Where a case had been brought up to this Court from the Supreme
Court of the Territory of Wisconsin, and was pending in this Court
at the time when Wisconsin was admitted as a state, the
jurisdiction of this Court over it ceased when such admission took
place.
Provision was made in the act of Congress for the transfer, from
the territorial courts to the district court of the United States,
of all cases appropriate to the jurisdiction of the new district
court, but none for cases appropriate to the jurisdiction of state
tribunals.
By the admission of Wisconsin as a state, the territorial
government ceased to exist, and all the authority under it,
including the laws organizing its courts of justice and providing
for a revision of their judgments in this Court.
The act of Congress passed in February, 1848, supplementary to
that of February, 1847, applies only to cases which were pending in
the territorial courts, and does not include such as were pending
in this Court at the time of the admission of Wisconsin as a
state.
Even if Congress had directed the transfer, to the district
court of the United States, of cases appropriate to the
jurisdiction of state courts, this Court could not have carried its
judgment into effect by a mandate to the district court.
The facts in this case are stated in the opinion of the
court.
Page 51 U. S. 77
MR. JUSTICE NELSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a writ of error to the Supreme Court of the late
Territory of Wisconsin. The suit was commenced by a writ of
attachment in the First Judicial District of that territory on 3
November, 1845, founded upon a judgment for $2,747.49 previously
obtained against the defendants in a circuit court in the State of
Illinois. A large amount of property was attached belonging to one
of the defendants.
All the defendants appeared by attorney, and put in two special
pleas to the declaration, upon which issues were joined, and such
proceedings were afterwards had thereon, that at the October term,
1841, judgment was rendered in the said suit for the defendants.
The cause was then removed to the supreme court of the territory on
error, and at the July term of that court, to-wit, on 31 July,
1847, the judgment below was in all things affirmed. This judgment
has been appealed from to this Court, and is now before us for
review. The citation is signed 20 November, 1847.
The case has been submitted by counsel on written arguments
under the fortieth and fifty-sixth rules of the Court.
The first question presented is whether or not this Court has
jurisdiction to review the judgment below.
The Territory of Wisconsin was admitted into the Union as a
state on 29 May, 1848. 9 Stat. 233
An act had been previously passed, on 2 March, 1847, assenting
to the admission on certain terms and conditions to be first
complied with and providing that upon a compliance with them and on
the proclamation of the President announcing the fact, the
admission should be considered complete. The admission did not take
place under this act, and no proclamation was issued by the
President in pursuance of it.
The people of the territory again assembled by a convention of
delegates and formed their Constitution on 1 February, 1848, as is
recited in the preamble of the act of Congress, passed 29 May,
1848, by the first section of which the state is declared to be
admitted into the Union on an equal footing with the original
states. The date of the admission, therefore, is 29 May, 1848.
The writ of error having been issued on 20 November, 1847, was
therefore regularly issued during the existence of the territorial
government, and the case was pending in this Court at the time when
that government ceased, and with it
Page 51 U. S. 78
the jurisdiction and power of the territorial courts.
Benner v.
Porter, 9 How. 235
The fourth section of the act of Congress admitting the state
into the Union organized a district court of the United States for
the state,
see also § 4 of the Act of 6 August, 1846,
9 Stat. 57, and the 5th section provided that the clerks of the
district courts of the territory should transmit to the clerk of
the above district court
"all records of all unsatisfied judgments, and suits pending in
said courts, respectively, attaching thereto all papers connected
therewith, in all cases arising under the laws or Constitution of
the United States, or to which the United States shall be a
party,"
and the said district court shall enter the same on its docket,
and shall proceed therein to final judgment and execution, as if
such suits or proceedings had originally been brought in said
court.
The sixth section provides for the delivery by the clerk of the
supreme court of the territory to the clerk of the district court,
of all records and papers relating to proceedings in bankruptcy
under the late bankrupt act, and also all records of judgments, and
of proceedings in suits pending, and all papers connected
therewith, in cases arising under the Constitution and laws of the
United States.
These sections provide for the federal cases pending in the
courts at the termination of the territorial government, and for
unsatisfied judgments of that character, by transferring them to
the federal court, there to be proceeded in and completed, or
executed. But no provision is made for the class of cases pending,
and unfinished, that belong to the state judicature after the
admission of the territory into the Union. That class seems to have
been left to be provided for by the state authorities. We had
occasion to express our views on this subject in the recent case of
Benner v. Porter, and need not repeat them.
The case before us is one of this character, and is therefore
unaffected by the transfer of cases to the district court above
provided for. And the question is whether, under these
circumstances, this Court has jurisdiction to review it.
By the admission of the State of Wisconsin into the Union, on 29
May, 1848, the territorial government ceased to exist, and all the
authority under it, including the laws organizing its courts of
justice, and providing for a revision of their judgments in this
Court by appeals or writs of error. This appellate power does not
depend upon the Judiciary Act of 1789, but upon laws regulating the
judicial proceedings of
Page 51 U. S. 79
the territory. And these necessarily ceased with the termination
of the territorial government.
In the case of
United States v.
Boisdore's Heirs, 8 How. 121, it is said that, as
this Court can exercise no appellate power over cases, unless
conferred upon it by act of Congress, if the act conferring the
jurisdiction has expired, the jurisdiction ceases, although the
appeal or writ of error be actually pending in the court at the
time of the expiration of the act.
The cases on this point are referred to in the brief in that
case, and afford full authority for the principle, if any were
needed. 1 Hill 328; 9 Barn. & C. 750; 3 Burr. 1456; 4 Moo.
& P. 341
The writ of error therefore fell with the abrogation of the
statute upon which it was founded.
Besides, since the termination of the territorial government,
there is no court in existence to which the mandate of this Court
could be sent to carry into effect our judgment. Our power,
therefore, would be incomplete and ineffectual, were we to consent
to a review of the case.
Palao v. Hunt,
4 How. 589. And had the records been transferred to the district
court, as in the federal cases, we do not see but that the result
must have been the same, for the case being one not of federal
jurisdiction, should the judgment be affirmed or reversed, and sent
down to that court, it would possess no power to carry the mandate
into execution, having no power over the case under the
Constitution or laws of Congress conferring jurisdiction upon the
federal courts. (Art. 3, § 2, Const. U.S.; Judiciary Act of
1789, § 11.)
There is another act of Congress bearing upon this question
which it is material to notice, and that is, an act supplementary
to the act entitled "An act to regulate the exercise of the
appellate jurisdiction of the supreme court in certain cases, and
for other purposes," passed 22 February, 1848, ch. 12, 9 Stat.
211.
The second section provides
"That all and singular the provisions of the said act to which
this is a supplement, so far as may be, shall be and they hereby
are made applicable to all cases which may be pending in the
supreme or other superior court of and for any territory of the
United States which may hereafter be admitted as a state into the
Union at the time of its admission, and to all cases in which
judgments or decrees shall have been rendered in such supreme or
superior court at the time of such admission, and not previously
removed by writ of error or appeal."
The act to which the above is a supplement was passed
Page 51 U. S. 80
22 February, 1847, ch. 17, 9 Stat. 128, and its several
provisions related to cases pending, and unsatisfied judgments
existing in the courts of the Territory of Florida at the time of
its admission into the Union as a state, and which were the subject
of examination in the case of
Benner v. Porter, already
referred to.
As the Territory of Wisconsin has been admitted into the Union
as a state since the passage of this supplementary act, the second
section applies the provisions of the Florida act to the cases
pending in its courts and to the judgments existing therein at the
time of its admission.
But it will not be material to refer particularly to those
provisions, as this second section does not bring the case before
us within them. It applies them to all cases pending in the several
courts of the territory, and to all cases in which judgments or
decrees shall have been rendered at the time of the admission and
not previously removed by writ of error or appeal to this Court. In
this case, the judgment had been rendered and removed before the
admission and was pending here at the time, and is therefore
unaffected by this supplementary act.
The section was drawn, doubtless, under the supposition that if
the suit was pending here at the time of the admission of a
territory into the Union as a state, on appeal or writ of error, no
legislation was necessary to preserve or give effect to the
jurisdiction of the court over it -- an opinion, as we have seen,
founded in error.
In placing the want of jurisdiction, however, upon this ground
we must not be understood as admitting that if the provisions of
the Florida Act of 22 February, 1847, applied to the case, the
jurisdiction could be upheld. For if we are right in the conclusion
that, even assuming the record in the case had been transferred
from the territorial to the district court of the state, our
jurisdiction would still be incomplete and ineffectual, inasmuch as
that court possessed no power to carry the mandate into execution,
the case not being one of federal jurisdiction, the result would be
the same as that at which we have arrived.
In every view, therefore, we have been able to take of the case,
we are satisfied that our jurisdiction over it ceased with the
termination of the territorial government and laws and that it has
not been revived or preserved, if indeed it could have been, by any
act or authority of Congress on the subject, and that
The writ of error must be abated.
Order
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the
record
Page 51 U. S. 81
from the Supreme Court of the Territory of Wisconsin, and was
argued by counsel. On consideration whereof it is ordered and
adjudged by this Court that this writ of error be and the same is
hereby abated.
Mr. WALKER, of counsel for the defendants in error, moved the
court to direct the clerk to what court the mandate, or other
process prescribed by the forty-third rule of court should be
addressed. On consideration whereof it is now here ordered by the
court that the clerk do not issue any mandate or other process in
this case, but only a certified copy of the judgment this day
rendered in this cause.