The constitutional requirement that "full faith and credit shall
be given in each state to the public acts, records, and judicial
proceedings of every other state" implies that the public acts of
every state shall be given the same effect by the courts of another
state that they have by law and usage at home.
Page 119 U. S. 616
Whenever it becomes necessary under Article IV, § 1 of the
Constitution for a court of one state, in order to give faith and
effect to a public act of another state, to ascertain what effect
it has in that state, the law of the other state must be proved as
a fact.
The courts of the United States, when exercising their original
jurisdiction, take notice without proof of the laws of the several
states of the United States, but in this Court, when acting under
its appellate jurisdiction, whatever was matter of fact in the
state court whose judgment or decree is under review is matter of
fact here.
When the decision of a state court holding a contract valid or
void is made upon the general principles by which courts determine
whether a consideration is good or bad on principles of public
policy, no question arises under the provision of the Constitution
respecting the faith and credit to be given in each state to the
public acts, records, and judicial proceedings of another state,
and this Court cannot review the decision.
In order to give this Court jurisdiction to review a decision of
a state court respecting the power of a corporation of another
state to make contracts, it is not sufficient to aver in the
pleadings that whatever force might be given to it in the court of
the forum, it was beyond the powers of the corporation under its
act of incorporation as construed by the courts of the state
incorporating it; it must appear affirmatively in the record that
the facts as presented for adjudication made it necessary for the
court to consider and give effect to the act of incorporation in
view of the peculiar jurisprudence of the state enacting it, rather
than the general law of the land.
This was a motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction. It was
submitted on the 19th April, 1886, at the last term of Court, and
was ordered to be argued at the hearing on the merits. The case is
stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The federal question which it is claimed arises on this record
is whether the Supreme Court of Missouri in its judgment gave "full
faith and credit" "to the public acts, records, and judicial
proceedings" of Illinois.
The facts are these:
The Wiggins Ferry Company was incorporated
Page 119 U. S. 617
by the State of Illinois in 1853, and given the exclusive and
perpetual right of maintaining and operating a ferry across the
Mississippi River between its own lands, in East St. Louis, on the
Illinois side, and St. Louis, in Missouri. It owned Bloody Island,
and substantially controlled two miles and a half of ferry landing
on the Illinois shore.
The Chicago and Alton Railroad Company is likewise an Illinois
corporation, having authority to own and operate a railroad between
Chicago and Bloody Island, opposite the City of St. Louis, and
to
"take, use, and make arrangements for the transportation of
freight and passengers carried or to be carried upon said railroad
or otherwise . . . to St. Louis, Missouri, and for this purpose to
construct, own, and use such boat or boats as may be
necessary."
The Alton and St. Louis Railroad Company was also an Illinois
railroad corporation, authorized to construct and operate a
railroad from Alton, Illinois, to any point opposite St. Louis. On
the 28th of April, 1864, this company entered into a contract with
the Wiggins Ferry Company by which, among other things, the ferry
company agreed
"to furnish and maintain good and convenient wharf boats and
steam ferry boats to do with promptness and dispatch all the
ferrying required for the transit of passengers and freight coming
from or going to said railroad (or the assignee hereinafter
mentioned) over the river,"
at reasonable rates of ferriage, and the railroad company
covenanted and agreed that it would
"always employ the said ferry to transport across the said river
all persons and property which may be taken across the said river,
either way, to or from the Illinois shore, either for the purpose
of being transported on said railroad or having been brought to the
said River Mississippi upon said railroad, so that the said ferry
company, its legal representatives or assigns, owners of the said
ferry, shall have the profits of the transportation of all such
passengers, persons, and property taken across said river either
way by said railroad company, and that no other than the Wiggins
Ferry shall ever at any time be employed by the said party of the
second part, or the assignee herein mentioned, to cross any
passengers or freight coming or going on said road. "
Page 119 U. S. 618
And it was also agreed and understood that the Alton and St.
Louis Company should have the right to transfer and assign the
agreement to the Chicago and Alton Company, in which event all the
covenants, stipulations, and agreements therein contained should be
as binding on the said Chicago and Alton Company as on the Alton
and St. Louis Company. On the same day that the contract was
entered into, the Alton and St. Louis Company transferred to the
Chicago and Alton Company all its right, title, and interest in and
to the lands, tenements, and easements mentioned therein, and the
Chicago and Alton Company became bound to the ferry company in all
respects the same as the Alton and St. Louis Company was.
This suit was brought by the ferry company in a state court of
Missouri, against the Chicago and Alton Company to recover damages
for not employing the ferry company for the transportation of
persons and property across the river, as by the contract it was
bound to do. The railroad company set up, by way of defense, among
other things, that
"it had no power or authority to make or enter into any
agreement whatever, perpetually obliging itself . . . not to cross
persons and property, nor not to employ others to do so, in the
manner alleged in the petition, and that if the provisions of said
articles of agreement contain, by construction, any such provision,
the same were and are in violation of the laws of the State of
Illinois, and contrary to the public policy thereof, and are void
and of no effect."
The answer further alleged that the railroad company, at the
time of the transfer of the contract to it,
"was a public common carrier as a railroad company, duly
incorporated by law, with power and right to construct and operate
its railroad, and to transport persons, passengers, freight, and
property to and from the City of St. Louis, in the State of
Missouri, across and over said river, and on or over its railroad,
as the public interest required; that it was and still is the legal
right and duty of defendant to furnish and supply the mode and
means of transportation needed and required, from time to time, by
the public welfare, for passengers and property to
Page 119 U. S. 619
and from said city over said river, and to, on, and over
defendant's railroad; that the public welfare and the necessities
of shippers of property and freight to and over said railroad, and
to and from said city, required that certain freights and property,
to be transported by defendant to and from said city, should be
transported by it to and from said city across said river, and to
and from and along defendant's railroad, in the cars in which it
might be, and over and across said river, without breaking bulk and
without being removed from such cars, and without being taken by
hand or by wagons, or other appliances, in packages, from or to the
cars, from or to ferry boats, to be ferried across said river, and
that since said assignment other and improved modes of
transportation across said river, without breaking bulk, and at
other points on said river opposite the City of St. Louis, were and
have been provided and established, and it was and became the duty
of defendant, as such common carrier, to accommodate the public by
the use of such other modes of transportation, and that any
provision of said contract which would prohibit defendant from
using the same for the benefit and convenience of the public was
and is against public policy, and void, and defendant was not and
is not bound thereby."
Upon the trial, the statutes under which the railroad company
was incorporated and from which it derived its corporate powers
were offered in evidence. They confer upon the company all the
usual powers of railroad corporations, and, either expressly or by
implication, subject it to corresponding obligations to the public.
No testimony was offered, so far as the record discloses, to show
that the courts of Illinois had decided, or that it had been
established by law or usage in that state, that this corporation,
or any other having similar powers, could not make such a contract
as had been entered into.
After the evidence was all in, the railroad company asked the
court to rule, among other things, as follows:
"If at the time the contract sued on was made and was assigned
to defendant, the plaintiff was a common ferry, incorporated under
the laws of Illinois, with power to have and use a ferry within
limits opposite to a portion only of the
Page 119 U. S. 620
City of St. Louis, and the Alton and St. Louis Railroad Company
was a common carrier, incorporated under the laws of Illinois, in
evidence, with authority and franchise to have and to use a
railroad in said state to a point opposite to the City of St.
Louis, Missouri, and defendant was a common carrier, incorporated
under the laws of Illinois, in evidence, with franchises and
authority to have and use a railroad from Chicago, by way of Alton,
in said state, to the Mississippi River, opposite to said City of
St. Louis, and carry persons and property to and from St. Louis,
and to and from and over such railroad, and to have or use boats
for such purpose, then the provisions of said contract between
plaintiff and the Alton and St. Louis Railroad Company, that said
railroad company would always employ plaintiff or its ferry to
transport across the Mississippi River all persons and property
which might be taken across said river, either way, to or from the
Illinois shore, either for the purpose of being transported on its
railroad, or having been brought to said river on said road, so
that plaintiff, its representatives or assigns, should have the
profits of the transportation of all such persons, passengers, and
property taken across the river either way by said Alton and St.
Louis Railroad Company, and that no other than plaintiff (or its
ferry) should ever at any time be employed by said Alton and St.
Louis Railroad Company, or the assignee therein mentioned, to cross
any passengers or freight coming or going on said road were and are
illegal, and defendant had no legal right or authority to bind
itself to comply with or perform the same, and plaintiff cannot
recover herein for nonperformance thereof by defendant."
There were other requests of a similar character, but this
contains the substance of all that was asked so far as the
questions for our consideration are concerned. These requests were
refused, but the trial court did rule that the railroad company
"did not covenant or contract that all persons and property
coming on its road to St. Louis, or going from St. Louis to be
carried on its road, should be crossed over the Mississippi River
by plaintiff or at plaintiff's ferry, but only such as said
railroad company, or its assignee, should employ or procure the
Page 119 U. S. 621
ferriage for or have ferried, and that if other persons than . .
. the defendant caused, employed, did, or procured the ferriage or
crossing over said river of persons or property coming on the road
of . . . defendant to St. Louis, or going from St. Louis to be
carried on said road, by other means or ferry than plaintiff or its
ferry, defendant is not liable therefor, and defendant was not
bound to cause or procure such persons or property to be crossed at
plaintiff's ferry."
The court also ruled that the contract was not "void, as being
in restraint of trade," nor "as being beyond the powers of the
corporations parties thereto," "nor as beyond the powers of the
Chicago and Alton Railroad Company to become the assignee thereof,
and be bound thereby," nor "as being contrary to public
policy."
Under these and other instructions, not important for the
purposes of the present inquiry, the cause was sent to a referee to
take testimony and report the damages. The referee in his report
construed the contract to mean that
where the defendant received and billed freights for carriage
over its own road at places or for destinations beyond the termini
of its road, so that a ferry had to be used to transfer the
freights between the City of St. Louis and the Illinois shore, it
was the duty of the defendant, whether acting as carrier or
forwarder, to give the ferriage to the plaintiff, and good faith
required the defendant to conform its acts and contracts of
carriage to this obligation.
He then said: "If the contract has the above scope and meaning,
I am convinced that the defendant has not acted in good faith
toward the plaintiff," and the damages were found and reported on
this theory of the case.
The trial court confirmed the referee's report, and gave
judgment accordingly. The case was then taken to the St. Louis
Court of Appeals, where the judgment of the trial court was
reversed because, in its opinion, the referee did not proceed on a
correct legal theory, and held the railroad company too strictly to
the letter of the contract, without looking sufficiently to the
facts surrounding it when made. This judgment of the court of
appeals was reversed, on appeal, by the supreme court of the state
and that of the trial court affirmed
Page 119 U. S. 622
on the ground that the contract was interpreted correctly by
that court and that, being so interpreted, it was not "
ultra
vires, condemned by public policy, or in restraint of trade."
To reverse that judgment, this writ of error was brought on the
ground that full faith and credit was not given to the acts of
incorporation of the railroad company, construed in the light of
the judicial decisions and the accepted public law of Illinois.
A motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction was made at the
last term, and continued for hearing with the case on its
merits.
This motion is first to be considered. The railroad company set
up in its answer, as a defense to the action, that it had no
authority to make the contract sued on, and in support of this
defense put in evidence its Illinois acts of incorporation. Without
doubt the constitutional requirement, Article IV, Section 1, that
"full faith and credit shall be given in each state to the public
acts, records, and judicial proceedings of every other state"
implies that the public acts of every state shall be given the same
effect by the courts of another state that they have by law and
usage at home. This is clearly the logical result of the principles
announced as early as 1813 in
Mills v.
Duryee, 7 Cranch 481, and steadily adhered to ever
since. The claim of the railroad company is that by law and usage
in Illinois, the operative effect of its charter in that state is
to make such a contract as that now sued on
ultra
vires.
Whenever it becomes necessary under this requirement of the
Constitution for a court of one state, in order to give faith and
credit to a public act of another state, to ascertain what effect
it has in that state, the law of that state must be proved as a
fact. No court of a state is charged with knowledge of the laws of
another state, but such laws are in that court matters of fact
which, like other facts, must be proved before they can be acted
upon. This Court and the other courts of the United States, when
exercising their original jurisdiction, take notice, without proof,
of the laws of the several states of the United States; but in this
Court, when acting under its appellate jurisdiction, whatever was
matter of fact in the court
Page 119 U. S. 623
whose judgment or decree is under review is matter of fact here.
This was expressly decided in
Hanley v. Donoghue,
116 U. S. 1, in
respect to the faith and credit to be given by the courts of one
state to the judgments of the courts of another state, and it is
equally applicable to the faith and credit due in one state to the
public acts of another.
Whether the charter of this company, in its operation on the
contract now in suit, had any different effect in Illinois from
what it would have, according to the principles of general law
which govern like charters and like contracts, in Missouri and
elsewhere throughout the country was, under this rule, a question
of fact in the Missouri court, as to which no testimony whatever
was offered. The case, from the beginning to the end, both in the
pleadings and in the requests for rulings, seems to have been
considered by the parties and by the court as involving questions
of general law only, which were not at all dependent upon anything
peculiar to the jurisprudence of Illinois. Thus, while in the
answer it is alleged in effect that the contract is "in violation
of the laws of the State of Illinois and contrary to the public
policy thereof," no proof was offered to support the averment, and
the whole case was made to rest, so far as the testimony was
concerned, on the further general allegation that the contract "was
and is contrary to public policy, and void." So, in the requests
for findings, no special reliance was had on any peculiar law or
usage in Illinois, but on the general claim that the contract "was
illegal, and the defendant had no legal right or authority to bind
itself to comply with and perform the same." And in the trial
court, the ruling was that the contract was "not void as being in
restraint of trade," nor "as being beyond the powers of the
corporations parties thereto," nor "as beyond the power of the
Chicago and Alton Railroad Company to become the assignee thereof,
and be bound thereby," nor "as being contrary to public policy." In
the supreme court, whose judgment we are asked to review, the
ruling and decision was even more general, for it was there held
that the contract as interpreted was not "
ultra vires,
condemned by public policy, or in restraint of trade." It thus
appears conclusively,
Page 119 U. S. 624
as we think, that both the parties and the court understood, as
they certainly might from the way this case was presented, that the
decision was to be made not upon anything peculiar to the State of
Illinois, but upon the general law of the land applicable to the
facts established by the evidence. Such evidently was the ground of
the decision, and, that being so, it is well settled we have no
power to bring it under review. The decision would have been the
same upon the case as made whether the Constitution had contained
the provision relied on or not.
Bethell v.
Demaret, 10 Wall. 537;
West
Tennessee Bank v. Citizens' Bank, 13 Wall. 432;
Delmas v. Insurance
Co., 14 Wall. 661, in which it was expressly held
that this Court cannot review the decision of a state court holding
a contract valid or void when "made upon the general principles by
which courts determine whether a consideration is good or bad, on
principles of public policy."
Tarver v.
Keach, 15 Wall. 67;
Rockhold v. Rockhold,
92 U. S. 129;
New York Life Ins. Co. v. Hendren, 92 U. S.
286;
United States v. Thompson, 93 U.
S. 587;
Bank v. McVeigh, 98 U.
S. 333;
Dugger v. Bocock, 104
U. S. 601;
Allen v. McVeigh, 107 U.
S. 433;
San Francisco v. Scott, 111 U.
S. 768;
Grame v. Insurance Co., 112 U.
S. 273. It is not enough to give us jurisdiction to say
in the pleadings or elsewhere in the course of the proceedings that
the contract, whatever it might be in Missouri, was beyond the
powers of the company under its acts of incorporation as they were
construed and given effect by law and usage in Illinois. It must
somehow be made to appear on the face of the record that the facts,
as they were actually presented for adjudication, made it necessary
for the court to consider and give effect to the act of
incorporation, in view of some peculiar jurisprudence of Illinois,
rather than the general law of the land. That, as we have seen, was
not done in this case. Consequently we have no jurisdiction, and
the motion to dismiss is granted.
Dismissed.
MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS did not sit in this case.