Clen v. Jorgensen

265 F. 120, 1 V.I. 497, 1920 U.S. App. LEXIS 1382
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedApril 23, 1920
DocketNo. 2486
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 265 F. 120 (Clen v. Jorgensen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clen v. Jorgensen, 265 F. 120, 1 V.I. 497, 1920 U.S. App. LEXIS 1382 (3d Cir. 1920).

Opinion

PER CURIAM. J. P.

Jorgensen, the plaintiff below, brought this action in the district court for St.. Thomas and St. John, Virgin Islands, against Sophie R. Cien, the defendant below, for rent due under a lease and for her ouster from the demised premises. The court entered against the defendant a money judgment for rent found due, together with a judgment of ouster. By this appeal she seeks a review of the judgment in both its branches, alleging errors of fact in one and an error of law in the other.

[1] This case — the first to come here from the Virgin Islands— is met on the threshold by a question of the jurisdiction of this court to review on appeal a judgment rendered under Danish procedure. Our jurisdiction is challenged on the ground that the action below was an action at law, and that our jurisdiction to review such an action is by writ of error — and then only as to errors of law- — under the familiar distinction between actions in equity and at law and the corresponding distinction between appeals and writs of error. Roberts v. Great Northern R. R. Co., 138 Fed. 711, 71 C. C. A. 127; Smith v. Currie, 230 Fed. 803, 145 C. C. A. 113. While in our jurisprudence an action of this character is without question an action at law, we are not prepared to say what it is under Danish procedure. But insisting, nevertheless, that the action was at law, the appellee asserts — without the possibility of successful contradiction, we admit — ■ that the defendant’s right to have her case reviewed and this court’s jurisdiction to review it are only such as are granted and conferred by Congress. He shows, further, that the only source of this litigant’s right to appeal and of this court’s appellate jurisdiction over judgments of the courts of the. Virgin Islands is the Act of Congress approved March 3, 1917, c. 171, § 2, 39 Stat. 1132 (Comp. Stat. 1918, Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 1919, § 3924J4b), and maintains, that this act specifically provides for review of actions at law by writs of error, [122]*122not by appeal; and that to such procedure this court’s jurisdiction is strictly limited by the terms of the act. Hooven v. Featherstone’s Sons, 111 Fed. 81, 49 C. C. A. 229.

This statute was enacted just after the United States, under treaty with -Denmark, had taken over the West Indian Islands, and is, so far as we have been shown, the only federal act which concerns the jurisdiction of courts, original and appellate, extending over these islands. The relevant section of the act reads as follows:

“Section 2. Local laws continued; courts; appeals and writs of error.— Until Congress shall otherwise provide, in so far as compatible with the changed sovereignty and not in conflict with the provisions of this act, the laws regulating elections * * * and the other local laws, in force and effect in said islands on the seventeentn day of January, 1917, shall remain in force and effect in said islands, and the same shall be administered by the civil officials and through the local judicial tribunals established in said islands; * * * and the orders, judgments, and decrees of said judicial tribunals shall be duly enforced. * <! * In all cases arising in the said West Indian Islands and now reviewable by the courts of Denmark, writs of error and appeals shall be to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, and, except as provided in sections two hundred and thirty-nine and two hundred and forty of the Judicial Code, the judgments, orders, and decrees of such court shall be final in all such eases.”

As the act of Congress which established Circuit Courts of Appeals provided that they “shall exercise appellate jurisdiction to review by appeal or by writ of error” final decisions in the District and Circuit Courts of the United States (Act of 1891, c. 517, § 6 [Comp. St. § 1120]), and as that act has been construed to preserve the distinction which had long existed in those courts between an appeal in an equity casé and a writ of error in a case at law, the appellee urges that there can be no presumption that Congress, in conferring upon this Circuit Court of Appeals appellate jurisdiction over proceedings in the courts of the Virgin Islands, intended to abolish that distinction and change the process prescribed by the act of its origin, unless its intention so to do is plainly manifested by the language of the act. Stevens v. Clarke, 62 Fed. 321, 10 C. C. A. 379.

In order to determine what Congress did when it conferred on this court appellate jurisdiction over proceedings in the courts of the Virgin Islands, we may validly inquire what Congress intended to do, havine regard; of course, to the subject-matter to which its enactment was addressed. In the first place, its subject-matter was not the District Courts and Circuit Courts of the United States. In these courts the distinction between actions in equity and at law existed and Congress in conferring appellate jurisdiction upon Circuit Courts of Appeals recognized the distinction by prescribing the mode of the exercise of their jurisdiction hy appeal and writ of error. Act of 1891. The subject-matter of the enactment under; consideration was the ordinary or district court of the Virgin Islands — a local court established under Danish rule, with jurisdiction over controversies of every kind, in which the distinction between actions in equity and at law was neither made nor known. Having this in mind it is plain that Congress intended, for a time at least, to preserve [123]*123the local laws of the islands and to provide for their enforcement through the local judicial tribunals as then established. As the courts of Denmark were, under the changed sovereignty, no longer open to appeals from the insular courts of original jurisdiction, Congress also intended to provide in substitution an appellate tribunal in the United States to review the judgments and decrees of those courts. To this end Congress by a few words conferred upon this court appellate jurisdiction, contemplating, doubtless, that this jurisdiction would be invoked by appropriate process and be exercised in a manner consistent with the character of the matters brought before it for review. In -conferring jurisdiction Congress did not define the process to be employed or the procedure to be followed, otherwise than by stating that—

"“in all eases arising in the said West Indian Islands and now reviewaWe by the courts of Denmark, writs of error and appeals shall be to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit.”

In using this expression Congress was chiefly concerned in designating the court to which the process of review should be addressed. It rather assumed that the appellate procedure would be by writs of error and appeals; it did not, however, expressly prescribe that procedure as it did in the act creating Circuit Courts of Appeals. Act of 1891, c. 517, § 6. But as Congress by the act of 1917 did incontestably grant this court jurisdiction to review judgments and decrees of these insular courts, * it becomes necessary, in order to determine what form such review shall take in order that it embrace what Congress intended, to inquire into the judicial establishment of these islands and the peculiar judicial proceedings by which cases were there tried and later were reviewed by the appellate court in Denmark.

' From the protocol in this case, made and certified by

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
265 F. 120, 1 V.I. 497, 1920 U.S. App. LEXIS 1382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clen-v-jorgensen-ca3-1920.