal as the case may be."
By the sixth section of the Act of August 13, 1888, c. 866, 25
Stat. 433, amending the Act of March 3, 1887, it was enacted
"that the last paragraph of section five of the act of Congress
approved March third, eighteen hundred and seventy-five, entitled
'An act to determine the jurisdiction of circuit courts of the
United States and to regulate the removal of causes from state
courts, and for other purposes,' and section six hundred and forty
of the Revised Statutes, and all laws and parts of laws in conflict
with the provisions of this act, be and the same are hereby
repealed."
Any doubt that may have been caused by this repealing enactment,
as to the power to review the judgment of a circuit court
dismissing a suit for want of jurisdiction, was removed by the Act
of February 25, 1889, 25 Stat. c. 236, p. 693, entitled "An act to
provide for writs of error or appeals to the Supreme Court of the
United States in all cases involving the question of the
jurisdiction of the courts below," and which provided
"that in all cases where a final judgment or
Page 169 U. S. 118
decree shall be rendered in a circuit court of the United States
in which there shall have been a question involving the
jurisdiction of the court, the party against whom the judgment or
decree is rendered shall be entitled to an appeal or writ of error
to the Supreme Court of the United States to review such judgment
or decree without reference to the amount of the same, but in cases
where the decree or judgment does not exceed the sum of five
thousand dollars, the supreme court shall not review any question
raised upon the record except such question of jurisdiction; such
writ of error or appeal shall be taken and allowed under the same
provisions as apply to other writs of error or appeals. . . ."
This Act of February 25, 1889, was followed by the Act of March
3, 1891, 26 Stat. 826, c. 517, which provided, in its fifth
section,
"that appeals or writs of error may be taken from the district
courts or from the existing circuit courts direct to the supreme
court in the following cases: in any case in which the jurisdiction
of the court is in issue; in such cases the question of
jurisdiction alone shall be certified to the supreme court from the
court below for decision."
These provisions of the several statutes plainly disclose the
intent of Congress that a party whose suit has been dismissed by a
circuit court for want of jurisdiction shall have the right to have
such judgment reviewed by this Court. And we have accordingly
heretofore held that the action of the circuit courts in such cases
is subject to our revision.
Williams v. Nottawa,
104 U. S. 209;
Barry v. Edmunds, 116 U. S. 550;
Hartog v. Memory, 116 U. S. 588;
Morris v. Gilmer, 129 U. S. 315;
Deputron v. Young, 134 U. S. 249;
Lehigh Mining &c. Co. v. Kelly, 160 U.
S. 327.
The question raised by this writ of error is whether the circuit
court erred in dismissing the plaintiffs' suit for the alleged
reason that the value of the property in dispute did not amount to
the sum of $2,000, exclusive of interest and costs, and that
therefore such suit did not really and substantially involve a
dispute or controversy properly within the jurisdiction of said
circuit court; and, as prescribed by the fifth section of the Act
of March 3, 1891,
Page 169 U. S. 119
such question of the jurisdiction of the circuit court alone is
presented for our decision.
Shields v. Coleman,
157 U. S. 168.
The question whether the land in dispute was of a value
sufficient to give the circuit court jurisdiction was purely one of
fact, and as that question was not submitted to the jury, but was
passed on by the court upon affidavit, it is now suggested that
upon a writ of error, this Court cannot consider the facts
disclosed by the affidavits, but is restricted to any errors of law
shown by the record.
Undoubtedly the general rule is that upon a writ of error, only
matters of law appearing on the face of the record can be
considered, and that evidence, whether written or oral and whether
given to the court or to the jury, does not become a part of the
record unless made so by some regular proceeding at the time of the
trial, and before the rendition of the judgment. Whatever the error
may be, and in whatever stage of the cause it may have occurred, it
must appear in the record, else it cannot be revised in a court of
error exercising jurisdiction according to the course of the common
law, and ordinarily a bill of exceptions lies only upon some point
arising either upon the admission or rejection of evidence, or is a
matter of law arising from a fact found, or not denied, and which
has been overruled by the court.
Arthurs v.
Hart, 17 How. 6.
The difficulty arises out of the peculiar character of the
legislation which we are now considering. Prior to the passage of
the act of 1875, questions going to the jurisdiction of the court
could only be raised by a plea in abatement in the nature of a plea
to the jurisdiction.
See Farmington v. Pillsbury,
114 U. S. 138, and
cases there cited. If such a plea presented a question of law upon
the face of the record, this Court could review the decision of the
court below upon such question of law. If the plea asserted matters
of fact dehors the record, it was open for the parties to agree
upon a statement of facts, or to take exceptions to the rulings of
the court in admitting or rejecting evidence offered to the jury,
or in giving instructions, and in either event only questions of
law would be presented for our decision.
Page 169 U. S. 120
But, under the act of 1875, the trial court is not bound by the
pleadings of the parties, but may, of its own motion, if led to
believe that its jurisdiction is not properly invoked, inquire into
the facts as they really exist.
Williams v. Nottawa,
104 U. S. 209;
Barry v. Edmunds, 116 U. S. 550;
Morris v. Gilmer, 129 U. S. 315;
Deputron v. Young, 134 U. S. 249.
And our present problem is to preserve as well the power of the
trial court to make such inquiries as the right of suitors, so
expressly reserved to them in the statutes, to have the action of
the lower court reviewed by the Supreme Court of the United
States.
In equity cases, which come up on appeal and where the evidence
on which the court below acted is presented here, the action of
that court can be readily reviewed. But in cases at law, like the
present one, how can we review the judgment of the court below
unless that judgment is either based on the verdict of a jury or
upon facts found in an agreed statement?
The statute does not prescribe any particular mode in which the
question of the jurisdiction is to be brought to the attention of
the court, nor how such question, when raised, shall be
determined.
When such a question arises in an action at law, its decision
would usually depend upon matters of fact, and also usually
involves a denial of formal but necessary allegations contained in
the plaintiff's declaration or complaint. Such a case would be
presented when the plaintiff's allegation that the controversy was
between citizens of different states, or when, as in the present
case, the allegation that the matter in dispute was of sufficient
value to give the court jurisdiction, was denied.
In such cases, whether the question was raised by the defendant
or by the court on its own motion, the court might doubtless order
the issue to be tried by the jury. The action of the court, in the
admission or rejection of evidence or in instructing the jury would
thus be subjected to the review by this Court which was intended by
Congress.
Such was the course pursued in the case of
Jones v.
League,
Page 169 U. S. 121
18 How. 76. That was an action at law to try title to land.
League, the plaintiff, averred himself to be a citizen of Maryland,
the defendants being citizens of Texas. By a plea in abatement the
defendants alleged that, at the time of the commencement of the
suit, League was a citizen of Texas. On this plea the plaintiff
took issue, and a trial of that issue was had which resulted, under
the instructions of the court, in a verdict of the jury for the
plaintiff. The case was brought up by a writ of error to this
Court, where the validity of the instructions given by the trial
court was considered.
A similar course was followed in the case of
Northwestern
Railway v. Ohle, 117 U. S. 123.
There an action had been brought by Ohle in a state court of Iowa
against the railway company, which took the case by a removal
petition into the circuit court of the United States on the ground
that Ohle was a citizen of Iowa and the railway company a citizen
of Illinois. Ohle was permitted by the circuit court to file a plea
in abatement or to the jurisdiction alleging that both he and the
railway company were citizens of Illinois. Upon this plea issue was
joined, and a trial had with a jury, and the cause was brought to
this Court by a writ of error, where the instructions of the court
to the jury were reviewed and the judgment affirmed.
But the questions might arise in such a shape that the court
might consider and determine them without the intervention of a
jury. And it would appear to have been the intention of Congress to
leave the mode of raising and trying such issues to the discretion
of the trial judge.
But whether the judge shall elect to submit the issues to the
jury or to himself hear and determine them, it is the manifest
meaning of this legislation that in either event the parties are
not to be concluded by the judgment of the circuit court. As we
have already said, if the questions are submitted to the jury,
there will be a ready remedy, by proper exceptions and a writ of
error, to correct any errors into which the trial court may have
fallen. And if the court takes to itself the determination of the
disputed questions, it is imperative, in order to give effect to
the intention of congress,
Page 169 U. S. 122
that its action must take a form that will enable this Court to
review it so far as to determine whether the conclusion of the
court below was warranted by the evidence before that court.
Thus, in
Barry v. Edmunds, 116 U.
S. 550, where the judgment of the circuit court,
dismissing a cause because in its opinion the matter in dispute did
not amount to the jurisdictional value, was reversed, it was
said:
"In making such an order, therefore, the circuit court exercises
a legal, and not a personal, discretion, which must be exerted in
view of the facts sufficiently proven, and controlled by fixed
rules of law. It might happen that the judge, on the trial or
hearing of the cause, would receive impressions amounting to a
moral certainty that it does not really and substantially involve a
dispute or controversy within the jurisdiction of the court. But
upon such a personal conviction, however strong, he would not be at
liberty to act unless the facts on which the persuasion is based,
when made distinctly to appear on the record, create a legal
certainty of the conclusion based on them. Nothing less than this
is meant by the statute when it provides that the failure of its
jurisdiction on this account shall appear to the satisfaction of
said circuit court."
In
Hartog v. Memory, 116 U. S. 588, it
was said:
"No doubt, if from any source the court is led to suspect that
its jurisdiction has been imposed upon by the collusion of the
parties or in any other way, it may at once of its own motion cause
the necessary inquiry to be made, either by having the proper issue
joined and tried or by some other appropriate form of proceeding,
and act as justice may require for its own protection against fraud
or imposition. But the evidence on which the circuit court acts in
dismissing the suit must be pertinent either to the issue made by
the parties or to the inquiry instituted by the court, and must
appear of record if either party desires to invoke the appellate
jurisdiction of this Court for the review of the order of
dismissal. And when the defendant has not so pleaded as to entitle
him to object to the jurisdiction, and the objection is taken by
the court of its own motion, justice requires that the
plaintiff
Page 169 U. S. 123
should have an opportunity to be heard upon the motion, and to
meet it by appropriate evidence."
And this language from
Barry v. Edmunds was quoted with
approval in the case of
Deputron v. Young, 134
U. S. 252.
This Court must therefore consider whether the judgment of the
circuit court dismissing the suit for want of jurisdiction was
warranted by the facts of the case as they are disclosed in the
record.
The declaration was as follows:
"The plaintiff George Peabody Wetmore, who is a citizen of the
State of Rhode Island; Matilda C. Alloway, a citizen and resident
of the State of Pennsylvania; v. K. Stevenson, Hugh Stevenson, Paul
E. Stevenson, Eloise Stevenson Kernochan and James L. Kernochan,
her husband, and Maxwell Stevenson, by Paul E. Stevenson, his next
friend, all of whom are citizens and residents of the State of New
York, sue the defendants David Rymer, Sam Rymer, Tom Payne, and W.
Calvin McConnell, all of whom are citizens and residents of Polk
County, Tennessee, to recover the following described lands,
situate in the County of Polk, in the Southern Division of the
Eastern District of Tennessee, to-wit:"
"In town, one, range three east, of the basis line, Ocoee
District:"
"The south half of section one, the south half of section two,
the northwest quarter of section eleven, all of section twelve, the
southwest quarter of section thirteen."
"In town. two, range four east, of the basis line, Ocoee
District:"
"All of sections one and two and three and five and eight and
nine and ten and eleven and twelve and thirteen and fourteen and
fifteen and seventeen and twenty and twenty-one and twenty-two and
twenty-three and twenty-four and twenty-five and twenty-six and
twenty-seven and twenty-eight and thirty-three and thirty-four and
thirty-five, the north half and the southeast quarter of section
six, the east half of section seven, the east half of section
eighteen, the east half and the northwest quarter of section
nineteen, the
Page 169 U. S. 124
north half and the southeast quarter of section twenty-nine, the
east half of section thirty-two, the west half of the west half of
section thirty-six."
"In town. one, range four east, of the basis line, Ocoee
District:"
"All of sections thirty-one and thirty-five and thirty-six, the
west half of section thirty-four."
"As shown on the general plan of the Ocoee District of the State
of Tennessee, to which and the grants for said land reference is
made for full description."
"Which lands are worth more than two thousand dollars, and of
which lands said plaintiffs were possessed, claiming in fee, before
the commencement of this suit; and, after said possession accrued,
the said defendants, on the first day of January, 1892, entered
thereupon, and unlawfully withhold and detain the same, together
with one thousand dollars due for the detention thereof."
The plea was as follows:
"And now comes the defendant David Rymer, and for plea to
plaintiffs' declaration says that he is not in possession of, and
does not claim, and has not entered upon, or been in possession of,
or claimed, any part of the lands in said declaration described,
except the following described lands, to-wit: the southwest 1/4 of
section 17, the north 1/2 of section 20, the east 1/2 and southwest
1/4 of section 18, and the northeast 1/4 of section 19, all in
township 2, range 4 east, of the basis line, Ocoee District,
Tennessee; and, as to all the lands except those herein described,
this defendant here and now disclaims any and all interest, right,
or title."
"And, for further plea in this behalf, said defendant says that
as to the said southwest 1/4 of section 17, the north 1/2 of
section 20, the east 1/2 and southwest 1/4 of section 18, and the
northeast 1/4 of section 19, all in township 2, range 4 east, of
the basis line, Ocoee District, Polk County, Tennessee, he is not
guilty in manner and form as the plaintiffs in their said
declaration have alleged, and of this put himself upon the
country."
The verdict and judgment were for all the lands claimed in
Page 169 U. S. 125
the declaration, being a connected body of land of about 25,000
acres. The plea claimed right of possession to between one and two
thousand acres. The evidence upon which the court passed was
restricted to the value of the land claimed by the defendants. And
it is urged on behalf of the plaintiffs that the value of the
entire tract claimed in the declaration, and recovered by the
verdict, should have been considered in passing upon the question
of the value of the matter in dispute; that, while the disclaimer
may estop the defendants, it does not deprive the plaintiffs of
their right to a verdict and judgment for the entire tract claimed,
upon which a writ of possession may issue; that judgment in
ejectment is conclusive as to title so far as the parties are
concerned.
But we do not consider it necessary to consider or decide this
contention, because we are of opinion that the evidence
sufficiently disclosed, for the purposes of maintaining
jurisdiction, that the value of the land claimed in the plea
exceeded the sum of $2,000. As that evidence is brief, it seems
proper to state it in the very form in which it appears in the bill
of exceptions.
At the trial, and before the jury rendered their verdict, the
plaintiffs introduced as a witness one Oscar W. Miller, who
testified that he was a surveyor, and had surveyed the lands for
the plaintiffs. On cross-examination, by defendants' attorney he
testified that the market value of the land was fifty cents per
acre; that it was wild or mountain land, and not worth more than
that, unless its prospective value was to be considered, and that
the land described in the plea of the defendants was not worth
$1,000.
After the verdict and judgment, and upon the motion made to
dismiss, the plaintiffs filed the affidavit of Charles Seymour, who
testified that he was the attorney, and had been for twenty-five
years the agent, of what are known as the Wetmore and Stevenson
lands, in Polk County, Tennessee, and that he is familiar with most
of the lands, and has been on the lands in dispute in this cause,
and that the lands set out in the plea of the defendants lie on
Lost Creek and Little Lost Creek, and form a connecting way to many
thousands of acres of land of
Page 169 U. S. 126
the plaintiffs which lie in that vicinity, and that the lands
described in this plea are worth more than $2,000 on account of
their location, and are not to be judged by the general price for
mountain land in the vicinity; that these lands lie near the foot
of Frog Mountain, on the northwesterly side, where the timber is
more than usually heavy and unusually valuable, both for
accessibility and quality.
The plaintiffs likewise filed the affidavit of J. B. Brock, in
which he testified as follows:
"I have lived in Polk County over forty years. Was sheriff for
six years, and have herded cattle for about twenty-five years on
and in vicinity of lands set out in defendants' plea, and I know
the location of some twenty thousand acres lying nearby, understood
to be the property of Wetmore and Stevenson heirs, the plaintiffs
in this suit. The lands described in the plea are worth much more
than the ordinary mountain lands. I sold a quarter section of 160
acres lying a mile from the lands in the plea for $400. and the
lands described in the plea are near the foot of the mountain,
where the timber is better than on most of the mountains, and the
way they lie, if I owned the Wetmore and Stevenson lands, I would
not want to sell at all, as they are part of a large boundary that
would be needed for shelter of cattle off the mountain and for
roadways, and control of the ways to the herding grounds or timber
work, or, if mining be done, would be in the way. Not long before
the defendant took the lease in 1888 from Wetmore and Stevenson, he
offered to make me a deed for some land a mile and a half from any
land in his present plea in this suit."
The plaintiffs likewise filed the affidavit of O. W. Miller,
who, having testified that he has been county surveyor for Polk
County for a number of years, and has surveyed the lands in
dispute, and also surrounding lands, said:
"While I value the mountain land as a whole at fifty cents per
acre, the land in litigation, lying on the waters of Lost Creek and
Little Lost Creek at the foot of the mountain, forms part of a
connected body of land of about twenty-five thousand acres, and
forms a gateway and outlet to this body
Page 169 U. S. 127
for timber and stock to the Hiwassee River and railroad, without
which the rest of the body would be materially reduced in value,
say from ten to twenty cents per acre. To cut this off and
permanently lock this approach would reduce the value of the whole
from two to four thousand dollars."
The defendants filed no affidavits, and adduced no evidence on
the question of value, but appear to have relied wholly on the
statements of O. W. Miller when under cross-examination at the
trial.
It is not easy to see upon what sound view of this evidence the
learned judge of the circuit court deprived the plaintiffs of their
verdict and judgment. There was no pretense that the plaintiffs had
fraudulently overstated the value of the land in order to confer
jurisdiction.
It does not seem to have occurred to the defendants that the
land which they claimed was not worth $2,000 until, at the trial,
their attorney caught at the statement of one of plaintiffs'
witnesses that he estimated wild mountain land at fifty cents an
acre. When the court gave leave to both parties to file affidavits
showing the value of the lands in controversy, the defendants were
unable or unwilling to make or procure to be made a single
statement under oath on the subject of the inquiry. A liberal
presumption ought therefore to be indulged in favor of the
plaintiffs' evidence in that regard. It is well known that there is
no matter in respect to which the judgments of men more widely
differ than in regard to the value of real estate.
We give no weight to that portion of the plaintiffs' evidence
that goes to show damage to the balance of their lands by an
adverse occupancy of the land claimed by the defendants. But,
looking only at the evidence bearing strictly on the value of the
controverted lands, it seems obvious that, while the market value
of the wild mountain land generally was estimated by one of the
witnesses at fifty cents an acre, yet it was testified by several
witnesses that these particular lands possessed a special value by
reason of their location at the foot of the mountain, and because
the timber on them was more than usually heavy and valuable both
for accessibility
Page 169 U. S. 128
and quality. Charles Seymour, who had been familiar with the
lands for twenty-five years as agent for their owner, testified
that the lands described in the plea were worth more than $2,000 on
account of their location and the quality of their timber, and were
not to be adjudged by the general price for mountain land in the
vicinity.
It is unnecessary to quote authorities to show that, in
estimating the market value of land, everything which gives it
intrinsic value is a proper element for consideration. Not only its
present use, but its capabilities, are to be considered. Even
unimproved land lying at the foot of a mountain range is obviously
more valuable than similar land less eligibly situated.
Applying the law as heretofore stated by this Court in the cases
cited, that a suit cannot be properly dismissed by a circuit court
as not substantially involving a controversy within its
jurisdiction unless the facts, when made to appear on the record,
create a legal certainty of that conclusion, we conclude that in
the present case the want of jurisdiction was not made clear, and
that the evidence before that court did not warrant a dismissal of
the action for the want of jurisdiction.
The judgment of the circuit court dismissing the action is
accordingly reversed, and the cause is remanded, with directions to
restore the judgment on the verdict.