after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court. •
Diversity of citizenship did not exist, and the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court rested solely on the ground that the cause of action arose under the Constitution of the United States. The appeal lay directly to this court under section five of the J udiciary Act of March 3, 1891, and not to the Circuit Court of Appeals.
American Sugar Refining Company
v.
New
Orleans,
In
Pullman's Palace Car Company,
v.
Central Transportation Company,
The questions on the merits are, however, presented for disposition on the direct appeal from the Circuit Court.
In
Shelby County
v.
Union and Planters' Bank,
But the bank objects that notwithstanding this court has thus held that the exemption asserted does not exist, it must nevertheless be recognized, in this case, as existing, because it was so determined by the 'judgment- pleaded as
res judicata.
The judgment thus relied, on as a bar to this assessment is reported ■in
Memphis
v.
Union and Planters' Bank,
91 Tennessee, 546, (1892,) which involved the assessment of municipal taxes, for the years 1887 to 1891 inclusive, on the capital stock of the bank, and a privilege tax for the years 1889, 1890 and 1891.
*75
The Supreme Court of Tennessee there held in deference to the supposed scope of the decisions of this court in
Farrington
v.
Tennessee,
In
Bank
v.
Memphis,
101 Tennessee, 154, (1898,) the conclusion announced in
Shelby Countyr
v.
Bank,
As the judgment relied on as
res judicata
was not so regarded in
Shelby County
v. Bank, it could not be properly so regarded in the present case; but, apart from that, it is enough that in Tennessee the doctrine of
resjudioata
is not applicable to taxes for years other than those under consideration in the particular case, inasmuch as what effect a judgment of a state court shall have as
res judicata
is a' question of state or local law, and the taxes involved in this suit are taxes for years other than those involved in the prior adjudication.
Phœnix Fire and Marine Insurance Company
v.
Tennessee,
In
New Orleans
v.
Citizens' Bank,
As the judgment pleaded had no force or effect in the Tennessee state courts other than as a bar to the identical taxes litigated in the suit, the courts of the United States can accord it no greater efficacy.
Cooper
v.
Newell,
The litigation over the alleged exemption has been protracted, and many decisions have been rendered in this court and in the highest tribunal of Tennessee in respect of it. They are re *76 viewed by Lurton, J., in the Circuit Court of-Appeals, 111 Fed. Rep. 561.
Decree of the Circuit Court in No. 67 affirmed.
Decree of the Circuit Court of Appeals in No. 221 reversed • with a direction to dismiss the appeal a/nd writ of error.
