95 F. 199 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon | 1899
In this suit the plaintiff seeks to enjoin the defendant from tearing down and destroying a certain flume, constructed and in operation prior to the commission by the defendant of the acts complained of, across the premises of the defendant, and used in connection with certain water rights and with the (tarrying on of the lumber business owned and carried on by the plaintiff and her lessees. The case was heard upon all questions involved, and thereafter the court dismissed the complaint for want of jurisdiction, upon the ground that it did not appear from the evidence that the amount in controversy was of a value exceeding $2,000. Upon petition for a rehearing this order was set aside, the court being of the opinion that the order of dismissal was erroneous, and that the court ivas not without jurisdiction; and thereupon, and upon consideration of the other questions involved, a decree was rendered in favor of the plaintiff, as prayed for, perpetually enjoining the defendant from the commission of the acts complained of. The defendant files his petition asking for a rehearing. Upon this petition the defendant seeks a re-examination of the question of jurisdiction, and renews his contention that the complainant failed to introduce testimony tending to prove the present value of the flume, or the matters in controversy, and asks that an opportunity he given to the defendant to present to the court the state of the testimony and of the authorities upon this issue. The petition for a rehearing makes the further point that the defendant was denied leave by the court, upon
The question of jurisdiction in this case has been fully considered, and there is nothing in the authorities cited in this petition that affects the conclusion reached on that‘question. I am satisfied that it is enough to sustain the jurisdiction that the complaint shows the amount in controversy to exceed in value the sum of $2,000, and that the contrary of this does not appear to a legal certainty from the evidence. In Barry v. Edmunds, 116 U. S. 558, 6 Sup. Ct. 501, it is held that the ‘court is not at liberty to dismiss a suit upon his personal conviction that the amount involved is less than that required to give jurisdiction, unless the facts on which the persuasion is based are such as to create a legal certainty of the conclusion based on them. In this case there was no personal conviction of the court, from the evidence in the case, that the amount in controversy was less than the jurisdictional amount. The action of the court was based solely upon the fact that the evidence failed to establish the allegation of the complaint as to the value of the subject-matter of the suit. The answer admitted the value, up to the amount of $2,000; and there was testimony tending to show that the property in controversy, together with other property, had been sold previously for the sum of $8,000. There is therefore no inference in this case that the amount stated in the declaration was merely colorable. The suit is to restrain the commission of a tort, and is therefore one where exemplary damages might be allowed; so that, in any view of it, it is not a case where a rule of law fixes the limit of a possible recovery. The same doctrine is laid down in the case of Wetmore v. Rymer, 169 U. S. 115, 18 Sup. Ct. 293. For the defendant, the cases of Oleson v. Railroad Co., 44 Fed. 2, and Cameron v. U. S., 146 U. S. 535, 13 Sup. Ct. 184, are cited. Neither of these cases has .any bearing on the conclusion here reached. The case of Oleson v. Railroad Co., was a suito for an injunction to restrain the operation 'by the defendant of a certain railroad, alleged to have been unlawfully constructed on a public highway. The case was presented for the complainant upon the assumption that the value of the railroad (which was alleged to be of the value of $6,000) was the amount in dispute. But the court held otherwise. It
“That if, in any suit commenced in a circuit court, * * * it shall appear to the satisfaction of said circuit court, at any time after such suit has been brought, * * ® Hint such suit does not really and substantially involve a dispute or controversy properly within the jurisdiction of said circuit court, ® * ® the said circuit court shall proceed no further therein, but shall dismiss the suit.”
So that it is enough to sustain the jurisdiction — The jurisdictional facts appearing in the complaint — that it does not at any time thereafter satisfactorily appear to the court that the suit does not really and substantially involve the jurisdictional amount. But in this ca.se the jurisdiction need not depend upon this principle, although its application is decisive of the question. The answer admits that the flume in question is of the value of $2,000, and this value is one of the things involved here. If the defendant is permitted to destroy this flume where it: crosses his land, the flume property as a whole is destroyed, and the plaintiff suffers loss in the amount of its value. But it is also claimed that the act of the defendant, in breaking down and destroying the flume makes it necessary for the plaintiff to go to great expense in making rej>airs. The answer alleges the fact to be that such repairs can be made for $10. This is an admission of damages made necessary by the repairs required, in' addition to the value of the flume, of at least that amount: and in this suit the court might award such damages to the plaintiff, as well as exemplary damages, either of which would make the amount in controversy above $2,000.
As to the claim made by the defendant in this petition,' that he has been surprised in the decision of the court without further argument, it is enough to say that all questions involved were argued at length, and fully presented, with a view and in the expectation that the court would consider them. The fact that the hill was dismissed for want of jurisdiction, and this order of dismissal after-wards set: aside, does not make it necessary that the other questions presented in the case, and not passed upon, should be reargued. There is no room for surprise to the defendant in the fact that he has not been allowed an opportunity to argue these same questions
As to the point that the court refused leave to amend, so as to enable the defendant to prove that the land in question was covered by the Northern Pacific Bailroad grant, it is enough to say that this question is wholly immaterial. That fact is conceded, and the court takes account of it in the conclusion reached upon the merits. It does not alter the case that the act of congress gives homesteaders an exclusive right, for six months after the forfeiture, to enter the forfeited lands under the homestead laws. This is a mere preference. It in no wise affects the title taken by the homesteader, and dqes not enlarge his rights over what they would have been without this preference. As between the defendant and another seeking title under the homestead laws of the United States, the statute would operate to give the defendant the better right. Neither this statute, nor the fact of the prior grant to the Northern Pacific, can affect the fact that Quine, the defendant, takes his title from the government. After the forfeiture, the title to this land was reinvested in the government, and passed from the government to Quine, and he took this title subject to the location of the plaintiff’s flume under the acts of congress. There is an express reservation in the patent to the defendant, which shows that it was not the purpose of congress to convey any right inconsistent with that held under such a location. This land was liable to the imposition of this burden, while the title was in the government, and so of any right in the government at the time the flume was built. The railroad company did not complain, and the government could not, since what was done was in conformity with public policy and was authorized by law. In short, the title and ah rights and interests relating to this land were either in the railroad company or in the government when the flume was built, and the appropriation was acquiesced in by the former, and expressly authorized by the latter. The location and construction of this flume upon granted lands of the railway company, with the acquiescence of that company, was not unlawful, so far as the government was concerned. The latter expressly authorized this very thing as to all unoccupied public land, and I conclude that any location authorized by the government upon .the public domain is as effective, so far as the government is concerned, when made upon lands subject to forfeiture, as though the forfeiture had already taken place. The defendant took his homestead with the burden thus created. By the terms of his patent his title was made “subject to any vested and accrued water rights for mining, agricultural, manufacturing or other purposes, and rights to ditches used in connection with such water rights, as may be recognized by the local customs,” etc.; and so taking, he acquiesced in the operation of the flume in question over his land for some seven years from the date of his patent, and then committed the acts complained of in retaliation for a grievance growing out of another transaction which he claims to have suffered. The petition for a rehearing is denied.