delivered the opinion of the Court. '
On April 24, 1911, as authorized by the laws of Virginia, the judge of the Circuit Court of Princess Anne County, Virginia, of his own motion, appointed three persons, styled viewers, to examine and report upon the condition Of three turnpikes, situated in the county and owned by the plaintiff in error. The viewers reported the turnpikes to be in bad condition and made recommendations as to the work necessary to be done to put them in good order. The Turnpike Company appealed from the report of the viewers to the Circuit Court. On the hearing of the appeal various motions were made on behalf of the Turnpike Company, to the overruling of which exception was taken, and which will be hereafter referred to, and an order was *266 entered as authorized by a statute suspending the taking of tolls on the turnpike until they were put in proper repair. The effect of the order, however, was suspended by the making of an application to the Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia for the allowance of an appeal and a writ of error to the order of the Circuit Court. The application however was rejected by an order reading as follows:
“In the Supreme Court of Appeals, Held at the .Library Building in the City of Richmond on Thursday, the l'lth Day of January, 1912.
“The petition of the Norfolk & Suburban Turnpike Company, a corporation, for a writ, of error and super-, sedeas to a judgment or order entered by the Óircuit,Court of Princess Anne County, on the -12th day of December, 1911, in certain proceedings, pending in said court, whereby the collection of tolls by the said, petitioner on certain sections of a turnpike located in said county was suspended, having been maturely considered and the transcript of the record of the judgment or order aforesaid seen and inspected, the court being of opinion that the said judgment or order is plainly right, doth reject said petition.”
A writ of error addressed to the Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia was then allowed by the President of that court. It was therein recited that the Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia had “refused a writ of error, thereby affirming said judgment of said Circuit Court of Princess Anne County, Virginia.” The same judicial officer also approved the bond and signed the citation. The Commonwealth of Virginia, however, was named as the obligee in the bond, and the citation was directed to that State as the ‘‘defendant in error.” The Attorney General of the State, who states in his brief that he inadvertently signed as “Commonwealth’s attorney of Princess Anne County,” acknowledged service of the citation and entered the appearance of the- Commonwealth in this court “without ad *267 mitting that the Commonwealth of Virginia is a proper party and reserving all rights.”
Appearing for the defendant in error, the Attorney General of Virginia moves to dismiss the writ of error, “because this court has no jurisdiction,” or to affirm the order and judgment below “because the questions on which jurisdiction depend are so frivolous as not to need further argument.”
The motion to dismiss is based upon the contention that the appearance in this court is a qualified one and “that the appeal was improvidently awarded in this Case, that the Commonwealth of Virginia has nowhere hi the proceedings been made a party, and is not.now a proper party in this case.”- But although the Commonwealth of Virginia was not named as a party to-the proceedings initiated by the judge .of the Circuit Court, it is not claimed that, those proceedings were not in reality begun and prosecuted on behalf of the Commonwealth, which in effect must have been the conclusion of the President of the Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia when he approved the bond and allowed the citation, as shown by the recitals in those papers to which we have heretofore referred. The grounds of the motion are therefore without merit.
Pearson
v.
Yewdall,
But aside from the propositions on which the motion to dismiss‘rests and which we have disposed of, there is an additional ground to which on our own motion wé deem it necessary to refer, that is, the existence of a possible doubt as to our jurisdiction begotten by the form in which the court expressed the action taken by it concerning the proceedings to review the order or judgment of the trial court. Thus although the Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia denied a writ of error to the Circuit Court because it was of opinion that the order of the lower court was “plainly right,” it does not affirmatively appear whether, by this action, the court was merely declining
*268
to take jurisdiction of the case or in effect was asserting jurisdiction and disposing of the case upon the meiits by giving the sanction of an affirmance of the judgment of the trial court. This writ of error runs to the Supreme Court of Appeals and not to the trial court. In view of the ambiguity it is unquestioned that the writ of error would have to be dismissed if we applied the ruling in the
Western Union Telegraph Company
v.
Crovo,
*270 Upon the merits, we are of opinion that the alleged Federal questions are so plainly wanting in merit as not to justify the retention of the cause for oral argument. The supposed Federal questions are embodied in three motions made in the Circuit Court. By motion No. 1 the Circuit Court was asked to dismiss the proceedings because, as the statute, in the event the report of the viewers was confirmed, authorized the public until the turnpikes were put in repair to use the' same for the purpose of travel and passage without payment of toll or other compensation, a taking of the property of the plaintiff in error for public use without just compensation was authorized, in violation of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Motion No. 2 embodied a request that the court should not enter judgment affirming the report of the viewers because, for the same reasons specified in the first motion, the judgment-would operate to deprive the plaintiff in error of its property without due process of law, in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. By motion No; 3 it was in effect claimed that the turnpikes in question were not profitable, that plaintiff went into possession of the roads in July, 1908, and had operated the same continuously; that no complaint had theretofore been made as to the .condition of the roads; that the statute under which the proceeding was prosecuted fixed the tolls to be charged, and that substantially all the revenue derived from the tolls had been judiciously employed in keeping the roads in repair, and that they had been kept “in as good repair as possible with the revenue received therefrom.” It was alleged that to enter a judgment suspending the collection of tolls under such circumstances would violate the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The refusal of the court to hear evidence'to substantiate the claim made in this motion and the overruling of the motion were duly excepted tó. It nowhere appears in the record that there was even a suggestion that the *271 statute in question invaded contract rights as to the tolls to be charged, nor was it claimed that since the acquisition by plaintiff in error of his rights therein the legislature of Virginia in regulating the turnpikes had altered the tolls. On the contrary in the brief of counsel for the Commonwealth the statement is made that “this statute.has been a law of Virginia, with little change, since February 7, 1817,”. and there has been no denial of this statement. The motions below did not, therefore, amount to a claim against the rates per se, but simply asserted that as the travel on the turnpikes was not sufficient to cause their operation to be profitable, jshat is to say, to produce a sufficient revenue to enable the roads to be kept in good order, therefore the obligation imposed by the statute and voluntarily assumed ought not to be enforced. The mere statement of this proposition is sufficient to establish its' entire want of merit. To suspend the taking of tolls while the roads were out of repair manifestly was not a taking of property, but was simply a method provided by statute to enforce the discharge of the public duty respecting the safe and convenient maintenance of a public highway. In other words, as observed by the Attorney General for the Commonwealth, the burden of keeping the turnpikes in repair was made a condition precedent to the right to collect tolls.
Affirmed.
