The Circuit Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit has no
jurisdiction in error over a judgment of the Supreme Court of the
Territory of New Mexico in a case not in admiralty nor arising
under the criminal, revenue, or patent laws of the United States,
nor between aliens and citizens of the United States or between
citizens of different states.
This Court has jurisdiction to review decrees or judgments of
the Supreme Courts of the Territories except in cases which may be
taken to the circuit courts of appeals, or where the matter in
dispute, exclusive of costs, does not exceed the sum of five
thousand dollars.
Congress intended to confer upon this Court jurisdiction to pass
upon the jurisdiction of the circuit courts of appeals in cases
involving the question of the finality of its judgment under
section six of the Act of March 3, 1891, 26 Stat. 828, c. 017.
Motion to dismiss or affirm.
Page 151 U. S. 80
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
Judgment was recovered in the District Court for the Third
Judicial District, within and for the County of Grant in the
Territory of New Mexico, on May 26, 1891, by John W. Ripley,
against the Aztec Mining Company for the sum of $1,657.51, damages
and costs, and affirmed on error by the supreme court of that
territory August 19, 1891. The mining company thereupon sued out a
writ of error from the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for
the Eighth Circuit which was dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
Aztec Min. Co. v. Ripley, 53 F. 7. A writ of error was
thereupon allowed from this Court, and comes before us upon a
motion to dismiss or affirm.
By the fifteenth section of the Judiciary Act of March 3, 1891,
26 Stat. 826, c. 517, the circuit courts of appeals, in cases in
which their judgments were made final by the act, were empowered to
exercise appellate jurisdiction over the judgments, orders, or
decrees of the supreme courts of the several territories, but as
this case was not a case in admiralty, nor a case arising under the
criminal, revenue, or patent laws of the United States, nor a case
between aliens and citizens of the United States, or between
citizens of different states, it did not belong to either of the
classes defined by section 6 of that act, as cases in which the
judgments or decrees of the circuit courts of appeals should be
final, and therefore the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Eighth
Circuit properly declined to take jurisdiction.
The last paragraph of the section provides that,
"in all cases not hereinbefore in this section made final, there
shall be of right an appeal or writ of error or review of the case
by the Supreme Court of the United States when the matter in
controversy shall exceed one thousand dollars besides costs,"
and, as this case was not made final by that section, a writ of
error
Page 151 U. S. 81
would lie were it not that under section 15, that court had no
jurisdiction to review the judgment.
As, however, in any case made final, the section made it
competent for this Court to require, by certiorari or otherwise,
such case to be certified for its review and determination with the
same power and authority in the case as if it had been brought up
by appeal or writ of error, and as the paragraph quoted gave the
appeal or writ of error as of right in cases not made final, we are
of opinion that it may be properly held that it was the intention
of Congress that jurisdiction might be entertained by this Court to
pass upon the jurisdiction of that court when involving the
question of the finality of its judgment under section 6. We have
already held that an appeal or writ of error lies to this Court
from or to the decrees of judgments of the supreme court of the
territories except in cases susceptible of being taken to the
circuit courts of appeals and cases where the matter in dispute,
exclusive of costs, does not exceed the sum of $5,000.
Shute v.
Keyser, 149 U. S. 649.
Tested by that rule, this case could not have been brought to
this Court; and, as we are clear that the Circuit Court of Appeals
for the Eighth Circuit rightly decided that it had no jurisdiction,
it could not be brought to that.
Judgment affirmed.