There was no dispute as to the facts out of which this
controversy arose. The right of the plaintiff to recover under his
contract with the state is not for this Court to determine unless
the record discloses that he has been deprived of some title,
right, privilege or immunity secured to him by the Constitution of
the United States, which was specially set up or claimed in the
state court.
The decision by the Supreme Court of the Nebraska that the
Pawnee Reservation lands in that state were public lands within the
meaning of the twelfth section of the Enabling Act did not bring
into question the validity of that section, and there is nothing on
which to rest a right to review the judgment of the Supreme Court
of Nebraska.
The case is stated in the opinion of the court.
MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
In May, 1897, in the District Court of Lancaster County, State
of Nebraska, Thomas P. Kennard brought an action against the State
of Nebraska seeking to recover the sum of $13,521.99, being fifty
percentum of a certain sum paid by the United States to the State
of Nebraska, and which plaintiff alleged had been so paid by reason
of his services, as a duly appointed agent of the state in
procuring the allowance of the claim of the state. The petition
further stated that, in pursuance of an act of the legislature of
the state, the governor had contracted with the plaintiff to
promote the claim of the state, and had agreed that plaintiff was
to receive fifty percent of the amount recovered. It also alleged
that, by a resolution of the legislature, he was authorized to
prosecute his claim in the courts of the State of Nebraska.
Page 186 U. S. 305
The cause was put at issue, and came to trial, a jury being
waived, and on March 11, 1898, upon the pleading and evidence, the
court found for the plaintiff the sum of $13,521.99, and entered
judgment accordingly. The cause was taken to the Supreme Court of
Nebraska, where, on October 5, 1898, the judgment of the trial
court was reversed,
State v. Kennard, 56 Neb. 254, and
again, on February 9, 1899, upon a rehearing, the same conclusion
was reached. A writ of error was allowed, January 17, 1901, and
cause brought to this Court.
The facts of this case appear sufficiently for our purposes in
the following extract from the opinion of the Supreme Court of
Nebraska, filed upon a rehearing of the case in that court:
"This is a rehearing of
State v. Kennard, 56 Neb. 254.
By section 12 of the enabling act passed by Congress, April 19,
1864, 13 Stat. 47, the United States donated to the State of
Nebraska five percentum of the proceeds of sales of all public
lands lying within the State of Nebraska which had prior to that
time been sold, or which should subsequently be sold, by the United
States, after deducting expenses incident to such sale. At the time
the state was admitted into the Union, a tribe of Indians known as
the 'Pawnees' occupied in common a tract of lands in this state
known as the 'Pawnee Indian Reservation.' After the state was
admitted into the Union, the United States took such steps as
resulted in the extinguishment of the rights of these Indians to
the lands in this reservation, sold the lands, and, it seems, used
the proceeds of the sale to defray the expenses incident thereto in
procuring other lands for the Indians elsewhere, and placed the
remaining proceeds of the sale of these lands in the United States
Treasury to the credit of the Indians. By an act passed by the
Legislature of the State of Nebraska in February, 1873
(
see General Statutes, 1873, c. 59), it seems that the
legislature was of opinion that, by reason of section 12 of the
Enabling Act, the United States was indebted to it for five percent
of the value of the lands lying within the state used as Indian
reservations, and five percent of the value of all lands on which
private parties had located military land warrants and land scrip
issued for military service in the wars of the United
Page 186 U. S. 306
States, and five percent of the value of all such as had been
donated by the United States to railroads."
"It is also recited in said act that the United States had
donated to other states swamp and overflowed lands lying within
their borders, but that no such donation or allowance of swamp and
overflowed lands had been made to this state, and it seems to have
been the opinion of the legislature that all the swamp and
overflowed lands lying within the state belonging to the United
States should by it be donated to the state. The act under
consideration authorized the governor to employ an agent in behalf
of the state, to prosecute to final decision before Congress or in
the courts the claim of the State of Nebraska against the United
States for the five percent of the value of the lands disposed of
by the United States for any of the purposes already mentioned and
for the purpose of procuring from the United States a donation of
the swamp and overflowed lands within its borders. The act left the
compensation of the agent to be agreed upon by the governor and the
agent, but provided in effect that the agent should not be entitled
to any compensation for collecting from the United States any part
of the five percent cash school fund which had been donated to the
state by the United States by section 12 of the Enabling Act
aforesaid. The governor of the state entered into a contract with
Kennard in pursuance of the act of the legislature just mentioned
in and by which he authorized Kennard to prosecute and collect the
claims of the state against the nation in conformity with the act
of the legislature, and that the state should pay him one-half of
all moneys, except such cash school fund, he should collect for the
state as such agent. Mr. Kennard entered upon the performance of
his contract with the governor, and by his efforts induced the
Secretary of the Interior to acknowledge that the United States
were indebted to the State of Nebraska in the sum of five percentum
of the proceeds of the sale of the 'Pawnee Indian reservation'
lands made by the United States subsequent to the admission of the
state into the Union; and, in pursuance of this decision of the
Secretary of the Interior, the United States paid into the treasury
of this state $27,000. Mr. Kennard, by permission
Page 186 U. S. 307
of the legislature, then brought this suit to recover one-half
of that sum. He had judgment in the district court for Lancaster
County, and the state brought the same here for review, and the
judgment of the district court was reversed. We based our judgment
of reversal of this judgment upon the proposition that the lands of
the 'Pawnee Indian Reservation' were public lands within the
meaning of section 12 of the Enabling Act, and that the only money
collected by Mr. Kennard was the five percent of the proceeds of
the sale made of these lands by the United States, and, by the
terms of his contract, he was not to have any compensation for
collecting these moneys."
Upon this statement of the facts, does this Court have
jurisdiction to review the judgment of the Supreme Court of the
State of Nebraska?
There was no dispute as to the facts out of which the
controversy arose. The right of the plaintiff to recover under his
contract with the state is not for us to determine unless the
record discloses that he has been deprived of some title, right,
privilege, or immunity secured to him by the Constitution of the
United States and unless it appears that such title, right,
privilege, or immunity was specially set up or claimed in the state
court.
Oxley Stave Co. v. Butler County, 166 U.
S. 648;
Water Power Co. v. Street Ry. Co.,
172 U. S. 475.
Looking into the record, we do not find in the pleadings, or in
the petition for a hearing, any specific statement or claim by the
plaintiff in error of any right, title, privilege, or immunity
secured to him by any provision of the Constitution of the United
States. This indeed is admitted in the brief of the plaintiff in
error, but it was claimed in the petition for allowance of a writ
of error from this Court
"that in the rendition of the judgment by the supreme court of
the state, there was drawn in question the construction of the
statutes of the United States with reference to the lands of the
Pawnee Indian reservation located in the State of Nebraska, and the
act of Congress authorizing the admission of the State of Nebraska
into the Union, passed April, 1864, 13 Stat. 47, and that the
decision of said supreme court was against the plaintiff in error
in such construction,"
and that
"said decision was necessary to the judgment
Page 186 U. S. 308
given by the said supreme court, and without such decision and
construction the said judgment could not have been given."
And it is now contended that the plaintiff's right to recover
was defeated solely by the construction the state court placed upon
the congressional acts, and that thus a federal question appears in
the record, giving this Court power to review the decision of the
state court.
But the validity of the acts of Congress referred to was not
drawn in question by the facts of this controversy. Our
jurisdiction to review the judgment of the state court rests upon
section 709 of the Revised Statutes. It has often been held that
the validity of a statute or treaty of the United States is not
"drawn in question" within the meaning of section 709 every time
rights claimed under a statute or treaty are controverted, nor is
the validity of an authority every time an act done by such
authority is disputed.
Baltimore & Potomac R. Co. v.
Hopkins, 130 U. S. 210;
Cook County v. Calumet &c. Canal Company, 138 U.
S. 635,
138 U. S. 653;
Borgmeyer v. Idler, 159 U. S. 408;
Blackburn v. Portland Mining Company, 175 U.
S. 571;
Florida Central Railroad Company v.
Bell, 176 U. S. 321,
176 U. S. 328;
Water Power Company v. Street Railway Company,
172 U. S.
488.
The decision by the supreme court of the state that the Pawnee
Reservation lands in Nebraska were public lands within the meaning
of the twelfth section of the Enabling Act did not bring into
question the validity of that section -- much less was it a
decision against its validity. As, then, the plaintiff in error
specially set up or claimed no federal right, and as the judgment
of the Supreme Court of Nebraska did not impugn the validity of any
statute of the United States, we find nothing on which to rest a
right to review that judgment, and the writ of error is
accordingly
Dismissed.