Merrill v. Petty

83 U.S. 338, 21 L. Ed. 499, 16 Wall. 338, 1872 U.S. LEXIS 1164
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 18, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 83 U.S. 338 (Merrill v. Petty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merrill v. Petty, 83 U.S. 338, 21 L. Ed. 499, 16 Wall. 338, 1872 U.S. LEXIS 1164 (1873).

Opinion

Mi'- Justice CLIFFORD

delivered the opinion of the court.

Power to re-examine the decrees of the Circuit Courts, removed there by appeal from the District Courts, was con *342 ferred upon this court by the 22d section of the Judiciary Act, where the matter in diépute exceeds the sum or váíue of $2000, exclusive of costs. 'Such decrees, howeyer, 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 bjT 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 $2000, 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. *

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 cá3e. 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 east *343 ward of Blackwell’s Island, distant about a hundred yards on the port-bow of the schooner, sailing before the wind near the centre of the channel six or seven miles an hour, with her maiusail 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 head-sheets 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 cat-head against the stem of the schooner, knocking her forefoot oft’ 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 navigatioh, 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 circumstauces 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 Diver 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 *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, aud 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 aud 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 $1292.84 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 $2000, 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. *

*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 $2000, if by .reason of any erroneous ruling of the court below he recovers nothing, or less than ihat 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.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 U.S. 338, 21 L. Ed. 499, 16 Wall. 338, 1872 U.S. LEXIS 1164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merrill-v-petty-scotus-1873.