An appeal on a libel
in personam for a collision by the
owners of a schooner against the owners of a sloop that had been
sunk in the collision dismissed, the decree having been for
$1,292.84, and therefore "not exceeding the sum or value of
$2,000." The fact that prior to this libel
in personam,
the owners of the sloop had filed in another district a libel
in rem against the schooner, laying their damages at
$4,781.84, and that in the district and circuit courts below, both
cases might have been heard as one (a fact asserted by counsel but
not apparent in the record),
Page 83 U. S. 339
held not to affect the matter, the cases never having
been brought into the same district or circuit nor in any manner
consolidated.
A schooner (the
Mary Eveline) sailing down Hell Gate
(towards New York), came into collision with a sloop (the
Ethan
Allen) sailing up (towards Connecticut), and sank her. The
owners of each vessel blamed the officers and crew of the other,
and sought respectively relief in admiralty. The owners of the
sloop which had been sunk accordingly filed a libel
in rem
against the schooner in the
Southern District of New York,
claiming $3,489, while, there being no
res for the owners
of the schooner to proceed against -- the sloop being at the bottom
of the East River -- the owners of the schooner were obliged to
proceed personally against the
owners of the sloop. This
proceeding, which was for $2,100 damages, they instituted in the
Eastern District of New York, the suit of
Petty v.
Merrill.
Owing to the docket in the Eastern District being lighter than
that in the Southern, the personal proceeding was reached first,
when, as was said in one of the briefs in the case and not denied
in the other (though the fact thus alleged and not denied did not
appear in the record), both cases by consent of counsel were heard
together on the same facts and the same proofs, without, however,
any attempt to consolidate in form the two proceedings or to
transfer the proceeding in the Southern District into the Eastern
one. However heard, the result of the matter was that the libel
in rem, against the schooner (the proceeding in the
Southern District), was dismissed
in that district, while
in the personal proceeding (that in the Eastern District) the
owners of the sloop were there decreed guilty in $1,792.84. Decrees
were entered in the respective district courts accordingly. From
both these decrees the owners of the sloop appealed to the
respective circuit courts of the Southern and Eastern
Districts.
When the cases got to the respective circuit courts, the
Page 83 U. S. 340
order of priority which had happened in the district courts was
reversed, and in the circuit courts the proceeding
in rem
-- the one against the schooner -- the case of
The Mary
Eveline -- was first called. [
Footnote 1] There again -- more or less of necessity --
the merits of both cases were again heard on the one appeal; and
the Circuit Court for the Southern District was -- as the district
courts in both had been before -- of the opinion that the fault was
with the sloop. It accordingly affirmed the decree in its own
district court; that is to say, it dismissed the libel.
When the appeal from the District Court of the Eastern District
in the personal proceeding (
Petty v. Merrill) came up to
be heard in the circuit court for that district, the circuit court,
deeming itself concluded by the decree in the proceeding
in
rem, in the Circuit Court for the Southern District, did not
hear the merits anew; but, examining the matter of damages and
reducing these to the extent of $500, entered a final decree for
$1,292.84.
From both the decrees -- the one in the Southern Circuit,
The Mary Eveline, and that in the Eastern,
Petty v.
Merrill -- the owner of the sloop
Merrill
appealed.
The present motion to dismiss was in the appeal in the personal
proceeding, that from the Eastern District; and was made on the
ground that the amount did not exceed the sum of $2000, and
therefore that no appeal lay.
The reader will of course remember that by the 22d section of
the Judiciary Act, the jurisdiction of this Court would attach
only
"Where the matter in dispute exceeds the sum or value of $2,000,
exclusive of costs. "
Page 83 U. S. 341
MR. JUSTICE CLIFFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
Power to reexamine the decrees of the circuit courts, removed
there by appeal from the district courts, was conferred
Page 83 U. S. 342
upon this Court by the 22d section of the Judiciary Act, where
the matter in dispute exceeds the sum or value of $2,000 exclusive
of costs. Such decrees, however, could only be removed here under
that act by virtue of a writ of error, but the subsequent act
allowing the removal to be made by appeal in cases of equity, of
admiralty, and maritime jurisdiction, and of prize or no prize
contains the same limitation that the matter in dispute "shall
exceed the sum or value of $2,000, exclusive of costs," and also
provides that such appeals shall be subject to the same rules,
regulations, and restrictions as are prescribed in law in case of
writs of error. [
Footnote
2]
Damages are claimed by the libellants, as the owners of the
schooner
Mary Eveline, against the respondents as the
owners of the sloop
Ethan Allen in a case of collision
civil and maritime. They allege in their libel that the collision
occurred on the 20th of September, 1868, in East River, under the
following circumstances:
That the schooner was beating down the river bound for the port
of New York, the tide being ebb and the wind about southwest; that
she had taken the channel to the east of Blackwell's Island,
another schooner being just ahead of her, sailing in the same
direction; that the respective schooners had beaten out the tack to
the eastward, running as near the west shore of Long Island as they
could safely go; that the other schooner, being ahead, went about
first on the westward tack, towards the other shore, and was just
in the act of going about again on her eastward tack as the
schooner of the libellants went about; that it became necessary for
the schooner of the libellants, in order to avoid the other
schooner, to go to the leeward and pass under the stern of the
other schooner, as she was making her westward tack, and they
allege that their schooner had just passed the stern of the other
schooner when the sloop was seen sailing up the channel to the
eastward
Page 83 U. S. 343
of Blackwell's Island, distant about a hundred yards on the port
bow of the schooner, sailing before the wind near the center of the
channel six or seven miles an hour, with her mainsail and jib set
and going at full speed; that the schooner of the libellants was at
that time going about and following the other schooner, with her
head to the wind, with the headsheets flowing and her helm
hard-a-lee; that the sloop, instead of keeping out of the way, as
she clearly should have done, by luffing and keeping off, as she
was under full headway with her mainsail and jib set, ran into and
against the schooner of the libellants, striking her cathead
against the stem of the schooner, knocking her forefoot off and
splitting the stem and doing other serious damage to the schooner;
that owing to the sudden and confused orders given by those on
board the sloop, keeping off and immediately luffing, it became
impossible to avoid the collision, and that the same occurred
wholly through the fault and negligence of the sloop and of those
in charge of her navigation, and that it was not in any way the
result of fault on the part of the schooner or of those in charge
of her deck.
Service was made and the respondents appeared and filed an
answer in which they allege that the circumstances attending the
collision are not truly stated in the libel, that the collision did
not occur through any fault, negligence, or mismanagement of the
sloop or of those in charge of her navigation or through or by the
sudden and confused orders given by her officers, as charged in the
libel, but solely by reason of the fault, negligence, and
mismanagement of those in charge of the schooner; that the sloop
was sailing through East River on the east side of Blackwell's
Island, against a strong ebb tide, the wind being south-southwest,
blowing a whole-sail breeze; that for the purpose of securing the
benefit of an eddy-tide, she was standing near the shore with her
boom on her port side; that while she was so standing on a steady
course, the two schooners were standing across the river on the
same side of the island, to the westward; the foremost and windward
of the two, having beaten out
Page 83 U. S. 344
her tack, went about just abreast of the sloop at a safe
distance; that the other, though to the leeward, continued on her
tack after the one ahead went about, and in such a position as
entirely prevented the sloop from luffing or avoiding her in any
other way; that she continued her course without change until she
arrived at a point ahead of and off the starboard bow of the sloop,
when she put her helm down to go about, and while in the act of
luffing into the wind ran into and upon the sloop, striking her at
the cat-head, on her starboard side, breaking and crushing in her
planking and causing her to sink in a few minutes, and that the
sloop and her cargo became a total loss.
Testimony was taken on both sides, and the district court,
having heard the parties, entered a decretal order in favor of the
libellants and sent the cause to a commissioner to report the
amount of the damages. He made a report, to which the respondents
filed several exceptions, some of which were sustained and others
were overruled, and the court entered a final decree for the
libellants, as corrected, in the sum of $1,292.84 damages and costs
of suit. Appeal was taken by the respondents to the circuit court,
but the circuit court affirmed the decree and the respondents
appealed to this Court.
Since the appeal was entered in this Court, the libellants, as
appellees, have filed a motion to dismiss the appeal because the
matter in dispute does not exceed the sum or value of $2,000,
exclusive of costs, as required by the 22d section of the Judiciary
Act.
Much discussion of that question is certainly unnecessary, as
the rule in this Court has been settled for the period of sixty
years that where the writ of error is brought by the defendant in
the original action, the matter in dispute is the amount of the
judgment rendered in the circuit court, as this Court can only
affirm the judgment rendered in that court. [
Footnote 3]
Page 83 U. S. 345
Attempt was subsequently made, it must be admitted, to call in
question the rule established in those two cases, but this Court
reaffirmed the rule in the most authoritative manner, deciding as
follows:
(1) That the amount required is to be ascertained and determined
by the sum in controversy at the time of the judgment in the
circuit court, and not by any subsequent additions thereto, such as
interest.
(2) That where the plaintiff sues for an amount, exceeding
$2,000, if by reason of any erroneous ruling of the court below he
recovers nothing, or less than that sum, the sum claimed by the
plaintiff in his writ and declaration in that state of the case is
the sum in controversy for which a writ of error will lie.
(3) That if the verdict is given against the defendant for a
less sum than $2,000 and judgment is rendered against him
accordingly, that in that state of the case nothing is in
controversy between him and the plaintiff if the plaintiff
acquiesces in the judgment beyond the sum for which the judgment is
given, and consequently the defendant is not entitled to any writ
of error. [
Footnote 4]
Supported as the rule suggested is by an unbroken series of
decisions throughout the period mentioned, it would seem to be a
work of supererogation to attempt to enforce it by any extended
argument, especially as the rule is a necessary deduction from the
act of Congress which provides that such jurisdiction may be
exercised by this Court in the classes of cases mentioned, "where
the matter in dispute exceeds the sum or value of $2,000, exclusive
of costs."
Congress, it is conceded, has not expressly enacted that final
judgments and decrees in such cases shall not be reexamined here
where the matter in dispute does not exceed
Page 83 U. S. 346
the sum or value mentioned, but inasmuch as the appellate power
of the court is conferred by the Constitution, with such exceptions
and under such regulations as Congress shall make, the rule of
construction is that the negative of any other jurisdiction in that
respect is implied from the intent manifested by the affirmative
description contained in that section of the Judiciary Act.
[
Footnote 5]
Opposed to this conclusion is the statement in the answer that
the respondents, before the present suit was commenced, filed a
libel in the District Court for the Southern District of New York
for the same collision against the schooner and all persons
intervening in the suit, and the suggestion of the respondents in
this suit is that the libel in this case is in the nature of a
cross-libel, and that the amount in dispute should be ascertained
by adding to the sum allowed as damages in the decree in this case
the amount of the libellants' claim in the libel in the other case,
which was filed and the decree entered in the district court for
another district in the same circuit. Various reasons are mentioned
in argument to show that the suggestion of the respondents may be
adopted, but none of them has the support of any authority, nor do
the counsel refer to any case as a precedent to warrant such a
proceeding. Some of the reasons given are as follows:
(1) That it was agreed between the parties that the two cases
should be heard together, but the record contains no evidence of
such an agreement, and if it did, it could not avail the
respondents, as it is settled law that consent cannot give
jurisdiction. Several cases [
Footnote 6] expressly decide that the agreement of the
parties cannot authorize this Court to revise a judgment of an
inferior court in any other mode of proceeding than that which the
law prescribes. [
Footnote
7]
(2) That the two cases were heard at the same time, before the
District Court of the Eastern District, where this
Page 83 U. S. 347
libel was pending. But that was a mere oral arrangement between
the parties to expedite a decision, which neither did nor could
have the effect to withdraw the other libel from the jurisdiction
of the district court in which the suit was commenced. One was a
proceeding
in rem and the other was a suit
in
personam, and it does not appear that any attempt was made to
consolidate them or to discontinue one and transfer it into the
court where the other was pending. On the contrary, though they
were both heard at the same time, it appears that separate decrees
were entered, each in the respective district court where the suit
was commenced. Separate appeals were also taken by the losing party
in the district court where the decree was entered, and the two
appeals were separately entered on the calendar of this Court.
Two suits, commenced and prosecuted as described, cannot be
blended in this Court without an open violation of the rule laid
down by the late Chief Justice Taney, that "parties cannot
authorize this Court to revise a judgment of an inferior court in
any other mode of proceeding than that which the law prescribes."
[
Footnote 8]
They were not heard together in the circuit court, as this suit
was still before the commissioner, but the suggestion is that the
merits in both suits were by consent discussed at the same time.
Suppose that is so, still the fact remains that the respective
decrees of affirmance were entered at different times and of course
in the respective districts where the appeals from the respective
district courts were pending. Nothing was done to consolidate the
suits and separate appeals were allowed to this Court.
Evidently this Court has no jurisdiction, as the matter in
dispute, exclusive of costs, is less than $2,000.
Dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
[
See the
83 U. S. in which
it was decided that the fault was not with the sloop, but with the
schooner, the decree from which the appeal in the preceding case
was taken being thus practically reversed.]
[
Footnote 1]
This happened because in the decree in the personal proceeding,
the matter had been referred to a master to assess damages, this
delaying the appeal in the Eastern District.
[
Footnote 2]
1 Stat. at Large 84; 2
id. 244;
The
San Pedro, 2 Wheat. 140;
United
States v. Goodwin, 7 Cranch 111;
Wiscart v.
Dauchy, 3 Dall. 321;
The Sloop Betsey,, 3 Dall. 16;
The
Admiral, 3 Wall. 612.
[
Footnote 3]
Gordon v.
Ogden, 3 Pet. 34;
Wise
v. Turnpike Co., 7 Cranch 276.
[
Footnote 4]
Knapp v. Banks,
2 How. 73;
Winston v. United
States, 3 How. 771;
Rogers
v. St. Charles, 19 How. 112;
Udall v.
Ohio, 17 How. 17;
Olney v.
Falcon, 17 How. 19;
Gruner v.
United States, 11 How. 163;
Brown v.
Shannon, 20 How. 55;
Oliver v.
Alexander, 6 Pet. 143;
Spear v.
Place, 11 How. 522;
Rich v.
Lambert, 12 How. 347;
Clifton v.
Sheldon, 23 How. 481;
Sampson v.
Welsh, 24 How. 207;
Seaver v.
Bigelows, 5 Wall. 208.
[
Footnote 5]
Durousseau v. United
States, 6 Cranch 318.
[
Footnote 6]
Scott v.
Sandford, 19 How. 393;
Kelsey v.
Forsyth, 21 How. 85;
Montgomery
v. Anderson, 21 How. 386.
[
Footnote 7]
Mordecai v.
Lindsay, 19 How. 200.
[
Footnote 8]
Kelsey v.
Forsyth, 21 How. 88.