after making the foregoing statement, delivered, the opinion of the court.
1. By the 35th section of the act of Congress of April 12, 1900, c. 191, temporarily providing revenues and civil government for Porto Rico, it was declared that “writs of error and appeals from the final decisions of the Supreme Court of Porto Rico and the District Court of the United States shall be allowed and may be taken to the Supreme Court of the United States in the same manner and under the same regulations and in the same cases as from the Supreme Courts of the Territories of the United States; and such writs of error and appeals shall be allowed in all cáses where the Constitution of the United States, or a treaty thereof, or an act of Congress is brought in question and the right claimed thereunder is denied; . . .” As the value of the matter here in dispute exceeds the sum of .five thousand dollars, and as the final judgment, in a like case in the Supreme Court of one of the Territories of the United States, could be reexamined here,' we have jurisdiction of the present appeal from the Dis
*321
trict Court of the United States for Porto Rico. 23 Stat. 443, c. 355; 31 Stat. 85, *c. 191, §§ 34, 35;
Royal Insurance Co.
v.
Martin,
2. This .action, we have seen, was brought to recover the value of the use of a vessel belonging to Spanish subjects and taken by our Army and Navy during the war with Spain, and used by the Quartermaster’s Department of the Army.
By the above act of April 12, 1900, the court below was given, “in addition to the ordinary jurisdiction of District Courts of the United States, jurisdiction of all cases cognizant in the Circuit Courts of the United States, and shall proceed in the same manner as a Circuit Court.” 31 Stat. 85, c. 191, § 34. If, therefore, this action could have been brought in a Circuit Court of the United States, it was within the cognizance of the. court below. We must, then,- look to the act of March 3, 1887, commonly known as the Tucker Act, and which provides for the bringing of suits against the Government of the United States. 24 Stat. 505, c. 359.
By the first section of that act it is provided that the Court of Claims shall have jurisdiction to hear and determine “all claims founded upon the Constitution of the .United States or any law of Congress, except for pensions, or upon any regulation of an Executive Department, or upon any contract, expressed or implied, with the Government of the United States, or for damages, liquidated or unliquidated, in cases not sounding in tort, in respect of which claims the party, would be entitled to redress against the United States either in a court of law, equity or admiralty if the United States were suable. . . .” The second section provides that “ the District Courts of the United States shall have concurrent jurisdiction with the Court of Claims as to all matters named in the preceding section where the amount of the claim does not exceed one thousand dollars, and the Circuit Courts of theUnited States-shall have such concurrent jurisdiction in all cases where the amount of such claim exceeds one thousand dollars and does not exceed ten thousand dollars.” -The fifth *322 section is in these words: “That the plaintiff in any suit brought under the provisions of the second section of this act shall file a petition, duly verified with the clerk of the respective court having jurisdiction of the case, and in 'the district where the • plaintiff resides. Such’petition shall set forth the full name and residence of the plaintiff, the nature of his claim, and a sugcinct statement of the facts upon which the claim is based, the money or any other thing claimed, or the damages sought to be recovered and praying the court for a judgment or decree upon the facts and law.”
The Government insists that the requirement in that act, that the petition shall be filed “in the district where the plaintiff resides,” precludes a suit against the United States by any person, natural or corporate, residing out of the country. We express no opinion upon that question, as there are other grounds upon which'we may satisfactorily rest our decision.
The present suit finds no sanction in the above act even if the plaintiff were not a foreign corporation. Its claim is not founded on the Constitution of the United States, or on any act of Congress, or on any regulation of an Executive Department. ' Nor can it be said to be founded on contract, express or implied.- There is no element of contract in the case; for nothing was done by the United States, nor anything said by any of its officers, from which- could’ be implied an agreement or obligation to pay for the use of the plaintiff’s vessel. According to the established principles of public law, the owners of the vessel, being Spanish subjects, were to be deemed enemies, although not directly connected with military operations. • The vessel was therefore to be deemed enemy’s property.- It was seized as property of that kind, for purposes of war, and not for any purposes of gain. The case does not come within the principle announced in
United States
v.
Great Falls Mfg. Co.,
We may add that even if the act. of March, 1887, standing alone, could be construed as authorizing a suit of this kind, the plaintiff must fail; for, it is well settled that in case of a conflict between an act of Congress and a treaty — each being equally the supreme law of the land — the one last in date must prevail in the courts.
The Cherokee Tobacco,
It results that the judgment below dismissing the action must be affirmed.
It is so ordered.
