This Court has no jurisdiction to review a judgment of the
Supreme Court of the Washington, denying a petition for a rehearing
which had been presented to the Supreme Court of the Territory of
Washington touching a cause therein decided, and had been
transferred to the supreme court of the state under the provisions
of the Act of February 22, 1889, c. 180, 25 Stat. 676, admitting
that state to the Union.
Motion to dismiss. The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
James Holmes recovered judgment in the District Court of the
Fourth Judicial District of the Territory of Washington against the
Northern Pacific Railroad Company. The railroad company prosecuted
an appeal therefrom to the supreme court of the territory, and the
judgment was affirmed by that court on February 2, 1888. Thereupon,
and on the same day, the supreme court of the territory, on the
application of plaintiff in error, entered an order granting it
leave to file a petition for rehearing on or before July 17, 1888;
giving sixty days after the determination of the petition within
which to perfect proceedings upon appeal in the event that the
petition should be denied, and staying all proceedings and
withholding a remittitur pending the filing and determination of
the petition and for sixty days thereafter.
The State of Washington was admitted into the Union November 11,
1889, and on March 8, 1890, an order was entered by the supreme
court of the state reciting the affirmance
Page 155 U. S. 138
of the judgment by the supreme court of the territory and the
order of that court of February 2, 1888, and, further, that
"the said petition having been filed within the time provided by
the order of said court, and having been pending undetermined at
the time of the admission of the State of Washington, and the
organization of this, the supreme court of the state, and this
Court having directed the defendant in error to answer said
petition, the said answer having been filed within the time
provided by said order, and said petition and answer having been
taken under advisement by this Court, now, on this 8th day of
March, A.D. 1890, the court, being fully advised in the premises,
denies said petition for rehearing; to which ruling and judgment,
as well as the judgment of the supreme court of said territory
affirming the judgment of said district court, plaintiff in error,
by its counsel, excepts, and said exception is allowed."
And it was ordered
"that a writ of error to the Supreme Court of the United States
to the judgment of the Supreme Court of the Territory of
Washington, now a record of this Court, and to the judgment, order,
and ruling of this Court upon the petition for rehearing, be and
hereby is allowed."
Supersedeas bond was given and approved, a writ of error issued,
and citation signed and served.
It is well settled that if a motion or petition for rehearing is
made or presented in season and entertained by the court, the time
limited for a writ of error or appeal does not begin to run until
the motion or petition is disposed of. Until then, the judgment or
decree does not take final effect for the purposes of the writ of
error or appeal.
Aspen Mining & Smelting Co. v.
Billings, 150 U. S. 31,
150 U. S. 36;
Vorhees v. Noye Manufacturing Co., 151 U.
S. 135.
Under sections 22 and 23 of the Act of Congress of February 22,
1889, c. 180, providing for the admission of the State of
Washington into the Union (25 Stat. 676, 682, 683, printed in the
margin
*), this petition,
which was pending in the
Page 155 U. S. 139
supreme court of the territory at the time of the admission of
the state, became a matter over which the state court had
Page 155 U. S. 140
jurisdiction. The Court took jurisdiction, and might, in its
exercise, have granted a rehearing and reversed the judgment, but,
upon consideration, both parties presenting their views, saw fit to
refuse the rehearing, and thereby to confirm the action of the
supreme court of the territory in affirming the judgment. It was
then that the judgment took final effect for the purposes of the
writ of error, and plaintiff in error so regarded it. But plaintiff
in error could not take the writ to the supreme court of the
territory, for when that court ceased to exist, a petition for
rehearing was pending which, after the admission, could not be
disposed of by that court, and which plaintiff in error did not
deem expedient to withdraw or abandon. And if the petition and the
case could have been transferred to the circuit court of the United
States because plaintiff in error was a corporation created by the
United States,
Glaspell v. Northern Pacific Railroad,
144 U. S. 211,
that could only have been done upon request, and no request to that
effect was preferred. On the contrary, plaintiff in error elected
to continue the jurisdiction of the cause in the supreme court of
the state, and as no federal question was involved, and the
judgment could not take effect, so far as a review of it on error
was concerned, until after the state court acted, and only through
that action, the writ of error cannot be maintained. Moreover, the
judgment of the supreme court of the territory was rendered
February 2, 1888, and the writ of error was not brought until more
than two years thereafter, and therefore too late, unless the time
of the pendency of the petition in that court were deducted, which
is quite inadmissible, in view of the fact that the petition
remained pending notwithstanding the admission of the state had
terminated the existence of the court in which it was originally
filed. The result is that the writ of error must be dismissed.
*
"SEC. 22. That all cases of appeal or writ of error heretofore
prosecuted and now pending in the Supreme Court of the United
States upon any record from the Supreme Court of either of the
territories mentioned in this act or that may hereafter lawfully be
prosecuted upon any record from either of said courts, may be heard
and determined by said Supreme Court of the United States. And the
mandate of execution or of further proceedings shall be directed by
the Supreme Court of the United States to the circuit or district
court hereby established within the state succeeding the territory
from which such record is or may be pending, or to the supreme
court of such state, as the nature of the case may require. . . .
And each of the circuit, district, and state courts, herein named
shall respectively be the successor of the supreme court of the
territory as to all such cases arising within the limits embraced
within the jurisdiction of such courts respectively, with full
power to proceed with the same and award mesne or final process
therein, and that from all judgments and decrees of the Supreme
Court of either of the territories mentioned in this act, in any
case arising within the limits of any of the proposed states prior
to admission, the parties to such judgments shall have the same
right to prosecute appeals and writs of error to the Supreme Court
of the United States as they shall have had by law prior to the
admission of said state into the Union."
"SEC. 23. That in respect to all cases, proceedings, and matters
now pending in the supreme or district courts of either of the
territories mentioned in this act at the time of the admission into
the Union of either of the states mentioned in this act, and
arising within the limits of any such state whereof the circuit or
district courts by this act established might have had jurisdiction
under the laws of the United States had such courts existed at the
time of the commencement of such cases, the said circuit and
district courts, respectively, shall be the successors of said
supreme and district courts of said territory, and in respect to
all other cases, proceedings and matters pending in the supreme or
district courts of any of the territories mentioned in this act at
the time of the admission of such territory into the Union, arising
within the limits of said proposed state, the courts established by
such state shall, respectively, be the successors of said supreme
and district territorial courts, and all the files, records,
indictments, and proceedings relating to any such cases shall be
transferred to such circuit, district, and state courts,
respectively, and the same shall be proceeded with therein in due
course of law; but no writ, action, indictment, cause or proceeding
now pending, or that prior to the admission of any of the states
mentioned in this act shall be pending in any territorial court in
any of the territories mentioned in this act, shall abate by the
admission of any such state into the Union, but the same shall be
transferred and proceeded with in the proper United States circuit,
district or state court, as the case may be:
provided,
however, that in all civil actions, causes, and proceedings,
in which the United States is not a party, transfers shall not be
made to the circuit and district courts of the United States,
except upon written request of one of the parties to such action or
proceeding filed in the proper court, and in the absence of such
request such cases shall be proceeded with in the proper state
courts."