This Court cannot entertain jurisdiction of a direct writ of
error to review a judgment of the district court under § 238,
Judicial Code, on frivolous grounds.
The contention that rights were denied under a treaty that did
not go into effect until two years after title had vested in
defendants in error or in the grantors under the state law is too
frivolous to sustain jurisdiction of this Court under § 238,
Judicial Code.
Even though the widow had some use of the intestate's property
after his death which continued until after the treaty became
operative, if the title was not suspended, the treaty could have
had no effect thereon.
The contention that a state statute forbidding the ownership of
real estate by nonresident aliens is repugnant to the Fourteenth
Amendment simply because it does forbid such ownership is also
frivolous.
Page 237 U. S. 581
The facts, which involve the jurisdiction of this Court of
direct appeals from the judgment of the district court, are stated
in the opinion.
Memorandum opinion by MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE, by direction of
the Court:
The plaintiffs in error, who were plaintiffs below, alleging
themselves to be residents of England and subjects of the Kingdom
of Great Britain and Ireland, in 1912 sued the defendants in error
to recover a two-thirds interest in a piece of real estate situated
in Nebraska. They alleged that John Toop, a resident of Nebraska,
who had owned the real estate in question, died in 1898 intestate
and without issue, his widow surviving him, and that as children
and grandchildren of a deceased brother and sister of Toop, they,
as his heirs, became the owners of the two thirds of the property
sued for. It was charged that the right to inherit the property
notwithstanding the alleged alienage was secured by a treaty
between the United States and Great Britain which took effect in
1900. In their answer, the defendants deraigned their title from
the children and grandchildren of a deceased sister of Toop, who,
it was alleged, were American citizens at the time of Toop's death.
Without denying the kinship of the plaintiffs to Toop, as they
alleged, it was asserted that, as aliens, they were incapacitated
from taking by inheritance or holding real estate in the State of
Nebraska in virtue of a law of
Page 237 U. S. 582
that state which was in force at the time of Toop's death. The
case was submitted to the court on an agreed statement of facts,
and was decided against the plaintiffs on the ground that applying
the state law prohibiting nonresident aliens "from acquiring title
to or taking or holding any lands or real estate in this state by
descent, devise, purchase, or otherwise," etc. (Act of March 16,
1889, Comp.Stat. 1907, § 4825), the plaintiffs had no interest
in the property for which they sued. The court concluded that the
treaty referred to in the pleadings was not necessary to be
considered, as it only became operative two years after the death
of Toop, and had no retroactive effect.
On the face of the pleadings, the only ground upon which there
is any semblance of jurisdiction to entertain this direct writ of
error is the averment of the treaty between the United States and
Great Britain. But the absolutely frivolous character of that
ground is apparent when it is considered that the treaty only went
into effect two years after the death of Toop, and the vesting of
the property in those entitled legally to take it. It is true that
it is now argued -- a contention which seems not to have been
pressed below -- that the treaty is involved because Toop's widow,
who survived him and died in 1907, after the treaty was adopted,
had a use of the property during her life, and therefore title to
it did not pass to the heirs until her death. This, however, does
not add substance to the proposition, but only asserts another
unsubstantial contention, for it is apparent that the fee of the
property was not in suspension until the death of the wife, but
passed to the heirs entitled to take, subject, it is true, to the
use of the widow, but nevertheless, so far as the passage of the
title was concerned, uncontrolled and uninfluenced by the
treaty.
As, except for a contention that the state statute forbidding
the ownership of real property by aliens was repugnant to the
Fourteenth Amendment, which seems also
Page 237 U. S. 583
not to have been raised below, and which we think also is too
frivolous to afford a basis for jurisdiction, what we have said
disposes of all the considerations relied upon as the basis for the
right to prosecute this direct writ of error, it follows that we
are without jurisdiction, and the writ is therefore
Dismissed for want of jurisdiction.