The right of the circuit court to take jurisdiction of a case as
one arising under the Constitution and laws of the United States
must distinctly appear in the allegations of the bill; but this
Court may take jurisdiction of direct appeal from the circuit court
under § 5 of the Court of Appeals Act if it properly appears
that a right under the Constitution and laws of the United States
was duly claimed during the case.
Loeb v. Columbia
Township, 179 U. S. 472.
While the opinion of the circuit court may not be examined to
ascertain what should, under proper practice, appear in the
pleadings or bill of exceptions, it may be looked to, when annexed
and forming part of the record, to ascertain whether either party
claimed, and was denied, a federal right.
Municipal legislation passed without authority of the state does
not lay the foundation of federal jurisdiction, and statements in
the bill to the effect that the ordinances complained of were
unauthorized and illegal will be held to refer to the state, rather
than to the federal, constitution, in the absence of distinct
references to the latter.
Quaere whether a bill within the jurisdiction of the
circuit court can be construed as charging that the action of a
municipality was without authority from the state and also that
such action denied plaintiff his constitutional rights under the
Fourteenth Amendment.
Where diverse citizenship exists and the bill alleges, and the
circuit
Page 218 U. S. 625
court holds, that the defendant municipality had no authority to
pass the ordinance complained of, the case is not one arising under
the Constitution and laws of the United States, and, although the
judge may have declared in his opinion that the ordinance violated
complainant's federal rights, this Court has not jurisdiction on a
direct appeal under § 5 of the Court of Appeals Act.
The facts, which involve the jurisdiction of this Court of a
direct appeal from the circuit court of the United States, are
stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
We are met at the threshold of this case with a challenge of the
appellate jurisdiction of this Court. The case was begun in the
Circuit Court of the United States for the Western District of
Tennessee by a bill filed by the Cumberland Telephone &
Telegraph Company against the City of Memphis seeking to enjoin the
enforcement of the provisions of an ordinance of that city, passed
September 24, 1907, regulating charges by telephone companies in
the city.
The bill averred that the complainant was a corporation
organized and existing under the laws of the State of Kentucky, and
that the respondent, the City of Memphis, was a municipal
corporation, created and existing under the laws of Tennessee. The
jurisdiction of the circuit court therefore might rest upon diverse
citizenship. Concerning the ordinance regulating the charges of
telephone rates, the enforcement of which it was the object of the
suit to enjoin, it was averred to be null and
Page 218 U. S. 626
void for the reason that the City of Memphis was incorporated
under a legislative act of the State of Tennessee, with certain
powers and authority which nowhere included, either by express
terms or necessary implication, a power to fix and regulate
telephone charges, and that the attempt to do so was an abuse of
power, and an attempt to exercise a power which the city wholly
lacked.
The bill also charged that the ordinance was null and void
because it was unjust, inequitable, and unreasonable, because the
tariff rates were fixed so low that complainant could not operate
its exchange without actual loss of money; that said ordinance was,
in truth and effect, confiscatory, and that it totally destroyed
the value of the complainant's plant in the City of Memphis for
profitable use as a telephone exchange. The prayer of the bill was
for an injunction against the enforcement of the ordinance in
question.
A preliminary injunction was granted, the judge holding the
circuit court at that time delivering an opinion announcing the
conclusion that the ordinance in question was passed by the city
without legislative authority, the court saying that was all which
was necessary to decide at that time, but beyond that, he thought
the city estopped by a certain contract which was set up in the
bill from adopting the ordinance in question, and a preliminary
injunction was granted.
The answer took issue upon the allegations of the bill, a
considerable amount of testimony was taken as to the reasonableness
of the rates fixed in the ordinance, and the judge who heard the
case upon the merits reached the conclusion that the rates fixed in
the ordinance were confiscatory, and said: "That result seems to us
to be destructive of the complainant's rights under the
Constitution of the United States."
Adverting to the opinion delivered upon the granting of the
temporary injunction, the court rendering the final
Page 218 U. S. 627
decree stated that the former decision was based upon a want of
authority in the city to pass the ordinance, and the estoppel of
the contract set up in the bill, adding:
"We are not to be considered as dissenting from either of these
views. We have not had time to examine either proposition, or
inclination to do so, because we are entirely content to decide the
case upon final hearing upon the one ground herein discussed."
As was said by Mr. Justice Moody, speaking for the Court in
MacFadden v. United States, 213 U.
S. 288, a right to review the judgments of the circuit
courts of appeals and of the circuit and district courts of the
United States rests upon different grounds, and that, unless this
fact is borne in mind, confusion is liable to result. The appellate
jurisdiction from the circuit court of appeals to this Court, as
Mr. Justice Moody pointed out, is determined by the sources of
jurisdiction of the trial court, and depends upon the finality of
the judgment of the circuit court of appeals, as under § 6 of
the Court of Appeals Act in all other cases there is a right of
review in this Court if the amount in controversy exceeds one
thousand dollars. The right to come directly to this Court by
appeal or writ of error from the district or circuit courts of the
United States arises under § 5 of the Court of Appeals Act,
and so far as the case now under consideration is concerned,
depends upon the case being within the class of cases mentioned in
that section -- namely, "in any case in which the Constitution or
law of a state is claimed to be in contravention of the
Constitution of the United States."
The right to take jurisdiction of a case in the circuit court of
the United States, arising under the Constitution or laws of the
United States, must appear in the allegations of the bill or
petition with such distinct averments as to show that it is such.
Under § 5 of the Court of Appeals Act, the right to come to
this Court by direct
Page 218 U. S. 628
appeal is given in any case in which it is "claimed" that a
Constitution or law of a state is in contravention of the
Constitution of the United States. It is thus apparent that the
claim, to give a right of appeal under this section, need not
necessarily be in the pleading of the party invoking the
jurisdiction of the court. It is sufficient if such right is duly
claimed in the case. The statute is silent as to how this claim
shall be made. The subject was under consideration in
Loeb v.
Columbia Township, 179 U. S. 472, and
the distinctions between the requirements of jurisdiction in an
appeal to the circuit court of appeals and an appeal direct to this
Court were pointed out. In that case, it was held that where the
defendant brought the constitutional question into the record by
demurrer, and the opinion of the circuit court showed that it had
considered and determined that question, the proper basis for
jurisdiction by direct appeal to this Court was shown.
In saying that the opinion of the circuit court might be looked
to, when annexed and transmitted as part of the record, to
ascertain whether either party claimed that a state statute was in
contravention of the Constitution of the United States, this Court,
in the
Loeb case, added:
"By this [view], however, we must not be understood as saying
that the opinion below may be examined in order to ascertain that
which, under proper practice, should be made to appear in a bill of
exceptions, or by an agreed statement of facts, or by the
pleadings."
In
Lampasas v. Bell, 180 U. S. 276, a
suit was brought against the City of Lampasas to recover upon
certain bonds, and the jurisdiction rested upon diverse
citizenship. The defendant sought to introduce a constitutional
question into the record in the contention set up in the answer,
that the residents of certain territory incorporated into the city
had not been given an opportunity to be heard as to whether they
should be included in and
Page 218 U. S. 629
be subject to taxation in the proposed incorporation. It was
therefore contended that the bonds were void, and an attempt to
levy and collect taxes to pay them was in violation of § 1 of
the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States.
This Court dismissed the writ of error, saying:
"This Court has only jurisdiction by appeal or writ of error
directly from the circuit court in certain cases, one of which is
when 'the Constitution or law of a state is claimed to be in
contravention of the Constitution of the United States.' Sec. 5 of
the Judiciary Act of March 3, 1891, c. 517, 26 Stat. 826, 828. But
the claim must be real and substantial. A mere claim in words is
not enough. We said by the Chief Justice in
Western Union
Telegraph Co. v. Ann Arbor Railroad Co., 178 U. S.
239:"
"When a suit does not really and substantially involve a dispute
or controversy as to the effect or construction of the Constitution
or laws of the United States, upon the determination of which the
result depends, it is not a suit arising under the Constitution or
laws. And it must appear on the record by a statement in legal and
logical form, such as is required in good pleading, that the suit
is one which does really and substantially involve a dispute or
controversy as to a right which depends on the construction of the
Constitution or some law or treaty of the United States before
jurisdiction can be maintained on this ground.
Gold Washing
& Water Co. v. Keyes, 96 U. S. 199;
Blackburn v.
Portland Gold Mining Co., 175 U. S. 571."
In this case, a perusal of the bill, answer, and testimony in
the case makes it apparent that, if brought into the record at all,
the alleged claim of a violation of the federal Constitution by a
state law must be found in the bill itself. It appears from an
examination of the bill that it is distinctly charged therein that
the ordinance was passed without authority of the state, and its
attempted passage,
Page 218 U. S. 630
it is alleged, was an abuse of power by the city. There is no
reference in the bill to any provision of the federal Constitution.
If any can be said to be violated, it must be the Fourteenth
Amendment. It is hardly necessary to say that that Amendment is
aimed at state action, in the provision that no state shall deprive
any person of life, liberty, or property without due process of
law. The bill therefore, so far from charging a violation of the
Fourteenth Amendment by an authorized action of the state,
distinctly and in terms avers that the ordinance was passed without
state authority. That such municipal legislation does not lay the
foundation of federal jurisdiction has been repeatedly held in this
Court.
Hamilton Gas Light Co. v. Hamilton, 146 U.
S. 258, in which many of the previous cases in this
Court are cited. In that case, MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, speaking for the
Court, said of an ordinance passed without legislative authority:
"A suit to prevent the enforcement of such an ordinance would not
therefore be one arising under the Constitution of the United
States."
In
Barney v. City of New York, 193 U.
S. 430, the bill invoked the jurisdiction of the circuit
court of the United States upon the ground that the plaintiff was
deprived of his property without due process of law; other
allegations of the bill showed that the matters complained of were
not only not authorized, but were forbidden by the legislation of
the state; hence, the action did not invoke the protection of the
Fourteenth Amendment because of action by the State of New York,
and therefore it was held the bill was properly dismissed for want
of jurisdiction. In that case, some of the previous cases in this
Court, to the same effect, are reviewed by Mr. Chief Justice
Fuller, who delivered the opinion of the Court.
A question closely analogous to the one at bar came before the
Court of Appeals of the Sixth Circuit, Judge Lurton delivering the
opinion of the court.
Louisville
Page 218 U. S. 631
v. Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Co., 155 F.
725. In that case, the jurisdiction of the circuit court was
invoked on the ground that the ordinance of the City of Louisville
regulating rates was in violation of a contract between the
complainant and the city; also on the ground that the rates were
unreasonable, unjust, and confiscatory, depriving the complainant
of property without due process of law, in violation of the
Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution. In that case, the bill
was dismissed upon the ground that the allegations of the complaint
showed that the case was not one arising under the Constitution and
laws of the United States. This was held to be so because of other
statements of the bill, which was held negatived state action,
which alone could lay the foundation of jurisdiction, in that it
averred that no power to regulate the rates charged by the
complainant had been granted by the State of Kentucky to the
municipality which had undertaken to pass the regulating ordinance,
and that the attempt to pass such ordinance was an unwarranted and
unfounded assumption of power upon the part of the city.
The claim that the jurisdiction should be sustained because the
common council of the City of Louisville had assumed to act under
authority of the legislature of the Commonwealth of Kentucky, which
was averred in the bill, was answered by the court saying that the
existence of such regulating power was distinctly negatived by the
allegation of the bill that the city had acted in the premises
wholly without authority.
So, in the present case, the statements of the bill are clear
and distinct that the passage of the ordinance was without power,
and a usurpation on the part of the city, and the allegations of
the bill as to the confiscatory character of the ordinance can,
consistently with the other averments of the bill, be referred only
to the state constitution, which, as well as the federal
Constitution, inhibits
Page 218 U. S. 632
attempts to take property without due process of law.
Harbinson v. Knoxville Iron Co., 103 Tenn. 421.
It is suggested that the bill, when properly construed, may have
a two-fold aspect, one of which charges that the city acted without
authority of law, and the other that, conceding the city to act
with authority, the rates fixed were confiscatory, in violation of
the federal Constitution. Assuming that a bill might be framed in
this manner, it is sufficient to say of the present bill that it is
not one of that character. There is nothing in it qualifying the
allegation as to the action of the city without authority of the
state, and, as we have said, the allegations as to the confiscatory
character of the ordinance are to be referred, as they can be,
consistently with the other allegations of the bill, to the state
constitution, which would be violated if such allegations were
true. This construction harmonizes the bill and does violence to
none of its averments.
The case, then, is this: the first and only reference to the
federal Constitution is in the final opinion of the circuit judge
who heard the case upon the merits, in the part of the opinion
above quoted, to the effect that the rates fixed are in violation
of the complainant's rights under the federal Constitution. This
observation was doubtless made by the learned judge as the
equivalent of saying that the rates were confiscatory, and
therefore unlawful; but whether so or not, so far as it makes the
Fourteenth Amendment a ground of decision, it is inconsistent with
the position taken in the bill, and as there is no basis for a
claim of denial of rights under that amendment in the case, it
cannot be made the ground of direct appeal to this Court under the
fifth section of the Court of Appeals Act.
We are of opinion that this case must be dismissed for want of
jurisdiction in this Court, and
It is so ordered.
Page 218 U. S. 633
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, with whom concur MR. JUSTICE McKENNA and MR.
JUSTICE HUGHES, dissenting:
As I cannot concur in the judgment of dismissal, in view of what
seems to me to be the importance of the subject, the reasons for my
dissent are expressed.
Let me restate the case. In September, 1907, the City of Memphis
passed an ordinance fixing maximum telephone rates. The telephone
company filed its bill to enjoin the enforcement of the ordinance.
Diversity of citizenship was alleged. The relief prayed was based
upon substantially the following grounds: (a) that, as the
Legislature of Tennessee had conferred no power upon the City of
Memphis to fix rates, the city was wholly lacking in authority to
pass the ordinance, and the same was therefore void; (b) that the
ordinance was void
"because it is unjust, inequitable, and unreasonable in that it
fixes the maximum tariff or rate of charges beyond which your
orator is forbidden to go, under severe penalties which is so low
that your orator could not operate its exchange without actual loss
of money to it, and, indeed, is in truth and effect confiscatory,
in that it totally destroys the value of your orator's plant in the
City of Memphis for profitable use as a telephone exchange."
The paragraph of the bill containing the foregoing concluded as
follows:
"Your orator further states that said ordinance was passed by
the legislative council of said city, not only without making any
investigation whatever, but in ignorance of what was a reasonable
rate (assuming that it had the power to deal with the subject at
all, which is denied), and without the least regard to the vested
rights of your orator, or to equity and justice, and it is, for the
reasons set forth in this paragraph, null and void;"
(c) that the ordinance was moreover void because it was unequal
and discriminatory in consequence of a proviso to the first
section, exempting from its operation telephone companies
Page 218 U. S. 634
whose rates were fixed by contract with the City of Memphis.
By its answer, the city asserted the power to pass the
ordinance, and traversed the averments of the bill as to
confiscation and discrimination. A final decree was awarded,
adjudging the ordinance to be null and void, and permanently
enjoining its enforcement. The court, premising by
"assuming that the City of Memphis, notwithstanding any contract
it may have with the complainant, has the right and power to fix
the rates which the latter may charge its customers in
Memphis,"
came to consider the constitutional limitations to which the
exertion of that power was subjected. Dealing with that subject, it
was pointed out that the power to fix rates could not be so
unreasonably exerted as to amount to confiscation, and, examining
the proof as to the operation and effect of the rates established
by the ordinance, it was found that they were of that character.
The court said:
"The holders of stock in the complainant company are entitled to
a fair return upon their investment if the company can earn it, but
the testimony leaves no doubt that the rates prescribed by the
ordinance would leave practically nothing to the stockholders."
"
* * * *"
"If to large taxation and other enforced expenditures already
properly exacted, the city (now that complainant's plant is fully
installed) can add the burden of rates fixed arbitrarily that would
so diminish earnings (though not expenses) as to leave no dividends
whatever for stockholders, manifestly the money invested by them
would be used for the benefit alone of the people of Memphis, and
not at all for the profit of those who made the investment under
inducements offered by the city."
"
* * * *"
"That result seems to us to be destructive of complainant's
rights under the Constitution of the United States. "
Page 218 U. S. 635
"In Judge Clark's opinion upon the motion for the temporary
injunction, it is clearly indicated that that learned and lamented
judge thought that the city had no power or authority to enact the
ordinance for two reasons,
viz.: 1st, because the state
had never given the city such authority, and, 2d, because the city
had a contract with the complainant which could not be thus
impaired."
"We are not to be considered as dissenting from either of these
views. We have not had time to examine either proposition, nor
inclination to do so, because we are entirely content to decide the
case on final hearing upon the one ground herein discussed."
The city appealed directly to this Court upon the ground that
the case is one where a constitutional right was claimed below, and
hence is susceptible of being directly reviewed here under § 5
of the Judiciary Act of 1891. On the hearing at bar, it was
suggested on behalf of the telephone company that the record did
not disclose that the protection of the Constitution of the United
States was claimed by the telephone company, and therefore the bill
should be dismissed, and the court gives effect to that suggestion
by its decree of dismissal.
Before ascertaining whether the record establishes that there is
a claim of federal right authorizing a direct review, it is
necessary to fix definitely what constitutes the record. The
contention on this subject involves the inquiry whether the opinion
of the court below is part of the record, and if it is a part of
the record, and it be conceded that a question of federal right was
decided below, does that fact establish the existence of a claim of
constitutional right, justifying the direct review within the
meaning of the Act of 1891? To my mind, an affirmative answer to
both these propositions is required if previous decisions of this
Court be now applied.
In
Loeb v. Columbia Township Trustees, 179 U.
S. 472, the case was this: Loeb, a citizen of Indiana,
sued the
Page 218 U. S. 636
trustees of Columbia Township in Hamilton County, Ohio, in a
circuit court of the United States, to recover the amount of
certain bonds issued by the township. The defendant filed a general
demurrer. This demurrer was sustained, and, the plaintiff electing
not to plead further, judgment was rendered for the defendant. The
court, in the opinion by it delivered, declared that it had
sustained the demurrer because it had concluded, as claimed by the
defendant on the argument of the demurrer, that the law under which
the bonds were issued was repugnant to the Constitution of the
United States. A writ of error having been prosecuted directly from
this Court, the right to prosecute the same was challenged, and
came to be disposed of when the case was considered. The Court said
(p.
179 U. S.
477):
"The petition shows that the parties are citizens of different
states. It states no other ground of federal jurisdiction. If
nothing more appeared bearing upon the question of jurisdiction,
then it would be held that this Court was without authority to
review the judgment of the circuit court."
The Court then proceeded to consider whether it was
"sufficiently informed by the record that the defendant
township, under its general demurrer, 'claimed' in the circuit
court that the statute of Ohio, by the authority of which the bonds
were issued, was in contravention of the Constitution of the United
States."
It was held (p.
179 U. S. 481)
that, although the demurrer was general, and did not make reference
to any claim of the protection of the Constitution of the United
States, "it was certainly competent for the township to claim at
the hearing of the demurrer" that the state enactment under which
the bonds were issued "upon its face was repugnant to the
Constitution of the United States, and therefore void." The Court,
after pointing out that there was nothing in the record outside of
the opinion of the Court, showing that a claim of federal right had
been made and decided, was brought to consider whether it had a
right to look
Page 218 U. S. 637
at and was controlled by the result of the opinion showing that
the federal right had been claimed. The previous decisions of this
Court, relating to that subject, were then fully and carefully
reviewed. The difficulty which had existed in ascertaining whether
a federal question had been specially set up or claimed on writs of
error to state courts during the prevalence of the conception that
the opinion of the state court formed no part of the record, and
could not be looked at, was adverted to, the rule adopted by this
Court to correct that situation, and by which it had become
established that the opinion of the state court could be referred
to in order to ascertain whether a federal right had been specially
set up and claimed was stated, and it was observed (p.
179 U. S.
483):
"The rule of our court referred to does not apply alone to cases
brought here from the highest court of a state. It applies, in
terms, to all cases brought to this Court by writ of error or
appeal. What therefore was said in the above cases as to the object
and effect of the rule, applies to records from a circuit court of
the United States."
Applying the rule settled in the
Loeb case, and hence
treating the opinion in this case as a part of the record, it is
not subject to question that it affirmatively shows that the decree
rendered in favor of the telephone company, adjudging the ordinance
to be null and void, was placed upon the express conclusion that
the ordinance was repugnant to the Constitution of the United
States. Is this, then, sufficient to establish for the purposes of
the jurisdiction of this Court that a federal question was claimed?
This is to be determined, as held in the
Loeb case, by the
principles applied by this Court in testing its jurisdiction to
review the judgments or decrees of a state court under § 709
of the Revised Statutes. That is to say, the fact that the court
below expressly decided a federal question must be given the same
weight as would be given the express determination by a state court
in its opinion of a
Page 218 U. S. 638
federal question for the purpose of ascertaining whether a
federal right was specially set up and claimed in the state court.
The rule upon this latter subject was thus stated in
Missouri,
Kansas &c. Ry. Co. v. Elliott, 184
U. S. 531,
184 U. S. 533,
as follows:
"The general rule undoubtedly is that those federal questions
which are required to be specially set up and claimed must be so
distinctly asserted below as to place it beyond question that the
party bringing the case here from the state court intended to and
did assert such a federal right in the state court. But it is
equally true that, even although the allegations of federal right
made in the state court were so general and ambiguous in their
character that they would not, in and of themselves, necessitate
the conclusion that a right of a federal nature was brought to the
attention of the state court, yet if the state court, in deciding
the case, has actually considered and determined a federal
question, although arising on ambiguous averments, then, a federal
controversy having been actually decided, the right of this Court
to review obtains.
Oxley Stave Co. v. Butler, 166 U. S.
648,
166 U. S. 660. All that is
essential is that the federal questions must be presented in the
state court in such a manner as to bring them to the attention of
that tribunal.
Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. Chicago,
166 U. S.
226. And of course, where it is shown by the record that
the state court considered and decided the federal question, the
purpose of the statute is subserved. And so controlling as to the
existence of the federal question is the fact that it was actually
considered and decided by the state court, that it has been held,
although the general rule is that the raising of a federal question
in a petition for rehearing in the highest court of the state is
too late, yet, when a question is thus raised, and it is actually
considered and decided by the state court, the right to review
exists.
Mallett v. North Carolina, 181 U. S.
589,
181 U. S. 592. "
Page 218 U. S. 639
And the
Elliott case has been repeatedly approvingly
referred to, and the doctrine which it announced expressly
reiterated.
Burt v. Smith, 203 U.
S. 129,
203 U. S. 134;
Smithsonian Institution v. St. John, 214 U. S.
19,
214 U. S. 28,
and cases cited.
Consistently with these rulings, I am unable to conclude that
the case made upon the record does not affirmatively establish a
claim of constitutional right authorizing the direct review of the
action of the court below in deciding a question of that
character.
Even at the risk of repetition, let me briefly consider the
grounds by which it insisted that this case is not controlled by
the authorities above referred to. They may be thus resumed: first,
because the bill, it is insisted, did not complain of any action by
the State of Tennessee against the rights of complainant, but
simply alleged that the City of Memphis had, without authority,
attempted to destroy the complainant's rights, thus, it is urged,
excluding power in the court to decide that a violation of the
Constitution of the United States had been brought about. Second,
because even if the complaint did not in express terms exclude all
claim of federal right, nevertheless there was no right in the
court to decide a constitutional question, since, taking the
complaint as a whole, it clearly appears that its purpose was to
assert only rights under the laws of the State of Tennessee, and to
exclusively invoke protection of the state constitution. Aside from
the abnormal limitation on the judicial function which must arise
from holding that, without the consent of a litigant, a judge, in a
case over which he has jurisdiction, may not apply and enforce the
Constitution if he deems the facts justify or require him to do so,
the propositions, it seems to me, misconceive the averments of the
bill. I say this, since they disregard the fact that, in substance,
while denying the want of power to pass the ordinance, the bill
moreover proceeded upon the alternative that, if there was power,
the ordinance was void because of the confiscatory character
Page 218 U. S. 640
of the rates fixed. In any event, in view of the fact that the
court below expressly considered and decided the constitutional
question, the case is brought directly within the statement in the
Elliott case, which I again quote, that
"it is equally true that even although the allegations of
federal right made in the state court were so general and ambiguous
in their character that they would not, in and of themselves,
necessitate the conclusion that a right of a federal nature was
brought to the attention of the state court, yet, if the state
court, in deciding the case, has actually considered and determined
a federal question, although arising on ambiguous averments, then,
a federal controversy having been actually decided, the right of
this Court to review obtains."
Passing, however, further consideration of the correctness of
these propositions as applied to the case made by the record, and
conceding them only for sake of argument to be sound, they are
irrelevant to the question of dismissal, since they address
themselves to the merits of the cause. In other words, if the
propositions be accepted as sound, they only demonstrate that error
was committed by the court below in undertaking to decide a
question of constitutional right. But error in this particular, if
found to exist, requires a correction of the wrong done, that is, a
reversal, and not in substance the upholding of the wrong committed
by refusing to review. If it be true, as announced in the previous
decisions of this Court, that the requirement of the statute as to
the existence of a claim of federal right for the purpose of review
is subserved where the court below has expressly decided the
question of federal right, it must also be true that, in such a
case, the duty exists to review and correct the error committed by
the court below, whether such error arose from a mistake committed
by the court in undertaking to decide a federal question, or from a
mistake committed in deciding the question which was expressly
passed upon. In other words, where the court
Page 218 U. S. 641
below has expressly decided a question of federal right, and
made it the basis of its decree, such decision, for the purpose of
review of the merits, in the very nature of things, engenders a
conclusive presumption as to the making below of a claim of federal
right. The necessity of this rule cannot be more clearly
demonstrated than by the case on this record, as it persuasively
appears that the telephone company, since the decree below, has
continuously claimed and enjoyed the right to be relieved from the
charges fixed in the ordinance of the City of Memphis -- a right
possessed as the result of accepting the benefits of the decree and
the relief awarded by the injunction therein issued. That is to
say, it being certain that the telephone company has, up to this
very moment, claimed the rights awarded to it by the decree, it, in
my opinion, ought not now to be allowed to successfully assert that
it made no claim to the constitutional right upon the existence of
which alone the decree went in its favor. To claim the benefits of
the decree amounts necessarily to claiming the existence of the
constitutional right upon which alone the decree was based.
The misconception which underlies the theory upon which the
judgment of dismissal now rendered is said to be sustained seems to
me to be destructive of the power to directly review a decision
passing on a claim of constitutional right for which the statute
expressly provides. I say this because, in my opinion, the
propositions relied on in reason come to this: that the authority
which is conferred upon this Court to directly review the actions
of trial courts in deciding constitutional questions will not be
exerted wherever it is found that a trial court has erroneously
undertaken to decide such a question. That is to say that the right
to directly review only authorizes the correction of the lesser
wrong resulting from having decided a federal question mistakenly,
and does not embrace the greater, of having expressly decided a
constitutional
Page 218 U. S. 642
question when there was no power to do so. The duty to review by
direct appeal, provided by the act of 1891, to be made efficacious,
in the very nature of things must embrace not only the case where
the court has erroneously decided a constitutional question, but
also must extend to the case where a court has undertaken to
expressly decide a constitutional question which it had no right to
pass upon.
Considered from another point of view, the confusion which is
involved in the propositions upon which the decree of dismissal
must rest, if I correctly understand them, is equally demonstrable.
As I have said, the denial of authority to review by direct appeal
the action of the trial court in expressly deciding a
constitutional question, and awarding rights to the complainants
solely upon the theory that they were guaranteed by the
Constitution of the United States, can only rest upon the
assumption that, although the court had general jurisdiction of the
cause, it had not power, under the circumstances, to decide the
constitutional questions which it did decide. But, if this premise
be true, then there is presented by the direct appeal a question
which, in its essence, is embraced within the power which the
statute confers to review by direct appeal decisions involving the
jurisdiction of trial courts. The distribution of appellate
jurisdiction which the act of 1891 effected was stated, and the
apparent conflict between some of the adjudged cases on that
subject was cleared up, in
MacFadden v. United States,
213 U. S. 288. It
was indubitably established that, where the jurisdiction of a trial
court was invoked on the ground of diversity of citizenship, and
during the trial a question of constitutional or federal right
arose or emerged and was decided, the parties were put to the
election of determining whether they would prosecute error from or
appeal to the proper circuit court of appeals or pursue the same
course directly to or from this Court. If the former course was
Page 218 U. S. 643
adopted, it was declared the right to come directly to this
Court was waived and the judgment or decree of the circuit court of
appeals on the constitutional question would be final. As the
result of the ruling now made, it must follow that the right of
election under the circumstances here disclosed would be difficult,
if not impossible, of exercise, since, if the election were made to
bring the case directly to this Court, the right to review might be
lost upon the theory that the lower court wrongfully undertook to
decide the constitutional question which it expressly passed upon.
If, on the other hand, the party elected to seek a review in the
circuit court of appeals, and the conclusion of that court was that
the trial court not only had power to decide the federal question
which it had passed upon, but had rightfully decided it, the right
to review in this Court would be lost.
Let me come, then, to the question of authority -- that is, the
cases relied upon to sustain the decree of dismissal. As it is
given me to understand them, none of them sustain the proposition
in support of which they are cited. In view of the statement which
I have previously made as to the ruling in the
Loeb case
and the matter in that case decided, it is unnecessary to
extendedly notice a reference to a general expression found in the
opinion in that case as to the duty of bringing into a record, by
way of a formal bill of exceptions, agreed facts, etc., since the
expressions relied upon cannot be given the effect now attributed
to them without virtually holding that the
Loeb case
overruled itself. This is also true of certain general expressions
found in the opinion in
Lampasas v. Bell, 180 U.
S. 276, decided at the same term as the
Loeb
case, and which directly affirmed the ruling there made. Of course,
nothing I have said in the slightest degree is intended to
controvert the elementary doctrine that, where the existence of a
federal question is essential to confer jurisdiction upon a trial
court over a cause,
Page 218 U. S. 644
the jurisdictional facts must be clearly and unambiguously
alleged, and not be left to surmise or conjecture. And this is all,
I submit, that can rightfully be said to have been decided in
Hamilton Gaslight Company v. Hamilton, 146 U.
S. 258;
Barney v. New York, 193 U.
S. 430;
Louisville v. Cumberland Telephone &
Telegraph Co., 155 F. 725. But that doctrine has no
application here, since the jurisdiction of the court below
existed, as diversity of citizenship was alleged. This being true,
it is apparent that the cases cited can only be made here
applicable by failing to distinguish between the test for
determining whether sufficient foundation has been laid to justify
the bringing of the powers of a trial court into play, and the duty
of an appellate tribunal to review the action of the trial court,
had in a case within its jurisdiction and authority. After patient
research, I am of the opinion that it is accurate to say that no
case can be found in the books holding that, where a trial court
has expressly considered and passed upon a question of
constitutional rights, and awarded affirmative relief to a party
before it, upon the theory that such right was involved in the
cause which was within its jurisdiction, that the right to review
by this Court has been denied because there was no claim of right
under the Constitution, since the court, in passing upon the case
before it, erroneously based its conclusion upon the mistaken
conception that stated propositions of constitutional law were
claimed to be applicable.
I am authorized to say that MR. JUSTICE McKENNA and MR. JUSTICE
HUGHES join in this dissent.