U.S. Supreme Court
National Exchange Bank of Baltimore v.
Peters, 144 U.S. 570 (1892)
National Exchange Bank of Baltimore v.
Peters
No. 1369
Submitted April 4, 1892
Decided April 18, 1892
144 U.S. 570
APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
UNITED
STATES FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF
VIRGINIA
Syllabus
The Judiciary Act of March 3, 1891, 26
Stat. c. 517, pp. 826, 827, having provided that no appeals shall be
taken from circuit courts to this Court except as provided in that
act and having repealed all acts and parts of acts relating to
appeals or writs of error inconsistent with the provisions for review
by appeals or writs of error contained in that act, and the joint
resolution of March 3, 1891, 26 Stat. 1115, having provided that
nothing contained in that act shall be held to impair the
jurisdiction of this Court in respect of any case wherein the writ of
error or the appeal shall have been sued out or taken to this Court
before July 1, 1891, it is held that an appeal to this Court from a
judgment entered in a circuit court November 18, 1890, appealable
before July 1, 1891, could not be taken after July 1, 1891.
Motion to dismiss. The case is stated
in the opinion.
Page 144 U. S. 571
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER delivered the
opinion of the Court.
This was a bill brought against the
receiver of an insolvent national bank and its late directors in the
Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of
Virginia, to which a demurrer was sustained, and the bill dismissed,
November 18, 1890. On August 20, 1891, an appeal was allowed to this
Court, bond for costs given and approved, and citation issued and
served. The case comes before us on a motion to dismiss.
Section 4 of the Judiciary Act of March
3, 1891, 26 Stat. 826, 827, c. 517, provides
"That no appeal, whether by writ
of error or otherwise, shall hereafter be taken or allowed from any
district court to the existing circuit courts, and no appellate
jurisdiction shall hereafter be exercised or allowed by said existing
circuit courts, but all appeals by writ of error [or] otherwise from
said district courts shall only be subject to review in the Supreme
Court of the United States or in the circuit court of appeals, hereby
established, as is hereinafter provided, and the review by appeal, by
writ of error, or otherwise, from the existing circuit courts, shall
be had only in the Supreme Court of the United States or in the
circuit courts of appeals, hereby established, according to the
provisions of this act regulating the same."
By section 14 of that act, section six
hundred and ninety-one of the Revised Statutes, and section three of
the Act of February 16, 1875, c. 77, 18 Stat. 316, and
"all acts and parts of acts
relating to appeals or writs of error inconsistent with the
provisions for review by appeals or writs of error in the preceding
sections five and six of this act"
were repealed.
By section 5, it is provided that
appeals or writs of error
Page 144 U. S. 572
may be taken from the district courts
or from the existing circuit courts direct to the supreme court in
any case in which the jurisdiction of the court is in issue; from the
final sentences and decrees in prize causes; in cases of conviction
of a capital or otherwise infamous crime; in any case involving the
construction or application of the Constitution of the United States;
in any case in which the constitutionality of any law of the United
States, or the validity or construction of any treaty made under its
authority, is drawn in question, and in any case in which the
Constitution or law of a state is claimed to be in contravention of
the Constitution of the United States. But nothing in the act was to
affect the jurisdiction of this Court in cases appealed from the
highest court of a state, nor the construction of the statute
providing for review of such cases.
In view of the general rule that if a
law conferring jurisdiction is repealed without any reservation as to
pending cases, all such cases fall with the law, Railroad Company v.
Grant, 98 U. S. 398; Gurnee v. Patrick County, 137 U. S. 141, a joint
resolution was passed on March 3, 1891, providing
"that nothing in said act shall he
held or construed in any wise to impair the jurisdiction of the
supreme court or any circuit court of the United States in any case
now pending before it,"
and it was added,
"or in respect of any case wherein
the writ of error or the appeal shall have been sued out or taken to
any of said courts before the first day of July, anno Domini eighteen
hundred and ninety-one."
26 Stat. 1115, 1116.
The case in hand did not come within
either of the six classes of cases specified in section 5, and as the
appeal was not taken until after July 1, 1891, it must be dismissed.
Wauton v. DeWolf, 142 U. S. 138. When the decree was entered,
appellants had two years thereafter in which to take an appeal to
this Court. The act and resolution of March 3, 1891, declared that
the right must be exercised prior to July 1, 1891. Although the
appellate powers of this Court are given by the Constitution, they
are nevertheless limited and regulated by acts of Congress. @ 10 U.
S. 314. In that case it was held that the affirmative description of
jurisdiction implied a "negative on the exercise of such
appellate power as is not comprehended within it." And here the
appellate jurisdiction is not left to inference, but is taken a way
in terms after the date mentioned.
Appeal dismissed.
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