Withers v. Buckley

61 U.S. 84, 15 L. Ed. 816, 20 How. 84, 1857 U.S. LEXIS 433
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 11, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 61 U.S. 84 (Withers v. Buckley) 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
Withers v. Buckley, 61 U.S. 84, 15 L. Ed. 816, 20 How. 84, 1857 U.S. LEXIS 433 (1858).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DANIEL

delivered the opinion of the court.

Upon a writ of error to the High Court of Errors and Appeals of the State of Mississippi, under the authority of the 25th section of the act of Congress of September 24th, 1789, establishing the judicial courts of the United States.

The plaintiff in error, by his bill'in the State court, alleged that he is the owner of a large and valuable plantation in the State of Mississippi, situated on what is called Old river, being a former bed of the Mississippi river, but which was cut off and made derelict by a change in the course of the Mississippi in the .year 1796. That the Homochitto river, in said State, empties its waters into the said Old river at a point above, or north of, the complainant’s plantation, and at low stages of the waters of the Mississippi the waters of the Homochitto pass around through the bed of Old river, and out by the narrows thereof into the Mississippi. That the flow of the waters of the Homochitto removes the deposits of mud occasioned by the overflow of the Mississippi, and thus keeps open the outlet of Old river, to the great advantage of the complainant, and of others similarly situated on Old river.

That the Legislature of Mississippi, by a law approved on the 5th of March, 1850, entitled “An act regulating and defining the powers of the commissioners of Homochitto river,” appointed the defendants commissioners for the purpose of “improving the navigation of the Homochitto river, and any outlet from the same, through Old river and Buffalo bayou to the Mississippi river, and for removing any obstructions in said streams, and excavating and digging a canal unto the Buffalo from the Homochitto river, or from Old river into the Buffalo.” That said canal commences on Old river below the mouth of the Homochitto river, and above the lands of the complainant, and will neither begin, pass through, nor terminate upon, the lands of the complainant. That the complain.ant and his grantors have ever enjoyed and used the waters flowing through his and their lands, for agricultural and domestic purposes, and for navigation in transporting their crops to markets, and receiving supplies therefrom; first when Old river was a part of the Mississippi, and since the cut-off in 1796, by the waters supplied to Old river from the Homochitto, and the back waters of the Mississippi in time of floods. That, by the said laws of Mississippi, no compensation is provided *88 for the injury to be done to the complainant by the diversion of the waters of the Homochitto and Old river from the lands of .complainant, and the deptruction of the navigation' which said waters afford to his plantation, because said canal or contemplated outlet is not to be made upon the complainant’s lands. The bill of the complainant then charged that the laws of Mississippi are invalid for having omitted to provide compensation for the injury to be inflicted by them upon the complainant, and are, by that,'omission, in violation of the fundamental laws both of the United States and of the State of Mississippi, the Constitutions of both of which declare that private property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation being made therefor; and are also in violation of the act of Congress of March 1st, 1817, authorizing the people of Mississippi to form á Constitution, and of the ordinance passed on the 15th-of August, 1817, in pursuance of the act'of Congress, both the act of Congress and ordinance providing that the Mississippi river, and the navigable rivers leading into the same, shall be common highways, and forever free, as well to the inhabitants.of Mississippi as to other citizens of the United States.

To this bill a demurrer was interposed by the defendants in error, and the cause having been carried to the High Court of Errors and Appeals of Mississippi, by that court the demurrer was sustained, and the bill dismissed, with costs.

The correctness or incorrectness of the decree of the High Court of Errors and Appeals is the subject of^inquiry and decision now before this court. In the prosecution of our inquiry, it is proper to disembarrass it of matters with which it has been attempted to associaté or surround it; matters having no just connection therewith, and the introduction of which tends only to obstruct and obscure the elucidation of truth.

Thus it is charged in the complainant’s bill, that the law authorizing the improvement of the Homochitto river is void, because it violates the Constitution of Mississippi, by omitting to provide a compensation for the .injury which might be done to individuals by carrying that law into effect; the Constitution of the State having declared-that private property shall not be taken for public use without just compensation being made therefor. In answer to this charge it is sufficient to state, that this court never has, and does not, assume the right to' pronounce authoritatively upon the wisdom or justice of the legislation of the States, when operating upon their own citizens, and upon subjects of property clearly within their own territory and appropriate cognizance, except so far as the Constitution of the United States *89 expressly, Or by inevitable implication, may have made it .the duty of this court to control the action of the State Governments. Nor has it been deemed the province of this court to abrogate or overrule the interpretation put upon their own respective statutes by the courts of the several States, whether such interpretation had reference to the ordinary rights of person or property, or to the nature and extent of the legislative powers vested by the Constitutions of the several. States, and their-coincidence with acts of legislation performed under the. delegation of those powers. These are functions wisely and necessarily left by this court untouched in the State tribunals, the assumption of which by the Federal judiciary, as it would embrace every matter upon which the Governments of the States could operate, would, in effect, amount to the annihilation of those Governments.- The doctrine of this court as here stated has been clearly affirmed.

In the case of Jackson v. Lamphire, in 8d of Peters, on page 289 of that volume, this court has declared that it “has no authority on a writ of error from a State court to declare a State law void on account of its collision with a State Constitution, it not being a case embraced in the judiciaxy act, which alone gives power to issue a writ of error to the State court.” This court say, “that they will therefore refrain from expressing any opinion on the poixxts made by counsel in relation -to the Constitution of New York.” See also the ruling of this court upon the construction of State laws, in the cases of Polk’s Lessee v. Wendal et al., in 9th Cranch, p. 87, and of the WestRiver Bridge Company v. Dix et al., 6 How., p. 507. The conformity, therefore, to the State Constitution, of the statute appointing the commissioners of the Homochitto river, and prescribing their powers and duties, was a question appropriately belonging to the State court, and its decision of that question is not properly subject to re-examination here.

The statute of Mississippi is next assailed, on the charge that it violates the 5th article of the amendments of the Constitution of the United States, of which the clause in the Constitution of Mississippi, relied on by the plaintiff in erx-or, is a literal transcript.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 U.S. 84, 15 L. Ed. 816, 20 How. 84, 1857 U.S. LEXIS 433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/withers-v-buckley-scotus-1858.