Distinct judgments in favor of or against distinct parties,
though in the same record, cannot be joined to give this Court
jurisdiction.
While in case of joint entry and ouster, where the answer of all
defendants takes issue without setting up separate claims to
distinct parcels, and the judgment for recovery of possession is
against all defendants jointly, the measure of appellate
jurisdiction is the value of the whole land,
Friend v.
Wise, 111 U. S. 797,
where there is no allegation of joint ownership or joint
possession, and the controversy with each defendant relates to a
separate and distinct parcel, and judgment is rendered separately,
the measure as to each defendant is the value of his separate
parcel.
Tupper v. Wise, 110 U. S. 398. Nor
does this Court have jurisdiction in such a case if the
judgment
Page 214 U. S. 269
were jointly against the defendants for damages where the total
amount awarded is less than the jurisdictional amount.
Writ of error to review 2 Phil. 142 dismissed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE MOODY delivered the opinion of the Court.
The defendant in error brought this action for the recovery of
certain lands, in the Court of First Instance of the Philippine
Islands, against eighty-four persons, who are now the plaintiffs in
error. The prayer of the complaint was for restoration of
possession, for damages, and an injunction against further
disturbance of the plaintiff's right. The Court of First Instance
rendered judgment for the plaintiff, awarding the relief prayed
for, and the judgment was affirmed by the Supreme Court of the
Philippine Islands. The case is now here upon writ of error,
accompanied by a large number of assignments of error. The
defendant in error has moved to dismiss the writ for lack of
jurisdiction of this Court to entertain it, and that motion must
first receive consideration.
The jurisdiction of this Court is rested by the plaintiffs in
error solely upon the ground that the value of the real estate in
controversy exceeds the sum of $25,000. Section 10 of Act approved
July 1, 1902, 32 Stat. 691, 695, c. 1369. The disposition of the
motion to dismiss turns upon the question whether, within the true
meaning of the statute, land of the value of $25,000 was in
controversy. In the solution of this question, it is useful to
examine the pleadings, the course of the trial, and the
judgment.
Page 214 U. S. 270
The company alleged itself to be the owner of lands known as the
Hacienda de San Luis y la Concepcion, having certain defined
boundaries and an area of some 4,000 hectareas. The complaint
further alleged
"that the defendants above named, for more than one and less
than six years ago, illegally seized and continued to hold certain
portions of the said property,"
having an
"area of four hundred and forty-six hectareas, seventy-nine
areas, and four centiareas as to the fields, and four hectareas,
approximately, as to the lots on which their houses and warehouses
are built, distributed among distinct and separate parcels, but all
within the perimeter of the said estate above described, and for a
better understanding thereof the following statement is given of
the parcels held by each one of the defendants."
There then follows eighty-four separate descriptions of the
separate holdings of each of the defendants. The case of Miguel
Tupino is agreed upon by the parties as typical of the others, and
the allegation with respect to him is:
"Miguel Tupino has a lot of six areas with a dwelling and two
warehouses thereon, and two fields, containing four hectareas and
fifty areas and two hectareas and twenty-five areas,
respectively."
Then follows an allegation that "the plaintiff has been damaged
in the sum of nine thousand Mexican pesos by reason of the unlawful
detention above described," and the complaint closes with the
prayer before stated.
Each of the defendants filed separate answers. The answer of
Tupino may be taken as a type. In it, he denies the title of the
plaintiff and that it suffered the damages alleged; denies
specifically that the plaintiff had a record title to the portion
of the land described as possessed by him; denies that that portion
of the land was situated within the boundaries of the Hacienda de
San Luis y la Concepcion; denies that the plaintiff is the owner of
the portion of the land described as possessed by the defendant, or
any part thereof, or that the plaintiff has ever been entitled to
the possession thereof; denies that the plaintiff has any interest
in the portion of the land
Page 214 U. S. 271
described as possessed by the defendant, or ever has had any;
denies that the defendant has unlawfully withheld from the
plaintiff the portion of land described as possessed by the
defendant.
In the opinion of the judge of the Court of First Instance, he
describes the defense in part as being
"that each and every one of them (the defendants) is the owner
of the parcel of land occupied by him, because it has been
cultivated and possessed by some of them for more than ten years
and by all of them for more than one year."
After the Supreme Court of the Philippine Islands had rendered
its judgment, the defendants made a motion for a rehearing, in
which they complained that the court had overlooked an assignment
of error in assessing damages jointly against all the defendants,
and said, in this connection,
"inasmuch as each of said defendants is alleged by plaintiff,
and found by the trial court, to be occupying a distinct and
separate parcel of land, with no privity or community of interest
with his codefendants, and each of said defendants has filed a
separate answer for such distinct parcel, and maintained a separate
defense."
It is very clear, although the plaintiff claimed under a single
title all the land occupied separately by the various defendants,
that the action itself was not against the defendants as joint
disseisors, but was an action against each of them separately as
the holder of a distinct parcel or parcels of land. There was no
allegation in either the complaint or the answer of joint ownership
or joint possession or joint action of any kind. The proceeding, in
effect, consisted of eighty-four separate and distinct actions
against the eighty-four defendants. The complaint alleged that each
defendant was in possession of a separate and distinct parcel of
land, described separately, however inadequately. The answer of
each defendant, while denying
in toto the title of the
plaintiff, in other respects related solely to the tract of land
alleged to be unlawfully held by that particular defendant.
Undoubtedly, where a complaint alleges
Page 214 U. S. 272
a joint entry and ouster, and the answer takes issue, without
setting up separate claims to distinct parcels by the several
defendants, and the judgment for the recovery of possession is
against all the defendants jointly, then the measure of appellate
jurisdiction is the value of the whole land.
Friend v.
Wise, 111 U. S. 797. But
where the pleadings show that there was no allegation of joint
ownership or joint possession, and that the controversy with each
defendant related to a separate and distinct lot of land, and the
judgment is rendered separately against the defendants, then the
measure of jurisdiction on appeal or writ of error is not the value
of the whole land, but the value of each part separately.
Tupper v. Wise, 110 U. S. 398,
where it was said:
"The rule is well settled that distinct judgments in favor of or
against distinct parties, though in the same record, cannot be
joined to give this Court jurisdiction."
We think that the case at bar falls within the rule of
Tupper v. Wise. It appears in point of fact that the value
of the whole land which the plaintiff sought to recover in separate
parcels from the eighty-four defendants exceeds $25,000. But it
also appears that the value of the land in controversy with any one
of the defendants is far less than $25,000.
Stopping at this point, it would follow that the writ of error
should be dismissed. But the form of the judgment in this case is
peculiar, and must receive consideration before the motion to
dismiss is finally disposed of. The judgment of the Supreme Court
of the Philippine Islands simply affirmed the judgment of the Court
of First Instance. In that court, as there was no formal judgment,
the terms of it must be gathered from the opinion of the judge. The
opinion concludes as follows:
"I decide: First, that the Campania General de Tabacos de
Filipinas shall be restored by the sheriff or by any of his
deputies to the possession of the Hacienda San Luis y la Concepcion
by giving possession thereof to D. Miguel Macias y Toro, or any
other person lawfully representing the said company. . . .
Page 214 U. S. 273
Third, that both the present defendants as well as those
declared in default be required to immediately vacate the said
hacienda or be evicted therefrom. . . . Fourth, that the
preliminary injunction issued on the 15th of November last, and
modified on the third inst., be regarded as perpetual from this
date, and the injunction bond of $10,000 given is to be cancelled
after the proper legal formalities. The tobacco in the hands of the
receiver will be delivered to the Compania General, and the bond
given by the receiver cancelled, after rendition by him of the
accounts of his receivership. Fifth, and last, that the defendants
present, and those in default, pay the costs and damages in the sum
of nine thousand Mexican pesos, and finally, that the said
defendants are enjoined absolutely from performing any act
hereafter tending in the slightest degree to disturb the possession
by the Compania General of the lands comprised within the hacienda
of San Luis y la Concepcion. So ordered."
If this language is to be taken as expressing the judgment of
the court, it certainly has some tendency to show that the judgment
for the restoration of the lands was a joint one against all the
defendants. But we are not inclined to scrutinize too strictly the
language of a learned judge, trained in another system of
jurisprudence than our own, and in view of the separate issues
clearly made by the pleadings, and the prayer of the complaint that
the plaintiff be restored
"to the possession of the various parcels of the said estate
above indicated, after the eviction or expulsion therefrom of all
the defendants, including the houses and warehouses which they have
erected thereon,"
we construe this judgment to run separately against each
defendant for that part of the land of which he was alleged and
found to be in possession. It was so treated by the judge of the
Supreme Court of the Philippine Islands, in refusing to allow a
writ of error. The judgment for damages appears to be, so far as we
can see, a joint judgment against all the defendants. But even the
whole amount
Page 214 U. S. 274
of the damages, 9,000 Mexican pesos, added to the value of the
land in controversy with any of the defendants, does not make a sum
exceeding $25,000. We think, therefore, that the writ of error must
be dismissed.
It may not be improper to say that, if we had jurisdiction on
this writ of error, we should find grave difficulty in sustaining
the joint judgment for damages against all the defendants, if,
indeed, we have properly construed it to be joint. But we have no
such jurisdiction, and therefore refrain from deciding that point.
Doubtless, if there is anything in it, some way may be found, by
application to the Supreme Court of the Philippine Islands, to
correct the error, if any exists.
Writ of error dismissed.