This Court does not sit to revise the construction of documents
by the state courts, even if alleged to be contracts within the
protection of the federal Constitution.
Fisher v. New
Orleans, 218 U. S. 438. It
takes more than a misconstruction by the state court to make a case
under the Fourteenth Amendment.
The state court, and not this Court, is the judge of its own
jurisdiction. This Court will not hold that the state court had no
jurisdiction to determine rights under an ordinance because it had
been superseded by a later ordinance when the latter does not
appear in the record
Page 231 U. S. 569
and the highest court of the state has held in another case that
it doe not affect the case at issue.
Writ of error to renew 62 Wash. 544 dismissed.
The facts, which involve the jurisdiction of this Court to
review judgments of the state courts, are stated in the
opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This writ of error seeks to reverse a judgment in mandamus
requiring the plaintiff in error, a street railway, to issue and
accept transfers to and from the Seattle Electric Company, another
street railway, redeemable by payment of two and one-half cents for
the ordinary five-cent fares, and of one cent and a quarter and for
school children's tickets costing two and one-half cents. 62 Wash.
544. The Seattle Electric Company was made a defendant, but did not
appeal from the judgment of the court of first instance, affirmed
by the supreme court. The plaintiff in error contends that its
property is taken without due process of law by the construction
given to the ordinance under which it was operating its line when
the suit was brought. That ordinance requires a division
"on the basis of settlement that the transfer is to be redeemed
at or for such a proportionate part of the fare paid as the run or
local route of the car on which transfer is received bears to the
sum of the runs of the local route of the cars from which the
transfer is issued and on which the transfer is received."
The supreme court construed the words "or local route" as
meaning
"the entire distance the passenger may travel upon that system
of railway as if he had paid the ordinary
Page 231 U. S. 570
fare, whether he changes cars upon that system or not."
62 Wash. 549. Noting that the Electric Company had not appealed,
it decided for an equal division of the fares. At every point of
intersection between the two roads, the line of the Electric
Company is longer than that of the plaintiff in error. In some
cases, a single car is routed over the entire length, in others the
routes are divided, but a passenger is entitled to a transfer that
will take him the whole length in the same general direction.
Whether there shall be a continuous single route or a divided one
is determined by each company for itself.
The possibility of a different construction and the grounds for
the one adopted both are obvious, but this Court does not sit to
revise the construction of documents by state courts, even if
alleged, as this ordinance is not alleged, to be contracts
protected by the Constitution of the United States.
Fisher v.
New Orleans, 218 U. S. 438.
There is no impairment of rights by later legislation, and it takes
more than a possible misconstruction by a court to make a case
under the Fourteenth Amendment.
Cross Lake Shooting &
Fishing Club v. Louisiana, 224 U. S. 632,
224 U. S. 638;
Ross v. Oregon, 227 U. S. 150,
227 U. S. 162;
McGovern v. New York, 229 U. S. 363,
229 U. S.
370-371.
The plaintiff in error put forward suggestions of want of
jurisdiction of the supreme court, etc., on the ground that, since
this suit was begun, the ordinance referred to has been superseded
by another. The supreme court, not we, is the judge of its own
jurisdiction, but the later ordinance does not appear in the
record. It was held not to affect the case when brought up at an
earlier stage. 62 Wash. 124. In short, while the railway seems to
have brought the case here under a strong conviction as to what
were its rights, and although it refers to the Constitution in its
answer, it discloses no grievance for which it is entitled to any
remedy in this Court.
Writ of error dismissed.