Morton v. Gordon

1 Dallam 396
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1841
DocketNo. XI
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 1 Dallam 396 (Morton v. Gordon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morton v. Gordon, 1 Dallam 396 (Tex. 1841).

Opinion

BAYLOR, Justice.

In this case Gordon and Alley, as administrators of Albert D. Duncan, deceased, instituted their suit in the court below to recover of Morton, the appellant, the sum of $124.18, alleged to have been due and owing to Duncan in his lifetime by Morton. To the plaintiffs’ petition setting forth their demand, Morton filed his plea of set-off, averring that Duncan before his death was justly indebted to him in the sum of $101. To this plea the plaintiffs demurred. The court sustained the demurrer and, as both parties admitted the justice of each other’s claim, gave judgment for the plaintiffs.

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A bill of exceptions taken in the case also presents the same- point for the consideration of this court which arose on the demurrer; and that is, “Does the act passed February 5, A. D. 1840, regulating the mode of settling the estates of intestate persons, preclude the defendant from the benefit of his plea of set-off, allowed as he contends by the act passed also on February 5, A. D. 1840 ?”

Before we are permitted to decide this point, although the parties have consented to the jurisdiction of this court, we feel bound to notice the question of jurisdiction as one of great moment to the jurisprudence of this country. Consent may do away error, but it is well settled that it can not give jurisdiction. By the act organizing the district courts, the right to appeal is expressly prohibited, unless the sum in controversy amounts to $300. Here the record shows that the amount in controversy was for a less sum. Hence if we entertain jurisdiction, our power to do so must be derived from some other source than the act alluded to, or the consent given.

It is urged that so much of the act of Congress as restricts the right of the citizen to appeal from the District to the Supreme Court is unconstitutional, and that this tribunal has the power to hear and [397]*397determine all causes which may originate and have been decided in the district courts.

If this position be correct, then we can legitimately consider and determine the point arising on the demurrer.

We think the power here contended for justly belongs to this tribunal, and in coming to this conclusion we have not been unmindful of the magnitude of the principles involved, and the respect due to the popular branch of the government.

We have felt the delicacy and embarrassment of this question, and, if we were permitted, from these and many other considerations (as the amount in controversy is small) we would be induced to pass it over. “Fortunately, however, for the people, the function of the judiciary in deciding constitutional questions is not one which it is at liberty to decline. While it is bound not to take jurisdiction if it should not, it is equally true that it must take jurisdiction if it should; it can not, as the Legislature may, avoid a measure because it approaches the confines of the Constitution; it can not pass it by because it is doubtful; with whatever doubt, with whatever difficulties a case may be attended, it must decide it when it arises in judgment. It has no more right to decline the exercise of a jurisdiction which is given than to usurp that which it not given; the one or the other would be treason to the Constitution.”

With these few preliminary remarks, we proceed to give some of the reasons which have induced us to decide in favor of the power claimed for this court. We have searched in vain for the express power delegated to Congress in the Constitution to enact the restriction. If it has the power then it must be by implication alone; and by implication perhaps, Congress have the power to restrict the right of appeal from the inferior to the district courts.

If we compare the Constitution of this country with that of the United States and most of the States, we shall find this remarkable difference: the Constitution of the United States, for example, after speaking of the appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court, expressly states that it is to be exercised with such exceptions and under such regulations as the Congress shall make. Here the power to restrict is clearly given, and under this grant of power Congress has said no appeal from the circuit court shall be allowed unless the amount in controversy exceeds $2000. If our Constitution had contained similar expressions, the right to restrict would have been placed beyond doubt. But were these expressions casually dropped from the circumstance that the Constitution was formed in the midst of a revolution, or were they [398]*398left out of the Constitution in order to take from Congress this restrictive power, and leave the appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court unfettered, “coextensive within the limits of the Bepublic?” To arrive at the true meaning, from the circumstances here stated, has produced our chief embarrassment. It may be said, although the Constitution is silent as to this restrictive power found in similar instruments, that silence is not extinction, and that Congress may, by a fair and liberal construction of its authority, exercise this power when the public welfare demands it. This may be true as to tribunals inferior to the district courts; but it would be carrying the doctrine of implication too far, as we conceive, to make it applicable to the question now under consideration. It may also be contended, as Congress have the power to make all laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying all other powers into execution, this gave the right to enact the restrictive clause complained of. But in the case of Gibons v. Ogden, 9 Wheat., 1, etc., Chief Justice Marshall, in delivering the opinion of the court, says this limitation on the means which may be used is not extended to the powers which are conferred.

The difficulty still remains, and we confess we have been unable to solve it by any construction of the Constitution which would confer this power on Congress. The Supreme Court of the United States have expressly decided that they derive their appellate jurisdiction from the Constitution and not from acts of Congress. That it is true, Congress may restrict their appellate jurisdiction, for this power is given; but in all cases where they have not thought proper to do so, the jurisdiction remains with the court. In other words that they derive their jurisdiction from the Constitution itself. This doctrine we think correct, and that the jurisdiction of our Supreme Court, which is admitted by all to be appellate only, is derived from the Constitution in proprio vigore, and is “coextensive within the limits of the Bepublic.” Whether this appellate jurisdiction thus derived was intended to be exerted over all the inferior courts of the country, we leave open for the future decisions of this tribunal. It is sufficient to say for the present, that Congress has no power to restrict the citizen in his right to appeal from the decisions of the district court to the Supreme Court, in cases cognizable in the former .tribunal. If we test the soundness of this opinion by the rules which have been adopted for the interpretation of the Constitution of the United States, we think we shall be borne out in our conclusions on this subject.

One of those rules is, where the grant inures solely and exclusively [399]*399for the benefit of the grantor himself, no one would deny the propriety of giving to the words of the grant a benign and liberal interpretation. Keeping this rule in view, let us refer to the eleventh clause of our Declaration of Eights.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Dallam 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morton-v-gordon-tex-1841.