delivered the opinion of the court.
It is contended by defendants in error' that, whatever questions may be found in the case, the -decision of the Supreme Court of Alabama was upon a question not of a Federal character, and one broad enough to sustain the judgment, and, therefore, that this court has no jurisdiction, and should dismiss the case.
Hale
v. Akers,
As the mortgage to the State was executed some months before the contracts with Bagley, the title held by the State of Alabama under the bankruptcy proceedings would
prima
*135
facie
be paramount to that acquired by Bagley.
Wilson
v.
Boyce,
*136 Section 4 of the act of Congress of June, 1856, is as follows:
“ Sec. 4. And l>e it further enacted, That the lands hereby-granted to said State shall be disposed of by said State only in manner following, that is to say : That a quantity of land, not exceeding one hundred and twenty sections for each of said roads, and included within a continuous length of twenty miles of each of said roads, may be sold; and when the governor of said State shall certify to - the Secretary of the Interior that any twenty continuous miles of any of said roads is completed, then another quantity of land hereby granted, not to exceed one hundred and twenty sections for. each of said roads, having twenty continuous miles completed as aforesaid, and included within a continuous length of twenty miles of each of such roads, may be sold; and so, from time to time, • until said roads are completed; and if any of said roads is. not completed within ten years, no further sale shall be made, and the lands unsold shall révert to the United States.”
■ These lands confessedly were not part of the.first one hundred and twenty sections, which the State might sell prior to the construction of any portion of the road, and there is • no pretence that at the time of 'these contracts of Bagley’s any certificate had been made by the governor of the State to the Secretary of the Interior, as provided in ’the act. The Supreme Court, in its first opinion, held that, under the act of 1870 and the reservation in .the mortgage, the railroad company had absolutely no power to sell until the making of that certificate; and that any attempted sale made prior thereto was a nullity, not voidable, but ¿bsolutóly void. Now, whether that was a correct construction or not of the act of 1870 and the reservation of the mortgage, is a purely local question, and involves nothing of a Federal character. The question is not what rights passed to the State under the acts of Congress, but what authority the railroad company had under the statute of the State. The' construction of. such a statute is a-matter for'the state court, and its determination thereof is binding on this court. The fact that the state statute and the mortgage refer to certain acts of Congress as prescribing the rule and measure of the rights granted by the *137 State, does not make the determination of such, rights a Federal question. A State may prescribe the procedure in the Federal courts as the rule of practice in its own tribunals; it may authorize the disposal of its own lands in- accordance with the provisions for the sale of the public lands of the United States; and in such cases an examination may be necessary of the acts of Congress, the rules of the Federal courts, and the practices of the Land Department, and yet the questions for decision would not be of a Federal character. The inquiry along Federal lines is only incidental to a determination of the local question of what the State has required and prescribed. The matter decided is one of state rule and practice. The facts by which that state rule and practice are determined may be of a Federal origin.
We see nothing in the cases of
St. Louis &c. Railway Co.
v. McGee,
Our conclusion, therefore, is that as the construction of the statute of 1870 and following mortgage presented no question of a Federal nature — as upon that construction thé Supreme Court decided the cáse —■ and as such question is sufficiently broad to sustain the judgment, the case must be
Dismissed.
