delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a writ of error directed to the court of last resort of a State since the taking effect of the Act of September 6, 1916, c. 448, 39 Stat. 726, by the second section of which § 237, Judicial Code, was so amended that the revisory jurisdiction of this court over the decisions of state courts, exercisable by writ of error, was confined to cases involving the validity of a treaty or statute of, or an authority exercised under the United States, the decision being against their validity, or involving the validity of a statute of, or an authority exercised under a State, on the ground of repugnancy to the Constitution, treaties, or laws of the United States, the decision being in favor of their validity; and by which the final judgment or decree of a state court of last resort based upon a decision adverse to a right or immunity claimed under the Constitution or a statute of the United States, previously reviewable by writ of error, was (with other kinds specified) made reviewable only in case this court, in the exercise of its discretionary authority, should require, “by writ of certiorari or otherwise,” that the judgment be certified to it for review. See
Philadelphia & Reading Coal & Iron Co.
v.
Gilbert,
In the case before us the questions raised by the record and assignments of error relate wholly to the alleged denial by the Supreme Court of Iowa of certain rights and immunities asserted by plaintiff in error under the Act of Congress approved April 22, 1908, commonly known as the Employers’ Liability Act (c. 149, 35 Stat. 65; c. 143, 36 Stat. 291). Hence, under the new system established by thé Act of 1916, the judgment is in the class *166 of those that are reviewable in this court not by writ of error but by writ of certiorari.
By § 7 of the latter act it was provided that the right of review under existing laws in respect of judgments entered before the act took effect (October 6, 1916) should remain unaffected for the period of six months thereafter, but at the end of that time should cease. The present writ of error was applied for within the six-months period— December 19, 1916 — and the question whether our jurisdiction is properly invoked by this form of writ depends upon whether the judgment sought to be reviewed was “entered before this act takes effect” within the meaning of § 7.
The action was brought against the railway company in a district court to recover damages for the death of plaintiff’s intestate, and a trial by jury resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff. Defendant appealed to the Supreme Court of Iowa, and that court on November 26,1915, delivered an opinion for affirmance (
We think this was a correct statement of the effective date of the judgment sought to be reviewed.
Section 237, Judicial Code, both before and since the
*167
amendment of September 6, 1916, permits of the review by this court only of the final judgment or decree of the highest state court in which a decision in the suit could be had. It is only a judgment marking the conclusion of the course of litigation in the courts of the State that is subjected to our review. Hence, whatever its form of finality, if a judgment be in fact subject to reconsideration and review by the state court of last resort through the medium of a petition for rehearing, and such a petition is presented to and entertained and considered by that court, we must take it that by the practice prevailing in the State the litigation is 'not brought to a conclusion until this petition is disposed of, and until then the judgment previously rendered can not be regarded as a final judgment within the meaning of the act of Congress. We said recently in an analogous case: “If it were not so, a judgment of a state court susceptible of being reviewed by this court would, notwithstanding that duty, be open at the same time to the power of a state court to review and reverse.”
Andrews
v.
Virginian Ry. Co.,
Writ of error dismissed.
