Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railway Co. v. Adams

180 U.S. 1, 21 S. Ct. 240, 45 L. Ed. 395, 1901 U.S. LEXIS 1278
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 7, 1901
Docket35
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 180 U.S. 1 (Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railway Co. v. Adams) 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
Yazoo & Mississippi Valley Railway Co. v. Adams, 180 U.S. 1, 21 S. Ct. 240, 45 L. Ed. 395, 1901 U.S. LEXIS 1278 (1901).

Opinion

Me. Justice Beown,

after making the above statement of the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

Motion was made to dismiss this writ of error upon the grounds: First, that the Federal question was not raised until after the decision of the Supreme Court on June 20, 1898. Second, that the action of the defendants in withdrawing their pleas and permitting a. judgment nil dicit to go against, them, because the circuit court had struck from the files their additional pleas attempting to set up a Federal question, was an admission that they had no defence upon’ the facts of the case, and deprived them of any right to insist upon a Federal question. Third, that the petition for removal was not made until after the case had been tried in the state Supreme Court, and reversed and remanded. No claim of error in the action of the state court in this last particular was made in this court. Indeed, the point seems to have been abandoned. Fourth, that the decision of the state Supreme Court on the first appeal, that the alleged exemption, if it existed at all, was lost by the consolidation of October 24, 1892, raised no Federal question. Several other reasons are assigned for the motion, but they are either addressed to the merits of the case, or become, immaterial in the view we have taken pf those herein specified.

4. Was the Federal question raised too late? The special pleas setting up distinctly the Federal question were filed after the case had been decided by the Supreme Court, its mandate had gone down to the circuit court, and the case was ready for a new trial. As already stated, certain of these pleas were stricken out upon motion of the plaintiff as constituting no defence to the action, and all the pleas,, except such as had been stricken out by the court, were then withdrawn, and a judg *6 ment nil dicit entered. On the case being again carried to the Supreme Court, that court held that the action of the court below in striking out the special pleas was correct, for the obvious reasons that, they presented no defence to the action, in whole or in part. The former opinion of the court in this case settled definitely and conclusively all the issues involved, and the special pleas are in effect nothing else than an effort to have the circuit court disregard that opinion. The futility of that sort of pleading needs no sort of comment. These matters of practice and procedure, and all the other assignments of error touching matters of practice and procedure, were correctly settled by the court. The former opinion of the court in this cause, and its opinion on the motion to strike that opinion from the files, disposed effectively of such of these matters as are not here specifically adverted to.” 77 Mississippi, 315.

It is very evident that the circuit court, in striking out these pleas, took the view that the Supreme Court had, upon the first hearing, settled the law to be that no valid contract of exemption existed, and that if such contract existed in favor of the .Louisville, New Orleans and Texas Railway Company (hereinafter stjded the Louisville Company) it had been lost by the consolidation of October 24, 1892, and that the only effect of the special pleas was to inject a claim under the Federal Constitution as an argument for reversing its ruling. These pleas evidently raised precisely the same questions that had been settled in a slightly different form. The circuit court treated this as an attempt to induce it to overrule the action of the Supreme Court, which of course was impossible. The Supreme Court not only held that the circuit court was correct in this view,' but that the issues having already been settled, it would itself treat them as res judicata. This accords with what seems to be the uniform practice of the Mississippi courts. Thus, in Smith v. Elder, 14 S. & M. 100, it was held that where a'demurrer to a plea, which had been sustained in the court below, was overruled by the Supreme Court, all the legal questions raised by the demurrer would be considered as having been settled .by the decision overruling it; and that such decision would not only be binding upon the inferior but also upon the *7 appellate court.. So also, in Bridgeforth v. Gray, 39 Miss. 136, it was held that, where the construction of a will had been settled upon demurrer to a bill in chancery, the court would not permit that question to be reopened upon a hearing upon the merits, notwithstanding the.chancery court of Tennessee in the mean time had placed a different construction upon the will. This is also the rule in this court. Supervisors v. Kennicott, 94 U. S. 498; The Lady Pike, 96 U. S. 461; Thompson v. Maxwell Land Grant & Railway Co., 168 U. S. 451. See also Hook v. Richeson, 115 Illinois, 431; Brooklyn v. Orthwein, 140 Illinois, 620; McKinney v. State, 117 Indiana, 26.

In this aspect the case is much like that of The Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Kirchoff, 169 U. S. 103. In that case the insurance company had loaned money to Kirchoff and had filed a bill to foreclose the trust deed. Pending this bill an agreement was entered into for the release to Kirchoff of two of the lots embraced in the foreclosure proceedings, but it was agreed that these-proceedings should be prosecuted, and as soon as the company obtained a deed from the master, it would convey to Kirchoff. No defence was made to the foreclosure, and the case went to a decree and the property was sold. The cáse went to the Supreme Court of Illinois, which found the agreement between Mrs; Kirchoff and the insurance company as. claimed by her; determined that she was entitled to the release sought,- arid remanded the casé for the purpose of an accounting. As stated by the Chief. Justice: “ The record does not disclose that any right or title was specially set up or claimed under, any statute of, or authority exercised under, the United States in the courts below, or in the Supreme Court of Illinois prior to the decision of the latter court on the first appeal. . . . The errors there assigned nowhere in terms raised a Federal question. And in affirming the judgment of the appellate court the Supreme Court did not consider or discuss any Federal question as such in its opinion.”. It appears- to have turned upon questions of fact. “ It is now contended that'it thén appeared that defendant claimed to hold an absolute title to the lots in question by virtue of the foreclosure proceedings and of the master’s deed obtained thereunder, and hence that the title was claimed un-’ *8

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Bluebook (online)
180 U.S. 1, 21 S. Ct. 240, 45 L. Ed. 395, 1901 U.S. LEXIS 1278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yazoo-mississippi-valley-railway-co-v-adams-scotus-1901.