Opinion
Submitted April 21st, 1884. Decided May 5th, 1884.
Jurisdiction. In ejectment in which several defendants are joined who hold separate tracts adversely to the plaintiff, this court will not dismiss the writ of error because each separate tract is not of the jurisdictional value, if their combined values are sufficient to give jurisdiction.
Mr. Henry Beard and Mr. Charles H. Armes for defendant in error in support of the motion.
Mr. William J. Johnston for plaintiffs in error, opposing.
Motion to dismiss, with which a motion to affirm was united.
These motions are denied. The value of the two sections of land which are in dispute is conceded to be more than $5,000. The complaint alleges a joint entry and ouster, and the answer does not set up separate claims to distinct parcels of the land by the several defendants. The judgment for the recovery of the possession is against all the defendants jointly. In this respect the case is entirely different from those of Tupper v. Wise and Lynch v. Bailey, 110 U.S. 398. We have jurisdiction therefore.
The questions arising on the merits are, some of them, of a character that ought not to be disposed of on a motion to affirm.