The validity of a statute is drawn in question when the power to
enact it is fairly open to denial, and is denied, but not
otherwise.
The "validity of a statute of the United States," as the term is
used in the Act of March 3, 1855, c. 355, § 2, 23 Stat. 443,
"regulating appeals from the Supreme Court of the District of
Columbia" to this Court, refers only to the power of Congress to
enact the particular statute drawn in question, and not to a
judicial construction of it which does not question that power.
In an action against the Baltimore and Potomac Railroad Company
to recover for injuries suffered by an unlawful use of the streets
of Washington by the company, the judgment being for less than the
jurisdictional amount necessary to sustain a writ of error, this
Court will not acquire jurisdiction by reason of a charge to the
jury which instructs them that certain uses of those streets were
warranted by statutes of the United States, and that certain other
uses were not authorized by them.
Semble that that company
is not authorized to occupy the public streets of Washington for
the purposes of a freight yard as such.
This was an action on the case brought by Hopkins in the Supreme
Court of the District of Columbia against the Baltimore and Potomac
Railroad Company for injuries alleged by him to have resulted from
a nuisance maintained by the railroad company on the public street
in front of his door from the 5th day of October, 1880, to the 5th
day of October, 1883, the date of the commencement of the suit,
consisting in suffering great numbers of freight cars to remain on
said street for an unreasonable length of time; in shifting cars
back and forth in an unreasonable manner, with engines making
disturbing noises, and giving out volumes of smoke, cinders, etc.,
the cars being often filthy, and emitting offensive odors, etc. The
freight station of the company was situated in square 386 at the
original terminus of the road between Ninth and Tenth Streets on
Maryland Avenue. Hopkins' dwelling house was in the square opposite
on the north side of Maryland Avenue, between the same lateral
streets.
Page 130 U. S. 211
On the trial of the cause, the plaintiff gave evidence tending
to prove the truth of the allegations in his declaration, and the
defendant gave evidence in its own defense, and, among other
things, to establish that the authorities of the District of
Columbia in 1874 enclosed the tracks of the railroad with a line of
stone curbing on each side about six inches higher than the
adjacent surface of the streets, and that the tracks were elevated
so as to be flush with this curbing; that the point between Ninth
and Tenth Streets was regarded and treated as the termini of two
lines of railroad, one coming from Virginia and the other from
Maryland, and that the freight trains habitually stopped there as
at the end of the route, to change engines, etc., and it was
claimed on behalf of defendant that it possessed and exercised
authority by virtue of grants from the United States to do all that
it did do in the premises, the validity of which authority, it is
now insisted, was denied by the court.
Among other instructions given by the court at plaintiff's
request was the following.
"8. The defendant company, under its charter, had no right to
convert Maryland Avenue, between Ninth and Tenth Streets, into a
freight yard by using the same for loading or unloading its cars,
or to encumber said place with cars by leaving them standing there
an unreasonable time when not in use, or to use said part of the
avenue for making up freight trains or shifting the same, except so
far as may be reasonably necessary for the purpose of carefully
carrying cars out of said station over the different tracks for the
purpose of making up freight trains; and, if the jury shall find
from the evidence that the defendant company did use said parts of
Maryland Avenue between the times named in the declaration for such
loading or unloading of cars, or encumbered the same by leaving the
cars standing there an unreasonable time when not in use, and used
the same for making up and shifting its freight trains (except
insofar as was reasonably necessary in connection with the careful
carrying of such cars into the freight station, or the careful
carrying of such cars out of the station over the different tracks
for the purpose of making up freight trains),
Page 130 U. S. 212
and shall further find that such acts on the part of the
defendant interfered with the comfortable enjoyment by the
plaintiff of his dwelling house, No. 941 Maryland Avenue, then the
plaintiff is entitled to recover."
And by instruction 7, the jury were told that
"The plaintiff is not entitled to recover for any annoyances,
discomforts, or inconveniences to himself or his family or for any
injury to the use and enjoyment of said dwelling house which
resulted from such uses of Maryland Avenue by the defendant as were
reasonably incident to the careful conduct of its through business
and to the maintenance and careful use of its freight depot or
station abutting on the south side of said avenue between said
Ninth and Tenth Streets Southwest."
And the court gave, on defendant's behalf, these
instructions:
"1. The defendant is entitled to make such careful use of the
tracks between Ninth and Tenth Streets, on Maryland Avenue, as may
be necessary for the lawful use and enjoyment of its freight depot
or station opposite the plaintiff's premises, and on square
386."
"2. The plaintiff is not entitled to recover anything in this
case for noise, smoke, odors, or any other inconveniences suffered
by him or his family by reason of the lawful use by the defendant
of the freight station or the tracks in the street in front of the
plaintiff's property, and the burden of proof is upon the plaintiff
to point out to the jury by satisfactory testimony the acts of the
defendant which were unlawful and unauthorized, if any such there
were."
"3. The plaintiff, under his declaration and upon the evidence,
cannot recover anything under or upon the third and fourth counts
of his declaration."
"5. If the jury shall find from the evidence that the board of
public works or the commissioners of the District of Columbia
erected, or caused to be erected, a stone curb higher than the
surface of the adjacent parts of Maryland Avenue on each side of
the railroad tracks, in front of the plaintiff's premises, on said
Maryland Avenue, between Ninth and Tenth Streets, and raised the
grade of the street between said curb line, then the defendant is
not liable to the plaintiff for any inconvenience or obstruction
caused by such curb lines. "
Page 130 U. S. 213
"6. The Board of Public Works or the Commissioners of the
District of Columbia were authorized by law to erect the curb lines
along the outside of the tracks of the defendant and to raise the
grade between them, and the said board and their successors had and
have lawful authority to maintain the same."
"10. The plaintiff, under the declaration in this case and upon
the evidence, cannot recover for injury or inconvenience caused by
any obstruction or obstructions in or upon Maryland Avenue without
showing special damage to himself."
"14. The defendant possesses the lawful right in the conduct of
its business to place its trains containing cars loaded with
cattle, hogs, or other animals, or vegetables, fruit, fertilizers,
or other odoriferous freight, on the tracks in front of the
plaintiff's premises for such a reasonable time as may be necessary
to enable other trains to pass, and also to enable the defendant to
take cars out of and to put cars into such trains, and before any
damages can be assessed in favor of the plaintiff, because of the
standing of such cars upon the tracks in front of the plaintiff's
premises, the plaintiff must show, by satisfactory proof, that such
cars on such occasion were kept standing on said tracks for an
unreasonable length of time, and that the plaintiff was thereby
specially injured."
"17. The defendant was authorized and empowered to unload
railroad iron upon the surface of the streets in front of the
plaintiff's premises for the purpose of repairing its tracks in
front of the plaintiff's premises on Maryland Avenue between Ninth
and Tenth Streets."
"19. The defendant possessed the lawful right to use the several
tracks on Maryland Avenue between Ninth and Tenth Streets for
carefully passing and moving thereon its trains, either loaded or
empty, north and south, and for any injury or inconvenience
unavoidably caused by such passing and moving of trains the
defendant is not liable."
But refused to give at defendant's request, among others, the
following:
"10. The plaintiff is not entitled to recover anything on
account of dust or noises caused by the loading and unloading
Page 130 U. S. 214
of cars on or within the sixty-foot space between the lateral
streets enclosed by the board of public works of the District of
Columbia."
"11. The space of sixty feet enclosed by the two lines of curb
by the board of public works within which are the tracks of the
railroad, and between the streets running north and south, were set
aside by the proper authorities of the District of Columbia for
railroad purposes, and the plaintiff cannot recover under the
pleadings in this case for any discomfort to him or his family, or
other injury caused by the loading or unloading of cars at that
place."
"14. The defendant has the legal right to the unlimited use of
the tracks in the vicinity of its freight depot, in front of the
plaintiff's premises, for the purposes of its freight depot between
Ninth and Tenth Streets, opposite the plaintiff's premises,
provided such tracks are carefully and skillfully used by the
defendant."
The court also instructed the jury upon its own motion:
"Congress allowed the company to run its road into the District,
along certain streets and avenues, to a certain point, that is, to
Ninth street, where the present station is located. We have
supposed that that implied a right to construct a station building,
and to construct tracks in the street; but if the business of the
company increase beyond the capacity of that freight yard to
accommodate it, we have thought that that was no reason which would
justify the company in occupying the public streets for the
purposes of a freight yard, and that they had no right to stow away
or store away their cars and freight in the public streets, nor had
they the right to occupy the streets in making up trains to
dispatch north and south; but we thought that their duty was to
acquire more property, and to enlarge their freight yard for these
purposes. If, in point of fact, without authority of law, they did
occupy the streets for these purposes, it was an illegal thing; but
if nobody was hurt by it, it would simply be a public nuisance,
which would be the subject of an indictment, and would not give any
private person a right of action against the company; but if, in
addition to being a public nuisance, it became a grievance to
Page 130 U. S. 215
private persons owning property in that neighborhood by reason
of the obstruction of the street, the noise, and the disagreeable
odors, then it was a private wrong also, which these parties are
entitled to have redressed. . . . I should further caution you
against supposing that the plaintiff is entitled to recover for all
the inconvenience he may suffer in consequence of the railroad
being located there at all. The railroad company has the right to
lay its tracks there by authority of law, and everything which is
the inevitable result of the legal use of the road are things which
the law does not consider grievances, and does not allow damages
for. For example, the trains have a right to pass over the street,
to stop there at the station, and to go on in each direction. That
necessarily gives some inconvenience to everybody. The noise, the
smoke, and the dust along the street is a disagreeable thing to the
whole neighborhood, but inasmuch as the law authorizes that, it is
not the subject of a private action. It is only the illegal use of
the street which will give a person a right of action against the
company, and this I have already explained. The inevitable
consequences of the road's being located there, and of trains
traveling in a legal way over the road, are what the law calls
'
damnum absque injuria' -- that is, an injury without any
wrong or damage. You will confine your consideration entirely to
the temporary inconvenience occasioned by the unlawful occupation
of the street for the purposes that have been mentioned."
The jury found for the plaintiff and assessed his damages at
$1,328, and judgment was entered on the verdict, which was
subsequently affirmed in general term.
To reverse this judgment the writ of error was sued out, which
defendant in error now moves to dismiss.
The following are the statutory provisions relating to the
Baltimore and Potomac Railroad which are deemed material:
The first section of the Act of Congress of February 5, 1867, 14
Stat. 387, c. 29, is as follows:
"Whereas it is represented to this present Congress that the
Baltimore and Potomac Railroad Company, incorporated
Page 130 U. S. 216
by an Act of the General Assembly of Maryland entitled 'An act
to incorporate the Baltimore and Potomac Railroad Company,' passed
the sixth day of May, eighteen hundred and fifty-three, are
desirous, under the powers which they claim to be vested in them by
the provisions of the before-recited act to construct a lateral
branch from the said Baltimore and Potomac Railroad to the District
of Columbia, therefore"
"
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of
the United States of America in Congress assembled that the
Baltimore and Potomac Railroad Company, incorporated by the said
act of the General Assembly of Maryland, shall be, and they are
hereby, authorized to extend into and within the District of
Columbia a lateral railroad such as the said company shall
construct or cause to be constructed in a direction toward the said
District in connection with the railroad which they are about to
locate and construct from the City of Baltimore to the Potomac
River in pursuance of their said act of incorporation, and the said
Baltimore and Potomac Railroad Company are hereby authorized to
exercise the same powers, rights, and privileges, and shall be
subject to the same restrictions, in the extension and construction
of the said lateral railroad into and within the said District as
they may exercise or are subject to under and by intent of their
said charter or act of incorporation in the extension and
construction of any railroad within the State of Maryland, and
shall be entitled to the same rights, compensation, benefits, and
immunities in the use of the said road and in regard thereto as are
provided in their said charter, except the right to construct any
lateral road or roads within the said District from the said
lateral branch or road hereby authorized, it being expressly
understood that the said Baltimore the Potomac Railroad Company
shall have power only to construct from the said Baltimore and
Potomac Railroad one lateral road within the said District to some
point or terminus within the City and County of Washington, to be
determined in the manner hereinafter mentioned."
By § 3, it was provided that the company,
"in passing into the District aforesaid and constructing the
said road within
Page 130 U. S. 217
the same, shall enter the City of Washington at such place, and
shall pass along such public street or alley to such point or
terminus within the said city as may be allowed by Congress upon
presentation of survey and map of proposed location of said road,
provided that the level of said road within the said city
shall conform to the present graduation of the streets unless
Congress shall authorize a different level."
The twelfth section of the act of the legislative assembly of
Maryland, referred to in the above-mentioned act of Congress, Laws
of Maryland, 1853, p. 234, 239, reads thus:
"SEC. 12. And be it enacted that the president and directors of
the said company shall be, and they are hereby, invested with all
the rights and powers necessary to the construction, working, use,
and repair of a railroad from some suitable point in or near the
City of Baltimore, and thence within one mile of the Town of Upper
Marlboro, in Prince George's County, and as near to said town,
within the limits of said distance, as may be practicable, and by
or near the Town of Port Tobacco, in Charles County, to a point on
the Potomac River to be selected by the president and directors of
said company hereby incorporated, not higher up than Liverpool
Point and not lower down than the mouth of St. Mary's River, with
such branches at any point of said railroad, not exceeding twenty
miles in length, as the said president and directors may determine.
The said road, when completed, not to be more than sixty-six feet
wide, except at or near its depots or stations, where the width may
be made greater, with as many tracks as the president and directors
may deem necessary, and the said president and directors may cause
to be made or may contract with others for making said railroad or
any part of it, and they or their agents or those with whom they
may contract or their agents may enter upon and use and excavate
any lands which may be wanted for the site of said road or the
erection of warehouses or other works necessary for the said road,
or for its construction and repair, and that they may build
bridges, fix scales and weights, lay rails, may take and use earth,
gravel, stone, timber, or other materials
Page 130 U. S. 218
which may be needed for the construction and repair of the said
road or any of its works, and may make and construct all works
whatever which may be necessary and expedient in order to the
proper completion and maintenance of the said road, and they may
make, or cause to be made, lateral railways in any direction
whatever from the said railroad, and for the construction, repair,
and maintenance thereof shall have all the rights and powers hereby
given in order to the construction and repair of said principal
railroad, and may also own and employ steamboats or other vessels
to connect the said railroad or railroads with other points by
water communication,
provided nothing herein contained
shall be construed to authorize the said company to take private
property for their use without compensation agreed upon by the
company and the owners thereof, or awarded by a jury, as
hereinafter provided, being first paid or tendered to the party
entitled to receive such compensation."
By Act of Congress of March 18, 1869, 16 Stat. 1, 2, c. 2, it
was declared that the Baltimore and Potomac Railroad Company
"may enter the City of Washington with their said railroad and
construct the same within the limits of said city on and by
whichever one of the two routes herein designated the said company
may elect and determine upon,"
and by the Act of March 25, 1870, 16 Stat. 78, c. 32, § 2,
a modification of the second of these two routes was authorized.
The terminal point in each was described as a point at the
intersection of South C and West Ninth Streets.
The company made choice of the second of the projected routes,
commencing on the western shore of the Eastern Branch, between
South L and South M Streets, and thence passing through K Street
and Virginia Avenue to the terminal point on Ninth Street.
By Act of June 21, 1870, 16 Stat. 161, c. 142, Congress
enacted
"that the Baltimore and Potomac Railroad Company be, and they
are hereby, authorized and empowered to
extend their lateral
branch, authorized by the act to which this is a supplement
and by former supplements to said acts,
by the way of Maryland
Avenue, conforming to its grade, to the viaduct
Page 130 U. S. 219
over the Potomac River at the City of Washington, known as the
'Long Bridge,' and to extend their tracks over said bridge, and
connect with any railroads, constructed, or that may hereafter be
constructed in the State of Virginia,"
the act authorizing the railroad company, to effect these
purposes, to take possession of and use the bridge free of cost and
maintain the same, etc. By virtue of the authority granted by this
act, the railroad extended its "lateral branch" to the Potomac
River from Ninth Street South, by way of Maryland Avenue, and it
was further authorized by Act of March 3, 1871, 16 Stat. 585, c.
137, in making this extension, to change the grade of Maryland
Avenue from Twelfth Street to the Long Bridge in the manner
specified in that act, under the supervision of the municipal
authorities of Washington.
The Act of Congress of May 21, 1872, 17 Stat. 140, c. 189,
relating to the establishment of the passenger depot of the company
at Sixth and B Streets, makes mention of no streets or avenues
except B Street and Sixth Street and Virginia Avenue.
Page 130 U. S. 221
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER, after stating the facts as above,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Appellate jurisdiction was conferred on this Court, by the
twenty-fifth section of the Judiciary Act of 1789, over final
judgments and decrees in any suit in the highest court of law or
equity of a state in which a decision in the suit could be had, in
three classes of cases: first, where is drawn in question the
validity of a treaty or statute of, or an authority exercised
under, the United States, and the decision is against their
validity; secondly, where is drawn in question the validity of a
statute of, or an authority exercised under, any state, on the
ground of their being repugnant to the Constitution, treaties, or
laws of the United States, and the decision is in favor of their
validity; thirdly, where is drawn in question the construction of
any clause of the Constitution, or of a treaty or statute of, or
commission held under, the United States, and the decision is
against the title, right, privilege, or exemption specially set up
or claimed by either party, under such clause of the said
Constitution, treaty, statute, or commission. 1 Stat. 73, 85, c.
20, § 25.
By the second section of the Act of February 5, 1867, 14 Stat.
385, 386, c. 28, this original twenty-fifth section was reenacted,
with certain changes, and among others the words,
"or where is drawn in question the construction of any clause of
the Constitution, or of a treaty or statute of, or commission held
under, the United States, and the decision is against the title,
right, privilege, or exemption specially set up or claimed by
either party, under such clause of the said Constitution, treaty,
statute, or commission,"
were made to read
"or where any title, right, privilege, or immunity is claimed
under the Constitution, or any treaty or statute of, or commission
held or authority exercised under, the United States and the
decision is against
Page 130 U. S. 222
the title, right, privilege, or immunity specially set up or
claimed by either party under such Constitution, treaty, statute,
commission, or authority,"
and this was carried into § 709 of the Revised
Statutes.
The Act of Congress entitled "An act regulating appeals from the
Supreme Court of the District of Columbia and the supreme courts of
the several territories," approved March 3, 1885, 23 Stat. 443, c.
355, provides
"That no appeal or writ of error shall hereafter be allowed from
any judgment or decree in any suit at law or in equity in the
Supreme Court of the District of Columbia or in the supreme court
of any of the territories of the United States unless the matter in
dispute, exclusive of costs, shall exceed the sum of five thousand
dollars."
"SEC. 2. That the preceding section shall not apply to any case
wherein is involved the validity of any patent or copyright, or in
which is drawn in question the validity of a treaty or statute of,
or an authority exercised under, the United States, but in all such
cases an appeal or writ of error may be brought without regard to
the sum or value in dispute."
When the validity of a statute of or authority exercised under
the United States is drawn in question in a state court, the
decision of the latter must be against its validity in order to
justify a review of such decision, but under this act, it is
sufficient if the validity is drawn in question irrespective of the
conclusion reached, so that the inquiry is confined to whether the
validity of such a statute or authority is actually
controverted.
In
Dupasseur v.
Rochereau, 21 Wall. 130,
88 U. S. 134,
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY, delivering the opinion of the Court, says:
"Where a state court refuses to give effect to the judgment of a
court of the United States rendered upon the point in dispute, and
with jurisdiction of the case and the parties, a question is
undoubtedly raised which, under the act of 1867, may be brought to
this Court for revision. The case would be one in which a title or
right is claimed under an authority exercised under the United
States, and the decision is against the title or right so set up.
It would thus be a case arising under the laws of the
Page 130 U. S. 223
United States establishing the circuit court and vesting it with
jurisdiction."
This is so because a claim of right or title under an authority
exercised under the United States was sufficient to give
jurisdiction under that act, whereas the act of 1885 does not so
provide, but only that the validity of the authority must be drawn
in question. The distinction is palpable between a denial of the
validity of the authority and a denial of a title, right,
privilege, or immunity claimed under it.
That part of original § 25, and of the act of 1867, as to
decisions in favor of the validity of a statute of, or of an
authority exercised under, any state, when drawn in question on the
ground of their being repugnant to the Constitution, treaties, or
laws of the United States, has been frequently passed upon, and the
distinction between the construction of a statute or the extent of
an authority, and the validity of a statute or of an authority,
pointed out. Thus, in
Commercial Bank of Cincinnati
v. Buckingham, 5 How. 317, where a general law had
declared all banks liable to pay six percent interest on their
notes when they had refused payment on demand, and a subsequent
act, incorporating the bank in question, provided for the payment
of twelve percent, and the question was whether the bank was liable
to pay eighteen, this Court held that the question submitted to and
decided by the state court was one of construction, and not of
validity. There, both the prior and subsequent statutes were
admitted to be valid under any construction of them,
"and therefore no construction placed by the state court on
either of them could draw in question its validity as being
repugnant to the Constitution of the United States or any act of
Congress."
Bridge Proprietors v. Hoboken
Co., 1 Wall. 116,
68 U. S.
144.
In
Lawler v.
Walker, 14 How. 149, where, in 1816, the
Legislature of Ohio had passed "An act to prohibit the issuing and
circulation of unauthorized bank paper," and in 1839 an act
amendatory thereof, and the question arose whether or not a canal
company, incorporated in 1837, was subject to these acts, it was
held that the Supreme Court of Ohio, in deciding that it was,
"only gave a construction to an act of Ohio, which neither of
itself nor by its application involved in any way a
Page 130 U. S. 224
repugnancy to the Constitution of the United States by impairing
the obligation of a contract."
Whenever the power to enact a statute as it is by its terms, or
is made to read by construction, is fairly open to denial, and
denied, the validity of such statute is drawn in question, but not
otherwise.
In
Millingar v.
Hartupee, 6 Wall. 258,
73 U. S. 262,
it was held that the word "authority" stands upon the same footing
with "treaty" or "statute," and, said the Court through Chief
Justice Chase:
"Something more than a bare assertion of such an authority seems
essential to the jurisdiction of this Court. The authority intended
by the act is one having a real existence, derived from competent
governmental power. If a different construction had been intended,
Congress would doubtless have used fitting words. The act would
have given jurisdiction in cases of decisions against claims of
authority under the United States. . . . In many cases, the
question of the existence of an authority is so closely connected
with the question of its validity that the court will not undertake
to separate them, and in such cases the question of jurisdiction
will not be considered apart from the question upon the merits, or
except upon hearing in regular order. But where, as in this case,
the single question is not of the validity, but of the existence,
of an authority, and we are fully satisfied that there was, and
could have been, no decision in the state court against any
authority under the United States existing in fact, and that we
have therefore no jurisdiction of the cause brought here by writ of
error, we can perceive no reason for retaining it upon the
docket."
So in
Lewis v
Campau, 3 Wall. 106, where the final judgment of
the highest court of law and equity in the State of Michigan was
that the revenue stamps attached to a deed offered in evidence, and
objected to as not having stamps proportioned to the value of the
land conveyed, were sufficient, was held not a subject for review
by this Court under the twenty-fifth section of the Judiciary Act,
and in
Mining Company v.
Boggs, 3 Wall. 304,
70 U. S. 310, which
was an action of ejectment
Page 130 U. S. 225
brought for the possession of certain mineral lands in
California, where the defendant contended that he was in possession
by virtue of an authority inferred from the general policy of the
United States in relation to mines of gold and silver, Chief
Justice Chase, speaking for the Court in dismissing the writ of
error, said:
"The decision was that no such license existed, and this was a
finding by the court of a question of fact upon the submission of
the whole case by the parties, rather than a judgment upon a
question of law. It is the same case, in principle, as would be
made by an allegation, in defense to an action of ejectment, of a
patent from the United States, with an averment of its loss or
destruction, and a finding by the jury that no such patent existed,
and a consequent judgment for the defendant (plaintiff). Such a
judgment would deny not the validity but the existence of the
patent. And this Court would have no jurisdiction to review
it."
In
Gill v. Oliver's
Executors, 11 How. 529, under a treaty between the
United States and Mexico, a sum of money was awarded to be paid to
the members of the Baltimore Mexican Company, and the proceeds of
one of the shares of this company were claimed by two parties, and
the judgment of the Court of Appeals of Maryland as to which of the
claimants were entitled to the money was held not reviewable by
this Court.
Williams v.
Oliver, 12 How. 111.
The case at bar does not involve the exercise of an authority
under the United States in the sense of an authority to act for the
government, but it is claimed that the railroad company acted under
certain statutes of the United States authorizing such action, and
that the validity of these statutes, or of authority under them,
was denied. But the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia did
not deny the right of the defendant company to use its tracks in
Washington on Maryland Avenue, between Ninth and Tenth Streets, in
a lawful manner, for the purpose of transacting its lawful
business, but, on the contrary, the jury was instructed that the
plaintiff was not entitled to recover for any annoyances,
discomforts, or inconveniences which resulted from such
Page 130 U. S. 226
uses of Maryland Avenue by the railroad company
"as were reasonably incident to the careful conduct of its
through business and to the maintenance and careful use of its
freight depot or station abutting on the south side of said avenue
between said Ninth and Tenth Streets Southwest,"
and the lawful uses to which the street might be put by the
railroad company were clearly explained. The jury were told that
all stoppage of trains and shifting of cars necessary for carrying
cars out of its freight depot over the different tracks for the
purpose of making up freight trains were lawful. The right of the
railroad company to establish freight stations or to lay as many
tracks "as its president and board of directors might deem
necessary" was not questioned. But the court also held that the
company was not justified in occupying the public streets for the
purposes of a freight yard as such, because the various statutes
bearing upon the matter did not authorize such occupation, with
which conclusion we are inclined to agree, though we forbear a
determination of the point until presented in a case properly
pending before us. The validity of the statutes, and the validity
of authority exercised under them, are, in this instance, one and
the same thing, and "the validity of a statute," as these words are
used in this act of Congress, refers to the power of Congress to
pass the particular statute at all, and not to mere judicial
construction, as contradistinguished from a denial of the
legislative power. In our opinion, the validity of no act of
Congress, or authority under the United States, was so drawn in
question here as to give us jurisdiction, and therefore, as the
amount of the judgment did not exceed $5,000,
The writ of error must be dismissed.