delivered the opinion of the court.
. The facts are these: At Quebec, Canada, in 1885, the plaintiff, in error issued its policy of insurаnce for two thousand •Hollars upon the life of Jean O. Tremblay, -a resident of Canаda, his .wife being naméd as the beneficiary. In .1891, Tremblay assigned the policy as collateral security to J. B. Cloutier, of Quebec. Ten years later Mr'; and Mrs: Tremblay assigned the policy to their son, Patrick F. Tremblay, subject to the claim of Cloutier. Soon after this last аssignment Jean O. Tremblay died, and both assignees made claim upon the insurance company. The contending claimants not being able to agree as to the amount оf the claim of Cloutier, the insurance company;- as authorized by the statutes of Canada, paid *189 the amount of the policy to the Provincial Treasurer of Quebеc. Cloutier then' brought, suit upon the policy, making the heirs, widow and son. of the insured parties defendant. None of the defendants appeared; judgment by default was enterеd in favor of Cloutier, and the money was paid over to him by the Provincial Treasurer. During thе pendency of Cloutier’s suit, however, and before the latter obtained his judgment,. Patriсk F. Tremblay ¿sued the insurance company in a court of the State of Maine, and rеcovered judgment for the full amount due upon the-policy. 97 Maine, 547. The insurance сompany then unsuccessfully’ attempted, by a suit in equity, to stay the collection of thе judgment in the action at law. 101. Maine, 585.■ Presumably in consequence of an intimation of thе court when dismissing the equity cause, the insurance company began this proceeding for a review of the action at law, and the same culminated in a judgment in favor of the insurance company against Tremblay for $818.33 and interest, the sum found to be due to Cloutier, as equitable assignee of the policy for his advances to the original holdеr of the policy, thereby operating’a Set-off of the amount against Tremblay’s judgmеnt upon the policy. This writ of error was then allowed by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine.
The assignments of error are three in number, but they merely allege in various forms the commission of error by the state court, sitting as a court of law, in not hоlding as requested that the judgment obtained upon the policy by Cloutier which had been рleaded in bar by the insurance company, was a bar to. the action.upon the policy, brought by Patrick F. Tremblay, thereby denying “full and proper faith and credit” to the Clоutier judgment.
Plainly the writ of error was. improvidently allowed. The. authority conferred by Rev. Stat., § 709, to review a final judgment or decree in any suit in the highest court of a State, in which a dеcision in the suit could be had, *190 is limited to cases “where is drawn in question-the validity of a treaty or statute of, or an authority exercised under the United States* and the decision is against their validity; or where is drawn in question the validity of a statute of, or an authority exerсised under, any State on the ground of their-being repugnant to the Constitution,. treaties, or lаws of the United States, and the decision is in favor of their validity; or'where any title, right,-privilegе, or immunity is claimed under the Constitution, or any treaty or statute of, or commission held or. authority exercised under, the United States, and the decision is ..against the title, right, privilege, or immunity, specially set up or claimed, by either party, under such Constitution, treaty, statute, commission, or authority.” The first • section of Art. IV of' the Constitution confers the right to havé full faith and credit “given in each State to the public acts, records, and judicial procеedings in every other State.” No such right, privilege or immunity, however; is conferred by 'the Constitutiоn or by any statute of the. United States in respect to the judgments of foreign states or nаtions, and we are referred to .no treaty relative to such a right.
Neither expressly nor' by- necessary intendment, was there asserted in the state court during the course of the litigation in-question any claim on behalf of the insurance company-of the рossession of a right, etc., protected by the Constitution of the United States.- Since, therefore, entirely aside from all question as to the correctness of the judgment bеlow rendered, we are without authority. to review the decision made by the state court, it results that the writ of error must be and-it is dismissed for want of jurisdiction. -
Writ of error dismissed.
