Bradford v. Southern Railway Co.

195 U.S. 243, 25 S. Ct. 55, 49 L. Ed. 178, 1904 U.S. LEXIS 715
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 28, 1904
Docket151
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 195 U.S. 243 (Bradford v. Southern Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bradford v. Southern Railway Co., 195 U.S. 243, 25 S. Ct. 55, 49 L. Ed. 178, 1904 U.S. LEXIS 715 (1904).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Fuller,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

1. After the passage of. the act of July 20,1892, many applications were made to this court for leave to prosecute writs- of error or appeals in forma pauperis, and were uniformly denied, as we were of opinion that the act had no relation to proceedings in this court. And we so stated in Gallaway v. Fort Worth Bank, 186 U. S. 177, where leave was asked to prosecute a writ of error to a state court without giving security as required by section 1000 of the Revised Statutes. The ruling would have been the same if the review of the judgment or decree of a court of the United States had been sought, because in our -view the statute refers only to the court of original jurisdiction. And the same ruling must necessarily obtain in the Circuit Courts of Appeals:

The act consists of five sections. Of these, sections 3 and 4 obviously relate to the trial or hearing. By section 5 “judgment may be rendered for costs at the conclusion of the suit as in other cases,” which we take to mean judgment at the close of the trial or. hearing, and not judgment then and also judgment in appellate proceedings, or in case of such proceedings no judgment for costs below until judgment rendered above.

*248 The first section relates to the commencement and carrying forward of a suit or action without plaintiff being required to prepay fees or costs or to give security therefor, whether the fees or costs accrue at the beginning or during the progress of the suit or action. .The application is to be made at the outset, and the order, if granted, covers the fees or costs, accruing when or after the suit or action is commenced. And this result is secured by the words “and its prosecution to conclusion.” That conclusion is the termination of the suit or action in the court where it is commenced. The second section provides for a similar- application after the suit of action has been brought.

The words “suit or action” are used in both sections, and the applicant is required to set forth “his alleged cause of action,” and by section 4 the case may be dismissed “if it be made to appear that the allegation of poverty is untrue,, or if said court be satisfied that the alleged cause of action is frivolous or malicious.”

LordrCoke defined “action” to be “a legal demand of one’s right,” and cause of action comprises every fact a plaintiff is obliged to prove in order to obtain judgment, or, conversely, t every fact the defendant would have the right to traverse, Railway Company v. Dixon, 179 U. S. 131, 139. The words “action” and “cause of action” are not ordinarily applicable to writs of error, and, in our opinion, were obviously not so applicable here, but used diverso intuitu. And this is so whether a writ of error be considered a new proceeding or a continuation of the original proceeding as it is usually regarded in the Federal courts. Cohens v. Virginia, 6 Wheat. 264, 410; Nations v. Johnson, 24 How. 195, 205; In re Chetwood, 165 U. S. 443, 461.

A leading case on the subject is Moore v. Cooley, 2 Hill, 412. The statute of New York under consideration in that case was as follows (2 Rev. Stat. N. Y. 2d ed. 1836, p. 362):

“Every poor person, not being of ability to sue, who shall have a cause of action against' any other, may petition the *249 court in which such action is depending, or in which it is intended to be brought, for leave to prosecute as a poor person, and to have counsel and attorneys assigned to conduct his • suit.”

After quoting the statute Judge Cowen said:

“Strictly speaking, an error on which a writ lies is not a cause of action; for, as Lord Coke says, there is a distinction between writs and actions; and under this distinction he instances actions and writs of error. 4 (2 Inst. 39, 40.) And yet, a release of all actions extends to writs of error, when anything may be .recovered or taken by way of restitution under or in, consequence of the writ of error. (Co. Litt. 288, b. Bac. Abr. Release, [1] 2.) This, however, I take it, proceeds rather upon an equitable, and therefore extended construction of the words in the .release beyond their strict meaning; for they generally reach the original- matter out of which the error arose, that being the direct subject of an action if the matter be thrown open by the writ of error. The original matter being released therefore, the words are very properly construed as reaching indirectly and in liberal construction to the writ of error itself, because that depends úpon the original matter. Yet) in strictness, no book holds the word action, or words cause of action, to be identical with a writ of error or cause of a writ of error.
“There can be little doubt that the statute under which this motion is made, should be construed strictly; for the pauper comes to litigate entirely at the expense of others. He is neither to pay his own attorneys or counsel, nor is he liable to his adversary should the suit prove to be groundless. He thus- enjoys a great privilege and exemption from the common lot of men, whereby, in respect to causes of action proper, he becomes, as Lord Bacon says, rather able to vex than unable to sue. (Hist. of Hen. 7.) ”

Lord Bacon was referring to the statute 11 Hen. VII, c. 12, and his language is elsewhere translated or explained to mean “that the charity of the legislature thought it better -that the *250 poor man should be able to vex than that he should not be able to sue.” 6 Bacon’s Works, 161.

So in Bristol v. United States, 129 Fed. Rep. 87, where the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit held that the act of Congress of July 20, 1892, did not entitle a defendant in a criminal case to prosecute a writ of error out of the Circuit Court of Appeals in forma pauperis, Jenkins, J., delivering the opinion, said:

“We do not think that it can properly be said that a writ of error is a suit or action within the statute so far as respects a writ of error in a criminal case. Were it not for the words ‘prosecute to conclusion,’ we doubt if any court would hold that the act applied to an appeal or writ of error in a civil cause. The applicant by the statute must declare the nature of his cause of action. Surely an erroneous ruling by the trial court cannot be held to furnish ‘ a cause of action,’ as that phrase is commonly understood. The statute, by that term, in our judgment, refers to a legal demand by one against another, not to the rulings of a trial court. Under a somewhat similar statute of the state of New York, its Supreme Court, speaking through Judge Cowen, held that the provisions of the statute do not extend to writs of error.

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Bluebook (online)
195 U.S. 243, 25 S. Ct. 55, 49 L. Ed. 178, 1904 U.S. LEXIS 715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradford-v-southern-railway-co-scotus-1904.