This Court has no jurisdiction under § 237, Judicial Code,
to review the judgment of a state court sustaining a demurrer to
the complaint on the ground of statutory limitations unless the
federal questions asserted as a basis for such jurisdiction were
presented or suggested to the court below.
Appleby v.
Buffalo, 221 U. S. 524.
Page 236 U. S. 212
Even if the judgment of dismissal of the complaint was the
result of sustaining a demurrer thereto, an express statement in
the demurrer that it was based on the statute of limitation affords
an opportunity for the plaintiff to assert that federal right would
be impaired by applying the statute.
Writ of error to review 24 Idaho 481 dismissed.
The facts, which involve the jurisdiction of this Court on writ
of error under § 237, Judicial Code, to review judgment of the
state court sustaining demurrer to and denying complaint, are
stated in the opinion.
Page 236 U. S. 214
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Concerned now only with a motion to dismiss, we limit our
statement to that which is essential to decide such issue. In 1912,
the Olympia Mining & Milling Company, Limited, the plaintiff in
error, brought this suit to enforce a trust agreement between
Kerns, the defendant in error, and one Cunningham by which it was
alleged Kerns had obliged himself in 1901 to transfer to Cunningham
certain property then owned or to be acquired by him, for a
designated consideration, Cunningham to put the title to the
property when transferred in the name of a corporation to be by him
organized, of which Kerns was to have a stated proportion of the
stock. The bill was generally demurred to and state statutes
creating terms of limitation of three, four, and five years were
expressly set out in the demurrer as barring all right to the
relief sought. In reviewing the action of the trial court in
sustaining the demurrer, the court below held that the statutes of
limitations were decisive. 24 Idaho 481. From the averments of the
bill and facts disclosed in its previous records concerning the
controversy, the time when the term of the statutes commenced to
run was determined by the court to be August, 1904, because on that
date Kerns made a sale of a portion of the property embraced by the
trust agreement and at the same time had bound himself to sell it
all -- obligations which were held to be a repudiation by him of
the trust agreement, and in fact constituted a disclaimer of all
obligation under it. It was held that, by a suit brought in 1905,
by which Cunningham was bound, it was judicially admitted that, at
that time, there was a
Page 236 U. S. 215
default in carrying out the trust agreement on the part of
Cunningham or those holding with or under him, and a knowledge on
their part of the disclaimer of all obligation by Kerns --
conclusions which caused the statutes to be operative, since, from
the date of the starting point, 1904, to the date of the bringing
of the present suit, in 1912, more than the statutory periods had
elapsed.
Briefly stated, two propositions are relied upon: first, that
causing the term of the statutes to commence to run from the year
1904 was a violation of the due process clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment because, at that date, the corporation was not in
existence, and hence was without capacity to take and hold the
property embraced by the trust agreement. Second, as the state
statutes of limitations, generally speaking, did not run against
minors or incapacitated persons, to cause the term to commence to
run against the corporation before it came into existence and had
capacity to take the property was a denial of the equal protection
of the laws under the Fourteenth Amendment. But, without in the
remotest degree admitting that these propositions afford the
slightest ground for converting such a purely state question as the
operation of statutes of limitations upon real property situated in
a state into federal questions giving rise to jurisdiction of this
Court to review, there is obviously, in any event, no jurisdiction,
because in no manner and at no time were the alleged federal
questions, be they real or imaginary, presented or even remotely
suggested to the court below.
Appleby v. Buffalo,
221 U. S. 524,
221 U. S. 529.
In the argument, this is admitted, but it is said the propositions
ought now to be treated as adequate to confer jurisdiction because
there was no opportunity to urge or suggest them in the courts
below. Again without conceding the merit of the suggestion if
founded in fact, it is here plainly not so founded, since the
statutes of limitations which were upheld by the court below were
in express terms stated in the
Page 236 U. S. 216
demurrer filed in the trial court, and yet the record is silent
as to any suggestion of assumed federal right until after the
decision below, when the assignments of error were made for the
purpose of a review by this Court.
Dismissed for want of jurisdiction.