In re Ewa Plantation Co.
In re Ewa Plantation Co.
Opinion of the Court
The taxpayer has filed a petition to be allowed an appeal to the United States Supreme Court from the judgment of
“Ewa Plantation Company returned its gross income for the year 1906 at $1,907,928.77 derived almost entirely from sales of sugar. Against this it claimed a deduction of $1,290,-109.76 under the heading Amounts expended in the purchase or production of movable property mentioned in Schedule A.’ This with other deductions which are not in issue brought its net income, as returned, to $577,929.56, on which the tax at two per cent, amounted to $11,558.59. Included in the deduction of $1,290,109.76, as shown by the hooks of the corporation, was the amount of $85,304.36 written off as depreciation of its property'against the crop of 1906. This item was disputed by the assessor, who subtracted it from the deduction claimed and assessed the net income at $663,233.92 and the tax at $13,264.65. The plantation appealed from the total assessment and was held to be entitled to a certificate of appeal. Ewa Plantation Co. v. Holt, 18 Haw. 362. The only controversy before the tax appeal court was'upon the item of $85,304.36 upon which the tax amounts to $1706.09. The tax appeal court sustained the contention of the plantation that it was entitled to the deduction claimed, from which decision the assessor appeals to this court.”
In this court also “the only controversy was upon the item of $85,304.36 upon which the tax amounts to $1706.09.”
The petitioner bases its right of appeal solely upon the allegation “that the matter and amounts involved in the above entitled suit exceeds, exclusive of interest and. costs, the sum of Five Thousand ($5000) Hollars,” the condition of appeal imposed by the act of March 3, 1905, amending Sec. 86, Organic Act. The act of August 13, 1888, 25 Stat. 433, ch. 866, provides that no appeal shall be allowed “unless the matter in dispute, exclusive of costs,” shall exceed the sum of five thousand dollars. The expression in the judiciary act, Kov.
“The judgment in this case is for $7,275.16, but it appears affirmatively on the face of the record that of this amount $2,669.03 was not disputed below. The defence related alone to the difference between these two amounts, which is less than $5,000. The dispute here is only in reference to the amount contested below. Such being the case, we have no jurisdiction.” Jenness v. Citizens’ National Bank of Rome, 110 U. S. 52.
This was not an action to recover the tax but a proceeding to determine its amount, the difference between the parties, to which the controversy relates, being $1706.09, which is all that is involved in the case. If the judgment were reversed on appeal the appellant would be the gainer to that amount and not otherwise.
The taxpayer’s claim in support of its right of appeal is as
Smith v. Adams, 130 U. S. 167, is cited, in which the court says: “By matter in dispute is meant the subject of litigation, the matter upon which the action is brought and issue is joined and in relation to Avhich, if the issue be one of fact, testimony is taken.” Cowell v. City Water Supply Co., 121 Fed. 53, defines the term as “the amount or value of that which the plaintiff claims to recover or the amount or value of that which the defendants avíII lose if the complainant obtains the recovery he seeks,” and Lee v. Watson, 1 Wall. 337, defines it as “the subject of litigation, the matter for Avhich the suit is brought and upon Avhich issue is joined,” and “in an action upon a money demand, Avhere the general issue is pleaded, the matter in dispute is the debt claimed.”
It is urged that even if it appear that the defendant has a complete defense “this does not change the jurisdictional amount if the original amount claimed in the declaration equals the amount required by the statute.” Schunk v. Moline, Melbourne & Stoddard Co., 147 U. S. 500; Stillwell-Bierce v. Williamson Oil Co., 80 Fed. 68.
In Smith v. Adams, 130 U. S. 167, a case to determine the validity of a statute of Dakota changing a county seat, the court said: “It is conceded that the pecuniary value of the matter in dispute may be determined not only by the money judgment prayed, where such is the case, but, in some cases, by the increased or diminished value of the property directly affected by the relief prayed or by the pecuniary result to one of the parties immediately from the judgment,” and dismissed the appeal. In the Cowell case, 121 Fed. 53, the appeal was dismissed because “it is the amount or value of that which the complainant claims to recover or the sum or value of that which the defendant will lose if the complainant succeeds in his suit that constitutes the jurisdictional sum or value of the matter in dispute.” In Lee v. Watson, 1 Wall. 337, the appeal was dismissed, an amendment having been made in the amount of damages claimed “for the purpose of bringing the case within the appellate jurisdiction.” In the Schunk case, 147 U. S. 500, an action on promissory notes, some of which were not due, under the statute an attachment had issued against
Undoubtedly, as shown by the cases cited, a defendant cannot deprive the plaintiff of his appeal by admitting that he owed enough to bring the balance below the jurisdictional amount and a judgment when made for the plaintiff determines that amount.
In this case, however, the only litigation in the tax appeal court and here was upon the sum to be deducted. If the taxpayer had appealed from the general assessment of the tax aj)peal court as it did from that of the tax assessor the question of the validity of the entire tax would have come up and required a decision affirming or disaffirming the assessment; but the Territory only appealed from the tax appeal court and solely, as shown by the record, upon the allowance of the disputed deduction.
If it were discretionary to allow this appeal and to leave the Territory to move in the United States Supreme Court for its dismissal, I should prefer that course. A justice of that
Petition denied.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- IN RE PETITION BY EWA PLANTATION COMPANY FOR ALLOWANCE OF APPEAL FROM DECISION IN RE ASSESSMENT OF INCOME TAXES
- Status
- Published