Durousseau v. United States

10 U.S. 307, 3 L. Ed. 232, 6 Cranch 307, 1810 U.S. LEXIS 345
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 15, 1810
StatusPublished
Cited by138 cases

This text of 10 U.S. 307 (Durousseau v. United States) 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
Durousseau v. United States, 10 U.S. 307, 3 L. Ed. 232, 6 Cranch 307, 1810 U.S. LEXIS 345 (1810).

Opinion

Marshall, Ch. J.

delivered the opinion of the court, upon the question of jurisdiction, as follows:

This is the fiist of several writs of error to sundry judgments rendered by the court of the United .States for the territory of Orleans.

The attorney-general having moved to dismiss them, because no writ of error lies from this court to that in any case, or, if in .any case, not in such a case as this ; the jurisdiction of this court becomes the first subject-for consideration.

The act erecting Louisiana into two territories establishes a district court in the territory of Orleans, consisting of one judge, who “shall, in all things, have and exercise the same .jurisdiction and powers which are, by law,.given to, or may be' exercised by, the judge of Kentucky district.”

On the -part of the United States it is contended, that this description of the jurisdiction of the court of New Oriels does not imply a power of revision in this court singlar to that which might have been exercised over the judgments of the district court pf Kentucky ; or, if it does, that a writ of error could npt have been sustained to a judgment rendered by the district ■court of Kentucky, in such a case as this.

• On the part of the plaintiffs it is contended, that this court possesses-a'constitutional power to revise and correct the judgments of inferior courts j or, if not so, that such a power is implied in the act by which the *313 fcourt of Orleans is created, taken in connection with the judicial act; and. that a writ of error would lie to a judgment rendered by the court for the district of Kentucky; in such a case as this.

Every question originating in the constitution of the United States claims, and will receive, the most serious consideration of this court.

The third article of that instrument commences with organizing the judicial department. It consists of one supreme court, and of such inferior courts as congress shall, frpm t.ime to time, ordain and establish. In these courts is vested the judicial power of the Unitéd States.'

The first .clause of. the second section enumerates the ases to which that power shall extend.

’The second clause of the same section distributes the powers previously described. In some' few cases the supreme court possesses original j urisdiction. The constitution then proceeds thus: “ In all the other cases •before mentioned the supreme court shall have appel-. late .jurisdiction, both as to law and fact, with such exceptions, and under such regulations, as the congress shall make.”

It is contended that the words of the constitution vest an appellate jurisdiction in this court, wh^hfexteiids to every case not excepted by congress ; an/f that if the court had' been created without any express definition or limitation of its powers, a full and complete appellate jurisdiction Would have vested in ifc, whith must have . been exercised, in all cases whatever'.

The force of this argument is perceived and admitted. Had the judicial act created the shpre me court, without defining or limiting its jurisdiction, it must have been considered as possessing all the jurisdiction which the constitution assigns to it. Tfte legislature would have exercised the power it possessed of creating' a supreme court as ordained by the constitution ; *314 ancii in omitting to exercise the right of excepting from hs constitutional powers, would have necessarily left those powers undiminished. The appellate powers of this court are not given by the judicial act. They are given by the constitution. But they are limited-and regulated by the judicial act, and by such other acts as have been passed on the subject.

When the first legislature of the union proceeded to carry the third article of the constitution -into effect, they must be únderstood as intending to execute the power they possessed of making exceptions to the appellate jurisdiction of the supreme court-. They have not, indeed, made these exceptions in express terms. They have not declared that the appellate power of the court shall not extend to certain cases ; but they have described affirmatively its jurisdiction, and this affirmative description has been understood to imply' a negative on the exercise of such appellate power as is not comprehended within it.

The spirit as well as the letter of a statute must be respectecl, and where the whole context of the law demonstrates a particular intent in the legislature to effect . a certain object, some degree of. implication may be called in to aid that intent.

It is upon this principle that the court implies a legislative exception from its constitutional appellate power in the legislative affirmative description of those powers.

Thus, a writ of error lies to the judgment of a circuit court, Where the matter in controversy exceeds the Value of 2,000 dollars. There is no express declaration that it will not lie where the matter in controversy .shall be of less value. But the court considers this affirmative description as manifesting the intent. of the legislature to except from its appellate jurisdiction all cases decided in the circuits where the matter in con, troversy is of less value, and implies negative words.

This restriction, however, being implied by the court, *315 and that implication being founded on the manifest in' tent of the legislature, can be made only where that manifest intent appears. It ought not to be made for the purpose of defeating the intent of the legislature.

Having made these observations on the constitution, the court will proceed to consider • the acts on which its jurisdiction, m the present case, depends; and, first, to inqüíre whether it could take cognisance of this case had the judginent been rendered by the district court of Kentucky.

The ninth section of the judicial act describes .the jurisdiction of the district courts.

The tenth section declares that the district court of Kentucky, “besides the jurisdiction aforesaid,” shall exercise jurisdiction over all other causes, except appeals and writs of error, which are made-cognisable in a circuit court, and shall proceed therein in the same manner as a circuit court: “ and writs of error and appeals shall lie from decisions therein to the supreme court, in the same causes as from a circuit court to the supreme court, and under the same regulations.”'

It is contended that this suit, which is an action on a bond conditioned to be void on the relanding of goods within the United States, is one of which the district-courts have exclusive jurisdiction, and thatja wtjt of error would not tie to a judgment given in such a-case.

This court does not concur with the attorney-general in the opinion that a circuit court has no original jurisdiction in a case of this description. ■ But it is unnecessary to say any thing on this point, because it is deemed clear that a writ of error is given in. the case, how* ever this question might be decided.

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Bluebook (online)
10 U.S. 307, 3 L. Ed. 232, 6 Cranch 307, 1810 U.S. LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/durousseau-v-united-states-scotus-1810.