The contention that an issue between private parties involving
the location of the state boundary was submitted to the jury upon a
theory inconsistent with the true principle of decision as laid
down by this Court, and that thereby a party was deprived of a
right, privilege or immunity claimed under the Constitution and
treaties of the United States, will not afford ground for a writ of
error to review the judgment of a state court under Jud.Code,
§ 237, as amended. P.
250 U. S. 73.
The claim that the decision of an original suit between two
states pending in this Court for the determination of their common
boundary will be determinative of private rights to timber,
involved in a case between private parties pending in the supreme
court of one of such states, and that a party to the latter case
will be entitled to set up such decision when rendered and is
entitled to a continuance meanwhile,
held, at most, an
assertion of a title, right, privilege, or immunity under the
federal Constitution, and the refusal of such continuance by the
state court
held to involve no question as to the
jurisdiction of this Court to render a conclusive judgment
Page 250 U. S. 72
in the suit between the states locating their boundary, and
hence no question as to the validity of "an authority exercised
under the United States" within the meaning of Jud.Code § 237,
as amended. P.
250 U. S.
74.
An application for certiorari to review a judgment of a state
court cannot be entertained after the three months' period limited
by § 6 of the Act of September 6, 1916, has expired. P.
250 U. S. 76.
Writ of error dismissed. Certiorari denied.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case was brought on for argument immediately following
Arkansas v. Mississippi, No. 7, Original,
ante,
250 U. S. 39.
It was a replevin suit, brought in the circuit court of one of
the counties of Mississippi by defendants in error to recover
certain timber taken by plaintiff in error from their possession
under a claim of ownership. They recovered a verdict and judgment
in the circuit court, and the judgment was affirmed by the supreme
court of the state, without opinion. Ownership of the timber was
deemed to depend upon the ownership of the land from which it had
been cut, and this was in dispute, and according to the theory of
plaintiff in error was dependent upon the location of the state
boundary. The land lay in the Mississippi river bottom, in the
vicinity of Horseshoe Bend, where a portion of the former channel
had been abandoned as the result of a sudden change that occurred
in the year
Page 250 U. S. 73
1848; the river having broken through the neck of the Bend and
formed a new channel there, with the result that, in the course of
time, the former channel around the Bend was abandoned and in large
part filled up, and its location as it was prior to the avulsion
has become, after the lapse of so many years, difficult of
ascertainment. The adjoining states whose common boundary is marked
by the river at this point are in dispute as to its former
location, and also as to whether the boundary ought to follow the
middle of the former main channel of navigation or rather a line
equidistant from the banks of the river at ordinary stage of water.
To determine this controversy, the suit between the states was
brought in this Court, and it is still pending.
It is the contention of plaintiff in error that the judgment in
the present case was based upon the determination of an issue which
necessarily involved the location of the interstate boundary, and
our first inquiry must be whether the judgment of the Supreme Court
of Mississippi herein is reviewable in this Court by writ of error.
The judgment was rendered December 23, 1916, after the taking
effect of the Act of September 6, 1916. c. 448, § 2, 39 Stat.
726, amendatory of § 237, Judicial Code, and hence is
reviewable here, if at all, only by virtue of that act and in
accordance with its provisions.
It is asserted that the issue involving the location of the
boundary line between the states was submitted to the jury under
instructions from the trial judge based upon a theory inconsistent
with the true principle of decision as laid down by this Court in
Iowa v. Illinois, 147 U. S. 1,
Arkansas v. Tennessee, 246 U. S. 158, and
Cissna v. Tennessee, 246 U. S. 289, and
that thereby plaintiff in error was deprived of a right, privilege,
or immunity claimed under the Constitution of the United States and
treaties made thereunder. Even if the record showed that such a
right, privilege, or immunity was properly set up
Page 250 U. S. 74
and claimed in the state court, it, of course, is not
maintained, nor could it be, that, under § 237 Judicial Code
as amended, a federal question of this character would give us
jurisdiction to review the resulting judgment by writ of error.
Were that the only federal question, clearly it would, at most,
furnish ground for a review by certiorari.
But it is insisted that the supreme court of the state, in the
course of its review of the judgment of the circuit court, rendered
an adverse decision upon the question of the validity of an
authority exercised under the United States, and for this reason we
have jurisdiction by writ of error under the amended §
237.
The question arose as follows: plaintiff in error moved the
supreme court to continue the cause until the decision by this
Court of the original action then and still pending between the
States of Arkansas and Mississippi, in which the location of the
disputed boundary at or near the land in question is involved. This
motion at first was sustained, but afterwards the defendants in
error moved to set aside the continuance upon these grounds: (1)
that the decision of this Court in the suit between the states
would not be controlling in the present case because it would not
be rendered upon the same testimony; (2) that the Supreme Court of
Mississippi was an appellate tribunal without original
jurisdiction, empowered only to affirm or reverse a decision of the
circuit court, depending upon whether that court upon the evidence
before it had reached a correct conclusion, and that there was no
way in which the judgment of this Court in the suit between the
states could be introduced before the Supreme Court of Mississippi,
and (3) because the latter court was not in any way subject to the
final jurisdiction of this Court. This motion was sustained, the
continuance was set aside, and the cause was placed upon the docket
and afterwards disposed of in its regular order, with the result,
as is maintained, that final judgment was rendered upon an
Page 250 U. S. 75
erroneous theory respecting the location of the interstate
boundary line.
It is the contention of plaintiff in error that, by the
last-mentioned motion, the validity of the authority of this Court
to determine the issues involved in the suit between the states was
drawn in question, and that the decision of the Supreme Court of
Mississippi was against its validity.
We do not, however, regard the ruling of the state court as
having involved the authority or jurisdiction of this Court to
render a conclusive decision in the suit between the states
respecting the location of the boundary line, and hence do not
consider that there was any question concerning the validity of "an
authority exercised under the United States" within the meaning of
§ 237. The question raised involved merely the consequences
that were to flow from the exercise of an admittedly valid
authority under the United States -- that is to say, the effect
upon the rights of third parties of a particular exercise by this
Court of its constitutional jurisdiction over a controversy between
two states -- the concrete questions being (a) whether, in the
event that our decision should be adverse to the State of
Mississippi, and therefore, according to the theory of plaintiff in
error, inconsistent with the title of its opponents, plaintiff in
error would be entitled to set up that decision and judgment as
conclusive against defendants in error, and (b) whether, in aid of
such right, plaintiff in error was entitled to have the suit
against it in the state court stayed to await our decision in the
suit between the states. In effect, the contention was that the
original jurisdiction conferred by the Constitution upon this Court
in controversies between states was of such a nature as to render
our decree made in a suit of that kind binding upon private parties
asserting opposing claims to lands in the disputed territory, and
to prevent such private parties from prosecuting their
litigation
Page 250 U. S. 76
in a state court pending our determination of the suit between
states. In setting up this contention, plaintiff in error did no
more than assert a title, right, privilege, or immunity under the
Constitution of the United States. This, at most, afforded ground
for an application to this Court for a review of the resulting
judgment by certiorari, but not for a writ of error. The case of
Cissna v. Tennessee, 242 U. S. 195;
246 U. S. 246 U.S.
289, in which a similar question was raised but not passed upon was
brought to this Court by writ of error, but before § 237,
Judicial Code was amended by the Act of 1916. The present writ of
error must be dismissed.
On the eve of the argument a writ of certiorari was applied for;
but, as this was long after the expiration of the three months
limited by § 6 of the Act of September 6, 1916, the
application cannot be entertained, irrespective of whether the
record shows a proper case for the allowance of that writ.
Writ of error dismissed.
Application for writ of certiorari denied.