after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
We are unable to discover any sufficient ground upon which to rest jurisdiction of this writ of error. The requirement of section 1 of Article IY of the Constitution, that “ full faith and credit shall be given in each State to the public acts, records and judicial proceedings of every other State,” is referred to by counsel, as also section 906 of the Eevised Statutes, which provides for the authentication of the acts of the legislature, and of the records and judicial proceedings of the courts, of any State or Territory, and concludes: “ And the said records and judicial proceedings so authenticated shall have such faith and credit given to them in every court within the United States as they have by law or usage in the courts of the State from which they are taken.” And it is contended that the New York courts did not give to the statutes and jurisprudence of Yirginia, and to the judicial proceedings in Yirginia, the faith, credit and effect that they had by law and usage at home. As to judicial proceedings, the action of the Yirginia courts was in no manner questioned by the decision under consideration. There was no judgment against the defendants in personam in Yirginia, and their liability as stockholders was not determined by the decrees which had passed there against the company. Nor were the validity and effect of the statutes of Yirginia denied, although, so far as relied on,- their proper construction and, operation were considéred by the Court of Appeals.
Our attention has been called to no case in which it has been held by the highest tribunal of Yirginia that the statutes referred to, (Code Ya. 1860, c. 66, c. 67; Code 1873, c. 67,) *368 were intended to be conclusive of, the liability of a party, who had never subscribed for stock or been ajransferee thereof in fact,' because of the presence of his name upon the books of the company without his consent or assent thereto.
In Vanderwerken v. Glenn, 85 Virginia, 14, the decision was, as stated by the Court of Appeals, that the appearance of the party, sought to be charged, on the company’s books as a stockholder, was prima facie evidence of. his being such, and this was conceded by the New York court. It is said that that was a mere common law legal presumption, and had nothing to do “ -with the statutory rights and obligations of actual dealers in the stock whose nameá appeared upon the books as holders of the stock with their knowledge and without dissent on their part, so far as the company and its creditors were concerned;” and that the New York court “went off upon the common law rule of evidence as to the appearance of stock upon , the stock books, in respect of strangers, and utterly ignored and rejected the constitutional credit and effect due to the said statutes of Virginia in respect of persons actually dealing in such stock, and -whose names appeared upon the books of the company as holders and owners of stock in the ordinary and regular course of its business as conducted under those statutes.” But this involves in large part a consideration of the case upon the merits, and begs the question whether upon the facts these defendants occupied the position plaintiff ascribes to them.
If we were to assume jurisdiction of^this case, it is evident that the question submitted would be, not whether the decision of the New York court was against a right specially set up and claimed under the Constitution of the United States, or necessarily arising, but whether in that ■ decision error intervened in the construction of the' statutes of Virginia. If every time the courts of a State put a construction upon the statutes of another State, this court may be required to determine whether that construction was of was not correct, upon the ground that if it were concluded that the construction was incorrect, it would follow that the state- courts had refused to give full faith and credit to the statutes involved, *369 our jurisdiction would be enlarged in a manner never heretofore'believed to have been contemplated.
The distinction, between the construction of a statute and the validity of .a statute has frequently been adverted to by this court.
Baltimore & Potomac Railroad
v.
Hopkins,
This record may be searched in vain for any proof that, as matter of fact, the public acts of Virginia had, by.law or usage in Virginia, any other effect than was given them in New York; nor can the contention of counsel, that the *370 Virginia statutes should be construed according to their views, be treated as the equivalent of the express assertion of a right arising under the Constitution of laws of the United States.
Writ of error dismissed.
