The due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment does not
control methods of state procedure or give jurisdiction to this
Court to review mere errors of law alleged to have been committed
by a state court in the performance of its duties and within the
scope of its authority concerning matters nonfederal in
character.
It is the lack of jurisdiction in the sense of fundamental
absence of any and all right to take cognizance of the cause that
amounts to deprivation of property without due process of law and
gives this Court power to review the judgment of the state court
under § 237, Judicial Code, not the wrongful exercise of
jurisdiction in the sense of duty to
Page 233 U. S. 666
rightfully decide subjects to which judicial power extends.
Castillo v. McConnico, 168 U. S. 674.
Where a defendant in the state court did not object to the
jurisdiction of the court to entertain an action to enjoin him from
enforcing his right of ownership, but went further and sought
affirmative relief in that action, he cannot be heard in this Court
to deny that the court had any power to exert the very jurisdiction
which he invoked.
Writ of error to review 58 Or. 228 dismissed.
The facts, which involve the jurisdiction of this Court under
§ 237, Judicial Code, to review a judgment of the state court
involving a railroad right of way, are stated in the opinion.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The defendant in error, hereafter referred to as the railroad
company, was plaintiff below, and sued the plaintiffs in error, who
were defendants, to enjoin them from interfering with its right of
possession of a strip of land constituting a railroad right of way.
It was alleged that this strip, which traversed property belonging
to the defendants, had been bought from them by the railroad
company for a cash price of $600, which was paid, but nevertheless
the defendants, asserting some title to the land, were threatening
to disturb the railroad in its possession, to tear up a track where
laid, and otherwise to prevent the use of the land for the purpose
for which it had been bought. The defendants answered, and
although
Page 233 U. S. 667
admitting that they had sold the land to the railway for a right
of way, and had received the stipulated price, nevertheless
asserted that they were yet the owners of the property for the
following reasons: (a) because, in the deed by which the property
was conveyed, there was an express condition
"that the Oregon Railroad & Navigation Company will
construct the line of road over the above-described premises within
two years from the date hereof."
(b) Because, while, after the deed the railroad had commenced to
construct its road, and had graded along the right of way, after
doing so, it suspended all work so that the two years provided in
the deed elapsed without the railroad's being built, and therefore
all right to the land had been lost, and the defendants had
reentered and notified the railroad of the fact.
Averring that the land was
"reasonably worth the sum of $1,000, and the plaintiff has not
paid the same nor any part thereof, and has not offered to pay
defendant anything for said land since its failure to comply with
the condition of the deed,"
the answer prayed not merely the rejection of the plaintiffs'
demand and the dissolution of the injunction which had been
allowed, but asked substantive relief -- that is, that the
defendants be decreed to be the owners, and that the complainant be
enjoined from in any way interfering with them, and for the
awarding of "such other and further relief as shall seem to the
court equitable in the premises." After trial, at which
considerable testimony was taken, among other things, as to the
value of the property, the court, holding in favor of the
defendants, decided that the railroad, by virtue of its failure to
build within the period specified, and the reentry of the
defendants, had lost all right to the land, and therefore that the
subsequent action of the railroad in entering upon the land to
complete its railroad was a trespass. The injunction which was
issued at the inception of the cause was dissolved. On appeal, the
court below expressly
Page 233 U. S. 668
adopted the legal principles which the trial court had applied
-- that is, the court likewise declared the cause in the deed to be
a condition, and decided that the failure of the railroad to comply
with its terms had forfeited all its right and title in and to the
land. But nevertheless the decree was not affirmed. After
expounding its reasons for fully agreeing with the legal
conclusions of the trial court, it was said:
"So far, then, we have found that defendants were entitled to a
forfeiture and that the land has reverted, but we now recur to the
remedy. The situation is anomalous. Plaintiff has constructed its
road and has it in operation, thereby preforming an important
public function for a large and increasing population. . . . It is
to the interest of the public that it should continue to do so, and
that the defendants should not be allowed to acquire a portion of
its roadbed to the detriment of public travel. The condemnation of
land for railway purposes is usually the function of a court of
law, but there are in this case such special circumstances as to
authorize this court to end the whole litigation at once and
forever. The pleadings show that this land is needed for the
purpose of a railway, and the evidence shows that the railway is
actually there on the ground. Defendants come into court, submit
themselves to the jurisdiction of equity, and ask affirmative
relief. Much of the testimony was devoted to showing the value of
the land taken, the effect of the taking on the remainder of the
tract, and all those things which are usually shown in an action to
condemn for a railroad right of way. Having jurisdiction of this
case, we have concluded to assume it for all purposes, and to so
modify the decree that plaintiff shall take title to the land
described in this strip upon the paying to defendants the damage
occasioned by such taking, which we assess at $700, and the costs
and disbursements of this suit."
Upon the entry of a decree conformably to these views, the
defendants asked that the decree be
Page 233 U. S. 669
modified so as to confine it to a recognition of their title and
to exclude all its provisions conferring upon the railroad company
the right to take the property on paying the adjudged sum. This
application was supported by an elaborate argument challenging the
right of the court under the state law to exert the power which it
had exerted. In none, however, of the elaborate arguments pressed
to sustain the motion to modify was there any reference whatever to
any supposed denial by the state court of rights guaranteed by the
Constitution of the United States, and for that reason, and because
it is insisted that, on the face of the record, it is manifest no
federal question is presented, a motion to dismiss has been made
which we come to consider.
All the contentions as to federal rights rest upon the
assumption that the court below denied due process of law when it
entered the decree complained of, and this is based upon the
conception that the court exceeded its jurisdiction and
misconceived or wrongfully interpreted the evidence, and thereby,
in effect, while recognizing the title of the plaintiffs in error,
virtually deprived them of the right conferred by the state law of
having a common law trial for the purpose of determining the
questions which would require to be decided in case of the exercise
by the railroad company of the right of eminent domain, including,
of course, the fixing of compensation to be paid for the taking and
the damages incident thereto. Leaving aside for the moment the
question of the jurisdiction of the court in the fundamental sense
-- that is,
ratione materiae, it is manifest that the want
of foundation for all the propositions insisted upon is quite
clear, since, after all, taking the aspect most favorable for the
plaintiffs in error, the propositions but assert that the court
below, in deciding the case, committed error as to matters
involving no federal question because purely of state cognizance.
It is elementary and needs no citation of authority to show
that
Page 233 U. S. 670
the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment does not
control methods of state procedure or give jurisdiction to this
Court to review mere errors of law alleged to have been committed
by a state court in the performance of its duties within the scope
of its authority concerning matters nonfederal in character. So far
as the contentions addressed themselves to the subject matter of
jurisdiction, it is clear that they do not deny jurisdiction in the
sense of the fundamental absence of any and all right to take
cognizance of the cause, but are confined to jurisdiction in the
sense of the duty to rightfully decide subjects to which judicial
power extends. In this aspect, the error of all the contentions is
within the principle announced in
Castillo v. McConnico,
168 U. S. 674.
But, aside from the reasons just stated, the absolute want of
merit in the federal right asserted becomes doubly apparent when it
is observed that the plaintiffs in error, who were defendants in
the trial court, did not simply stand upon their rights as
defendants, but went further and sought affirmative relief at its
hands, and could only be now heard to deny all power by being
permitted to deny the right to exert the very jurisdiction which
they invoked.
Dismissed for want of jurisdiction.