after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of-the. court.
In the trial on the merits it was shown that a shipment of live stock had been made from a point in Kentucky under a
“Mr. Hill offers in evidence for plaintiff section 190 of the constitution of the State of Kentucky, as follows:
“‘Transportation of freight and passengers by railroad, steamboat, or other carrier, shall be so regulated, by general law, as to prevent unjust discrimination. No common carrier shall be permitted to contract for relief from its common law liability.’
“Mr. Jones [for railway company] objects, that the regula-, tion as provided for in this section should accompany it, and unless it does it is irrelevant and inadmissible; that if is merely a paragraph of the constitution of the State giving the legislature and laws. He further objects to it on the ground that this suit is brought under the Georgia laws, and is not a suit on a Kentucky contract.
“Objection overruled.
“Plaintiff announces closed.
“Mr. Hill moves the court to direct a verdict for plaintiff for the amount sued for.
“Mr. Jones [for railway company] insists that the contract offered is a legal contract, and forms an issue for the jury to pass upon.”
Concerning the questions of jurisdiction raised by the pleadings, the Court.of Appeals, to winch the case was taken, held as follows: 1st. That by the requirements of §4575 of the Georgia Civil Code, and by the application of the law of the
The assignments of error are eleven in number, but when the reiterations which they contain are put out of view it is apparent on their face that, in their broadest aspect, they embrace only two questions of a Federal nature: First, that the trial court did not acquire jurisdiction over the railway company, as the levy upon the box car was a direct burden upon and at all events .was repugnant to the legislation of Congress on the subject of interstate commerce; and, second, that a right under the same legislation to the benefit of the laws of the • United States in construing the contract of shipment upon
The second proposition is, that, as the court below construed the contract of shipment upon which the cause of action depended by the law of Kentucky where it was made instead of by the laws of the United States regulating interstate commerce, thereby a Federal right was denied. But this contention is at once disposed' of by saying that the assertion of Federal right upon which it rests finds no support in the record, as it does not appear to have been urged below or called to the attention of or decided by the appellate court. On the contrary, as we- have previously shown, the contention- made at the trial by the railway company was not that the contract of
From these considerations it «¡suits that the record presents no Federal question, and the writ of error is therefore dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
Dismissed.
