No federal right is denied by an appellate court of a state in
dismissing an appeal from a lower court because its jurisdiction
was not invoked in accordance with the laws of the state, and this
Court cannot review such a judgment under § 709, Rev.Stat.,
now Judicial Code, § 237.
It rests with each state to prescribe the jurisdiction of its
appellate courts, and the mode of invoking it, and their rules are
equally applicable when federal, as when only local, rights are
involved.
Section 12 of the Act of March 3, 1905, 33 Stat. 1048, 1081,
providing for the review of judgments of the courts temporarily
established in the Indian Territory, related only to such
judgments, and has no application to judgments rendered by the
state courts after statehood.
The method of subjecting the judgments of a subordinate state
court to review by appellate courts of the state is a matter of
local concern, and not within the control of Congress.
Coyle v.
Smith, 221 U. S. 559.
Page 231 U. S. 584
In this case, as nothing was decided but a preliminary question
of the jurisdiction of a state appellate court which turned
entirely upon a question of local law, the writ of error is
dismissed.
Writ of error to review 24 Okl. 636 dismissed.
The facts, which involve the jurisdiction of this Court under
§ 237 of the judicial Code to review a judgment of the
appellate court of a state dismissing an appeal from an inferior
court, are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
Our jurisdiction in this case is challenged by a motion to
dismiss. The case was begun in the United States Court for the
Central district of the Indian Territory, and was pending in that
court when the Territory of Oklahoma and the Indian Territory were
admitted into the Union as the State of Oklahoma. Under the
combined operation of the Oklahoma Enabling Act (June 16, 1906, 34
Stat. 267, c. 3335;
id., 1286, c. 2911) and the state
constitution (
See Benner v.
Porter, 9 How. 235,
50 U. S. 246),
the case was then transferred to the District Court of Bryan
County, where a trial resulted in a judgment determining the
matters in controversy, which turned in part upon the validity,
under the laws of the United States, of certain deeds and leases
executed by an Indian allottee, since deceased. The guardian of two
minor heirs of the allottee had intervened in the cause, had
asserted the invalidity of all the deeds and leases, and
Page 231 U. S. 585
had set up a claim to the property in question as against the
other parties; but this claim was rejected, and the guardian sought
to have the judgment reviewed and reversed by the supreme court of
the state. That court held that some of the parties below whose
presence in the appellate proceeding was essential had not been
brought into that proceeding or voluntarily appeared therein in
accordance with the law of the state, and upon that ground
dismissed the proceeding, 24 Okl. 636. The guardian then sued out
the present writ of error.
As the supreme court of the state did not pass upon the merits
of the case or upon the correctness of any of the rulings below,
but, on the contrary, held that it was powerless to do so because
its appellate jurisdiction was not invoked in accordance with the
laws of the state, we do not perceive any theory upon which its
judgment of dismissal may be reviewed by us consistently with the
familiar limitations upon our authority.
See Rev.Stat.
§ 709; Judicial Code, § 237. Certainly no federal right
was denied by that court, and if, as was held by it, its appellate
jurisdiction was not properly invoked, no federal question was
before it for decision.
Without any doubt, it rests with each state to prescribe the
jurisdiction of its appellate courts, the mode and time of invoking
that jurisdiction, and the rules of practice to be applied in its
exercise, and the state law and practice in this regard are no less
applicable when federal rights are in controversy than when the
case turns entirely upon questions of local or general law.
Callan v. Bransford, 139 U. S. 197;
Brown v. Massachusetts, 144 U. S. 573;
Jacobi v. Alabama, 187 U. S. 133;
Hulbert v. Chicago, 202 U. S. 275,
202 U. S. 281;
Newman v. Gates, 204 U. S. 89;
Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co. v. McDonald,
214 U. S. 191,
214 U. S.
195.
But it is said that the proceedings by which it was attempted to
secure a review of the judgment of the trial court should have been
tested by the Act of Congress of
Page 231 U. S. 586
March 3, 1905, 33 Stat. 1081, c. 1479, § 12, and that the
supreme court of the state erred in holding otherwise. We cannot
accede to the contention. The Act of 1905, § 12, related to
the review of judgments rendered in the courts temporarily
established by Congress in the Indian Territory, and had no
application to judgments rendered after statehood in the courts of
the state. Besides, the mode of subjecting the judgments of the
state's subordinate courts to review in its supreme court was a
matter of local concern only, and not within the control of
Congress.
See Coyle v. Smith, 221 U.
S. 559.
The state constitution provided (Art. 7, § 8) that the
appellate jurisdiction of the supreme court should be invoked in
the manner prescribed by the laws of the Territory of Oklahoma,
until the state legislature should provide otherwise, and also
(Art. 25, § 2) that the laws of the Territory of Oklahoma not
repugnant to the state constitution or locally inapplicable should
be extended over the new state, which embraced the Indian Territory
as well as the Territory of Oklahoma. When the state was admitted
into the Union, the Territory of Oklahoma had a full complement of
laws regulating appellate proceedings. Wilson's Rev. &
Anno.Stat. 1903, §§ 4732
et seq. It was by these
constitutional provisions and laws that the supreme court tested
the appellate proceedings in this instance, with the result that
they were adjudged inadequate because they had not brought before
the court within the time prescribed (Wilson's Stat. §§
4736, 4748), parties whose presence was essential to enable it to
review the judgment below.
Thus, it appears that nothing was decided but the preliminary
question of the court's jurisdiction to pass upon the controverted
matters shown in the record, and that this question was resolved
according to what the court deemed to be the true construction and
effect of applicable provisions of the constitution and laws of the
state. In
Page 231 U. S. 587
short, the judgment of dismissal turned entirely upon a question
of local law.
As particularly apposite, we quote the following from the
opinion in
Newman v. Gates, 204 U. S.
89, a case in which this Court declined to review a like
judgment of dismissal by a state court:
"Had the appeal been properly taken, it would have been the duty
of the Supreme Court of Indiana to pass upon the questions
presented by the record before it, including, it may be, a federal
question, based upon the due faith and credit clause of the
Constitution, which, on various occasions, was pressed upon the
attention of the trial court. In legal effect, however, the case
stands as though no appeal had been prosecuted from the judgment
rendered by the trial court. As the jurisdiction of this Court to
review the judgments or decrees of state courts when a federal
question is presented is limited to the review of a final judgment
or decree, actually or constructively deciding such question, when
rendered by the highest court of a state in which a decision in the
suit could be had, and as for the want of a proper appeal, no final
judgment or decree in such court has been rendered, it results that
the statutory prerequisite for the exercise in this case of the
reviewing power of this Court is wanting."
Writ of error dismissed.