168 Mo. 1 | Mo. | 1902
— This is an original proceeding, by certiorari, whereby the cause of Charles E. Pearce vs. the Wabash Railroad Company, was removed from the St. Louis Court of Appeals to this court, after final judgment in that court in favor of the plaintiff. The petition for the writ of certiorari was based upon the allegation that the St. Louis Court of Appeals\had exceeded its jurisdiction or was without jurisdiction, because “the validity of a treaty or statute of or authority exercised under the Hnited States is drawn in question” in the case of Pearce vs. the railroad aforesaid, and that the defendant in that case had invoked and been denied the protection of such Federal statute or authority. And it was upon this showing and claim that the'writ of certiorari was issued.
The record in the case of Pearce vs. the relator, certified to this court under said writ, presents this state of facts:
Pearce shipped four boxes of curios, of the value of $1,000, from Yokohama, Japan, to Wilfred Schade & Company, at St. Louis, in bond, by the Canadian Pacific Railway Company, prepaying the freight. The port of entry, specified in the clearance certificate of the Hnited States deputy consul-general, was St. Louis, where the duties were to be paid. The
The answer of the railroad sets up these facts and alleges
The plaintiff obtained judgment in the circuit court. The railroad appealed to the St. Louis Court of Appeals, where two hearings were had. The first decision was unanimous in favor of the plaintiff. Upon a rehearing being granted, the majority again decided in favor of the plaintiff. The court refused to certify the case to this court, and the dissenting judge joined in that refusal. Then this writ of certiorari was issued. The plaintiff, Pearce, moves to quash the writ on the ground that no Federal right has been denied the relator.
I.
The contention of the relator is that under the statutes of the United States, it is subrogated to the rights of the United States, and has a lien upon the goods for the import duties that were paid by its connecting road in St. Paul.
It is claimed that sections 3100 and 3102, Revised Statutes of the United States (2 Ed.), 1878, and vol. 1, Supplement to the Revised .Statutes of the United States of 1891, pages 294 and 540, give this right of subrogation.
This being the law and this the state of facts presented by the record certified to this court, it follows that no statute of or authority exercised under the United States is drawn in question in the case of Pearce v. the Wabash Railroad Company; that the laws of the United States do not contemplate that the carrier shall pay the import duties at all, at any time ■or place, but that they shall be paid at the port of entry by the consignee, and that no right of subrogation to the right or lien of the United States is conferred either expressly or impliedly by the laws of the United States upon a carrier or upon any one else. It also follows that no such right was asserted by the defendant in the circuit court by its pleadings, but that the right of subrogation asserted in its answer is an alleged equitable right of subrogation, and not a legal or equitable right conferred by the statutes of the United States.
The right of the government of the United States to .in
The case resolves itself, then, into this: No Eederal protection has been invoked and denied to the defendant by the lower courts. The case does not fall within the appellate jurisdiction of this court. The question involved is a simple question of the right of subrogation in equity. The St. Louis Court of Appeals has final appellate jurisdiction in such cases where the amount involved does not confer jurisdiction upon this court, and such is not the case here. Is this, then, a proper case for the exercise of the original and superintending jurisdiction of this court over all inferior courts of record, by the use of the writ of certiorari, under section 12 of article 6, Constitution of Missouri ? If it is, then any litigant who loses in any ordinary action involving no Eederal, or constitutional, right, would have a right to have the decision of any court reviewed by certiorari. The writ of certiorari never was intended to perform such functions. It reaches only questions of jurisdiction. It does not deal with the merits of controversies between the litigants. It acts upon judicial bodies, and their proceedings, not upon private controversies.
Eor these reasons, it is beyond dispute that the writ of certiorari was issued in this case upon a misconception of the questions presented to and decided by the St. Louis Court of Appeals, and, hence, the motion to quash the writ should be sustained.
Under these conditions, it would be improper to consider the merits of the case of Pearce v. the Wabash Railroad Company at all.
The writ of certiorari is therefore quashed.