delivered the opinion of the court.
This suit was brought by George A. Bowman, a citizen of Nebraska, and Fred. W. Bowman, a citizen of Iowa, against the Chicago and Northwestern Railway Company, an Illinois corporation, doing business as- a common carrier of goods for .hire between Chicago, Illinois, and Council Bluffs, Iowa, to recover damages for a refusal of th'e company to receive and carry one thousand kegs of beer from* Chicago to Marsha,11town, a city on the line of its road, in the State of Iowa. There are two counts in the declaration on the same cause of action, and' in each it is stated that the damages sustained amount to $1200. The suit was begun February 11, 1885, and the declaration was filed about that time-. Pleas were filed by the company February 26, setting up as an excuse for not receiving and carrying the goods, a statute of Iowa which made it a penal offence for any railroad company to knowingly bring within that State any intoxicating liquors for a person who did not have a propér certificate authorizing him to sell such, articles, and that the. plaintiffs had no such certificate, and that the beer which was offered for transportation was an intoxicating liquor within the meaning of the statute. On the 8th of May the plaintiffs demurred to these pleas, and on the 11th of the same month amended their declaration, by leave of the court, so as to increase the damages demanded to $10,000. The demurrer to the pleas was overruled on the same day, and on the 23d of June a written stipulation was filed in the cause, as follows:
“ It is hereby, stipulated and agreed by and between the respective-parties hereto that, in making up the record of this cause to be transmitted to the Supreme Court of the United *613 States, the clerk of this court shall only transmit or copy into the record the amended declaration showing the ad [quod] damnum to be $10,000, and the pleas of the defendant to said declaration, together with the demurrer thereto, and the ruling of the court thereon.”
Afterwards, and‘on the 13th of July, judgment was entered in favor of the defendant. To reverse that judgment this writ of error was brought, and docketed here October 21. At a later day in the term the cause was submitted under Rule 20 on printed briefs.
Upon the face of this record it is apparent that the actual value of the matter in dispute is not sufficient to give us jurisdiction. It is now well settled tha,t our jurisdiction in an action upon a money demand is governed by the value of the actual matter in dispute in this court, as shown by the whole record, and not by the damages claimed or the prayer for judgment alone.
Lee
v.
Watson,
It is suggested, however, that' the case falls within the fourth subdivision of Rev. Stat. § 699, which gjves this court jurisdiction, “without regard to the sum or value in dispute,” for the. review of “ any final judgment at law or final decree in equity of any Circuit Court, or of any District Court acting as a Cir *615 cuit Court, in any case brought on account of the deprivation of any right, privilege, or immunity secured' by the Constitution of the United States, or of any right or privilege of a . citizen of the United States.”
The authority for making this a part of the Revised Statutes is found in what are known as the “ Civil Rights ” acts of April 9, 1866, 14 Stat. 27, ch. 31, §§ 1, 3, 10; May 31, 1870, 16 Stat. 144, ch. 114, §§ 16, 18; and April 20,1871,17, Stat. 13, ch. 22, §§ 1, 2. In the original statutes this provision was applicable only to the particular rights, privileges and' immunities therein mentioned. In the Revised Statutes it stands separate from the other parts of the old acts, and is to be construed accordingly, but with reference to the general rules of interpretation applicable .to the revision. We deem it unnecessary to consider now whether it has, in its present form, a more extended meaning than it had originally, because, in our opinion, this is not a case to which it can, in any event, be applied. The alleged right of which these plaintiffs have been deprived is one secured to them, if secured at all, not by the Constitution, but by that principle of general law which requires a common carrier of goods for hire to carry, whenever he is asked to do so, within the general scope of his professed business, and for a reasonable reward. It grows out of the duty which in law a common carrier owes to the public at large, and is no more secured by the Constitution than are. any other of the ordinary transactions of business. Whether the railroad company is excused from .the performance of that duty by the statute on which it relies may depend on the Constitution. If the statute is' constitutional, the plaintiffs are deprived of the right which they would otherwise have had in law, but if not, , the railway company must carry for them. This, not because the Constitution requires it, but because the statute does not furnish a sufficient excuse for not carrying. The question is not, therefore, whether the plaintiffs have been deprived of a right which the Constitution has secured to them, but whether a right ".existing without the Constitution', has been lawfully taken away. The case may be one arising under the Constitution, within the meaning of that term, as used in other statutes, but *616 it is not one brought on account of the.deprivation of a right, privilege or immunity secured by the Constitution^ within the meaning of this provision.
The writ of error is
Dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
