On a writ of error to a state court, this Court cannot take
jurisdiction under the allegation that a contract has been impaired
by a decision of that court when it appeals that the state court
has done nothing more than construe its own constitution and
statutes existing at the time when the bonds were issued, there
being no subsequent legislation touching the subject.
This Court is bound by the decision of a state court in regard
to the meaning of the constitution and laws of its own state, and
its decision upon such a state of facts raises no federal question,
though other principles obtain when the writ of error is to a
federal court.
This was a motion to dismiss. The case is stated in the
opinion.
MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was commenced in the Superior Court of Wilkes
County, in the State of North Carolina, by the Board of
Commissioners of Wilkes County and C. C. Wright, against Clarence
Call. Mr. Wright was a taxpayer of the county, while the defendant
Call was its treasurer. The action was brought to test the validity
of certain bonds issued by the County of Wilkes in payment of its
subscription to the stock of the Northwestern North Carolina
Railroad Company.
The defendants Turner and Wellborn were the owners of some of
the bonds, and after the bringing of this action they were, on
their own motion, brought in as parties defendant, and they invited
all other bondholders to come in and join them in resisting the
action.
Page 173 U. S. 462
It was claimed by the holders of the bonds that authority for
their issue existed under an ordinance chartering the Northwestern
North Carolina Railroad Company, which ordinance was adopted by the
constitutional convention of North Carolina, March 9, 1868; the
Constitution being itself ratified April 25, 1868. It was also
insisted that the bonds were authorized under sections 1996 to 2000
of the Code of North Carolina, as enacted in 1869, and subsequently
ratified in 1883; also, that the charter of the railroad company,
as amended in 1879, and again in 1881, authorized the issuing of
the bonds. The bonds were in fact issued in 1890, and therefore
subsequent to all the legislation above referred to. The bonds
recited on their face that they were issued under the act of
1879.
As grounds for their contention that the bonds were invalid, the
plaintiffs below asserted that neither the above-mentioned act of
1879 nor the amended act of 1881 had been constitutionally passed,
that the bonds were not issued under the ordinance adopted by the
constitutional convention, and that, by the doctrine of estoppel,
the bondholders could not claim that the bonds were issued under
such ordinance or by virtue of any other authority than that
recited on their face,
viz., the act of 1879.
The supreme court of the state held that the bonds were void
because the acts under which they were issued were not valid laws,
not having been passed in the manner directed by the Constitution.
The court further held that the bonds were not authorized by the
above sections of the Code, and that as they purported, by recitals
on their face, to have been issued under the act of 1879, the
bondholders were estopped from setting up any other authority for
their issue, such as the ordinance of the constitutional convention
above mentioned. 31 S.E. 481.
The bondholders have brought the case here, claiming that, by
the decision below, their contract has been impaired because, as
they allege, the supreme court of the state had decided before
these bonds were issued that the acts under which they were issued
were valid laws and authorized their issue, and that, in holding
the contrary after the issue of these bonds, the state court had
impaired the obligation of the contract,
Page 173 U. S. 463
and its decision raised a federal question proper for review by
this Court.
But in this case we have no power to examine the correctness of
the decision of the Supreme Court of North Carolina because, this
being a writ of error to a state court, we cannot take jurisdiction
under the allegation that a contract has been impaired by a
decision of that court when it appears that the state court has
done nothing more than construe its own constitution and statutes
existing at the time when the bonds were issued, there being no
subsequent legislation touching the subject. We are therefore bound
by the decision of the state court in regard to the meaning of the
constitution and laws of its own state, and its decision upon such
a state of facts raises no federal question. Other principles
obtain when the writ of error is to a federal court.
The difference in the jurisdiction of this Court upon writs of
error to a state, as distinguished from a federal, court, in
questions claimed to arise out of the contract clause of the
Constitution, is set forth in the opinion of the court in
Land
Company v. Laidley, 159 U. S. 103, and
from the opinion in that case the following extract is taken (page
159 U. S.
111):
"The distinction, as to the authority of this Court, between
writs of error to a court of the United States and writs of error
to the highest court of a state is well illustrated by two of the
earliest cases relating to municipal bonds, in both of which the
opinion was delivered by Mr. Justice Swayne, and in each of which
the question presented was whether the Constitution of the State of
Iowa permitted the legislature to authorize municipal corporations
to issue bonds in aid of the construction of a railroad. The
supreme court of the state, by decisions made before the bonds in
question were issued, had held that it did, but, by decisions made
after they had been issued, held that it did not. A judgment of the
District Court of the United States for the District of Iowa,
following the later decisions of the state court, was reviewed on
the merits, and reversed, by this Court, for misconstruction of the
Constitution of Iowa.
Gelpcke v. City of Dubuque,
1 Wall. 175,
68 U. S. 206. But a writ of
error to review one of those decisions of
Page 173 U. S. 464
the Supreme Court of Iowa was dismissed for want of jurisdiction
because, admitting the constitution of the state to be a law of the
state, within the meaning of the provision of the Constitution of
the United States forbidding a state to pass any law impairing the
obligation of contracts, the only question was of its construction
by the state court.
Railroad Co. v. McClure, 10
Wall. 511,
77 U. S. 515."
An example of the jurisdiction exercised by this Court when
reviewing a decision of a federal court with regard to the same
contract clause is found in the same volume.
Folsom v.
Ninety-Six, 159 U. S. 611,
159 U. S.
625.
This case is governed by the principles laid down in
Land
Co. v. Laidley, supra, and the writ of error must therefore
be
Dismissed.