Under § 10 of the Act of July 1, 1902, c. 1369, 32 Stat.
695, this Court can only review judgments of the Supreme Court of
the Philippine Islands where the value in controversy exceeds
$25,000, and where only a half interest of property is affected,
jurisdiction does not exist unless the value of such half interest
exceeds that amount.
An affidavit that the value of the real property involved in the
action exceeds $25,000 is not sufficient to confer jurisdiction
where only a one-half interest is affected and the context of the
affidavit gives rise to the inference that the statements as to
value relate to the entire property, and not to a half interest
therein.
In this case, resort to the record shows that the value of the
interest in the property affected is less than the jurisdictional
amount.
The facts, which involve the jurisdiction of this Court of
appeals from the Supreme Court of the Philippine Islands, are
stated in the opinion.
Page 222 U. S. 124
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Rafael Enriquez, as administrator of the estate of his father,
Antonio Enriquez, and as his heir, joined by other children and a
grandchild of the deceased, also suing as heirs, who were
plaintiffs below and are appellants here, sued to set aside a
purported conveyance of a piece of real estate in the City of
Manila, made by the deceased to his daughter-in-law Carmen, the
wife of a son, Francisco, who were defendants below and are
appellees here. The case, as ultimately presented to the court of
first instance, involved two questions: first, whether the assailed
conveyance was forged, and if real, whether Antonio had mental
capacity to execute it; and, second, if the sale was real and the
mental capacity obtained, was one-half the property embraced by the
deed beyond the dispositive power of Antonio because such half
belonged to the estate of his deceased wife, as an acquet of the
community which had existed between husband and wife. The court of
first instance held that the sale was real and that there was
mental capacity. It, however, decided that one undivided half of
the property belonged not to Antonio, but to his wife in virtue of
her community interest, and vested on her death in her heirs. To
that extent the sale was set aside and judgment was directed for
13,250 pesos as the gross value of the use of the one undivided
half of the property during the time, it was unlawfully retained.
This sum, however, was held to be reducible by the amount of
one-half of the expenditures made for the whole property, including
repairs, improvements, etc., and the defendant Carmen Enriquez was
ordered to forthwith make a statement of such expenditures for the
purpose of an appropriate reduction in the allowance made for rents
and profits. The defendants alone appealed.
In disposing of the appeal, the Supreme Court said:
Page 222 U. S. 125
"The plaintiffs in this court have neither assigned as errors
the rulings made against them by the lower court, nor have they
discussed any such rulings in their brief. So much of the decision,
therefore, as is adverse to the plaintiffs we cannot consider, and
the questions to be resolved are those presented by the appeal of
the defendants."
Confining itself, therefore, to the question of the existence of
the community, the court decided that the court below had erred on
that subject, and its judgment was accordingly reversed. The court
concluded its opinion as follows:
"The judgment of the court below, which rests solely upon the
proposition that, at the time of the death of Dona Ciriaca
Villanueva, one-half of this property passed to her heirs cannot
therefore be sustained. That judgment is reversed, without costs to
either party in this court, and judgment is entered acquitting the
defendants of the complaint, with the costs of the first instance
against the plaintiffs."
This appeal was prosecuted. The assignments of error are solely
directed to the conclusion of the court below concerning the
nonexistence of the community interest, and the grounds of
complaint on this subject have been elaborately pressed at bar,
both orally and in printed argument. We are of opinion, however,
that we may not consider the subject, as we conclude that a motion
made to dismiss the appeal on the ground of the absence of the
requisite jurisdictional amount must prevail.
The Act of July 1, 1902, c. 1369, § 10, 32 Stat. 695,
authorizes us to review judgments or decrees of the Supreme Court
of the Philippine Islands
"in causes in which the value in controversy exceeds twenty-five
thousand dollars, or in which the title or possession of real
estate exceeding in value the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars,
to be ascertained by the oath of either party or of other
Page 222 U. S. 126
competent witnesses, is involved or brought in question. . .
."
Evidently in consequence of these requirements of the statute,
there was filed with the assignments of error in the court below an
affidavit of Rafael Enriquez stating in general terms
"that the real property, the title to and possession of which is
involved therein [in the action] exceeds in value the sum of
$25,000 gold coin of the United States."
But even if the sum thus stated were to be accepted for the
purpose of testing the existence of the requisite jurisdictional
amount, the affidavit would be inadequate, since its context
clearly gives rise to the inference that the sum stated is not the
value of the undivided one-half of the property in controversy, but
the value of the entire property. But even if it be conceded that
the deficiency of the affidavit may be supplied by a resort to the
record, we are of opinion that the record establishes that the
essential jurisdictional amount does not exist. True, the complaint
and amended complaint state amounts from which, if considered
alone, it might be possible to conjecture that the jurisdictional
amount existed. These pleadings seem, however, not to have been
verified, and if they had been, their effect would be neutralized
by other parts of the record. In the first place, the consideration
expressed for the sale made by Antonio Enriquez of the entire
property was only 8,000 pesos, and while the amended complaint, in
assailing the conveyance, alleged the actual value of the property
to have been 20,000 pesos, the trial court, from the evidence,
found that the real value of the property at the time of the sale
was 14,000 pesos -- that is, $7,000 currency of the United States.
In the second place, that the rents and profits were greatly
exaggerated in the complaint and amended complaint is shown by the
fact that only 13,250 pesos was allowed by the court as the value
of the use of
Page 222 U. S. 127
one-half of the property while wrongfully withheld, and this
amount was subject to be reduced by charging against it the
one-half cost of administering the property, including
disbursements for repairs, improvements, etc., during such period.
In other words, whether we look at the affidavit alone or whether
we consider the record as a whole, we think it is demonstrated not
only that there is a failure to establish that the requisite
jurisdictional amount exists, but moreover it affirmatively appears
that such amount is not involved.
Dismissed for want of jurisdiction.