Where a decree of the Court of Appeals of Maryland affirmed the
decree of the court below and remanded the case to that court, this
is not such a final decree as will give jurisdiction over the case
to this Court.
The decree of the court below was merely an interlocutory order,
and although state laws allow an appeal to state courts from such
an order, this cannot enlarge the jurisdiction of this Court given
by act of Congress.
Moreover, the judgment of the state court was in favor of the
authority set up
Page 65 U. S. 421
under the laws of the United States, and therefore no appeal
lies to this Court under the 25th section of the Judiciary Act.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court, and is reported
in 14 Md. 470-471.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TANEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a writ of error to revise the decree of the Court of
Appeals of Maryland, affirming a decree of the Circuit Court for
Montgomery County in that state.
This case, as it appears on the record, is this:
The bill in equity of the plaintiff in error, filed in the
Circuit Court for Montgomery County, in Maryland, alleges that the
defendants have trespassed on land of his in Montgomery County, in
Maryland, digging it up and erecting abutments and structures for
an aqueduct, and so breaking up and dividing the land as to render
it incapable of tillage, and inflicting great and irreparable
damage upon the complainant, and that the defendants meditate, for
completing the aqueduct, still further damage of the same
aggravated character to the land by digging to great depths of
twelve to fifteen feet, and at other points raising embankments and
building walls, and in conducting through the land a large and
constant stream of water, for the sole use of the aqueduct.
The bill further states that the defendants claim to thus act
under authority of the Executive of the United States,
unsanctioned, however, as the bill alleges, by any action of
Congress, and for supplying water to the Cities of Washington and
Georgetown, and under color of an act of the Legislature of
Maryland, session of the year 1853, chapter 179, purporting to
authorize the United States "to purchase land in Maryland
Page 65 U. S. 422
for so supplying water, through construction of dams,
reservoirs, buildings, and other works," and in case of sale not
being agreed by owners, to allow the United States to adversely
appropriate to herself the land, by condemnation and on valuation,
to be effected in manner as provided in case of the Chesapeake
& Ohio Canal company's occasions for land and materials for
that company's works.
The bill also avers that no such purchase was authorized by
Congress, nor any attempt ever made on behalf of the United States
toward an agreement for the purchase of complainant's lands, and
insists that these pretended sanctions of the act of the Maryland
legislature, and of the United States Executive, are repugnant to
the Constitution of the United States and of Maryland, and that the
land is thus intruded on for no public purpose of Maryland, nor for
any connected with the United States as such and of a federal
character, nor even so declared in the Maryland act of legislature,
or in any action of Congress. And the bill prays injunction to
prevent the trespass and encroachments complained of from being
carried on. The circuit court refused the injunction, and from the
order of refusal the plaintiff appealed to the Court of Appeals.
That court affirmed the order of the circuit court and remanded the
case.
From this decision of the Court of Appeals, the case is here
upon writ of error.
It is evident from this statement that the appeal to this Court
cannot be sustained. In the first place, the decree of the Court of
Appeals merely affirms the decree of the inferior court and remands
the case. It is therefore still pending, and there is no final
decree. And although the State of Maryland in her own courts may
authorize an appeal from such an interlocutory order, it cannot
affect the jurisdiction of this, which is governed by the act of
Congress, and that act authorizes the writ of error only in cases
where there is a final decree or judgment.
In the second place, we do not see in the plaintiff's bill any
right claimed under the laws of the United States. On the contrary,
the claim is against the rights asserted by the United
Page 65 U. S. 423
States, and exercised by the agents of the government under its
authority; and even if there had been a final decree by the
dismissal of the bill, in addition to the refusal of the
injunction, we perceive no ground upon which the writ of error
could be maintained under the 25th section of the act of 1789.
It is therefore
Dismissed for want of jurisdiction.