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State National Bank v. St. Louis Rail-Fastening Company/Opinion of the Court

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United States Supreme Court

122 U.S. 21

State National Bank  v.  St. Louis Rail-Fastening Company

 Argued: --- --- Decided: May 23, 1887.

Mr. Justice GRAY, after stating the case as above reported, delivered the opinion of the court.

The matter in dispute being less than $5,000, the jurisdiction of this court depends upon the certificate of division of opinion, in which the only question certified is whether, upon all the facts found by the court, the plaintiff has the legal right to recover upon the checks in controversy. But the office of a certificate of a division of opinion between two judges in the circuit court is to submit to this court one or more points of law, and not the whole case, nor the general question whether upon all the facts, as a agreed by the parties in a case stated, or specially found by the court when a trial by jury has been waived, the judgment should be for the one party or the other.

In Harris v. Elliott, 10 Pet. 25, one of the questions certified was, 'upon the facts stated, whether the plaintiffs have any right or title to the lands taken for streets, in which the trespass is supposed to have been committed, and can maintain their said action.' This court held that it could express no opinion upon that question, because, as said by Mr. Justice THOMPSON in delivering judgment, it 'is too general, embracing the merits of the whole case, and dos not present any single point or question; and it has been repeatedly ruled in this court that the whole case cannot be brought here, under the act of 1802, upon such a general question.' The subsequent decisions under the successive acts of congress upon this subject are uniformly to the same effect. U.S. v. Briggs, 5 How. 208; Nesmith v. Sheldon, 6 How. 41; Waterville v. Van Slyke, 116 U.S. 699, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 622; Williamsport Bank v. Knapp, 119 U.S. 357, 7 Sup. Ct. Rep. 274.

The necessary conclusion is that the question certified cannot be answered, and that the writ of error must be dismissed.


Notes

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This work is in the public domain in the United States because it is a work of the United States federal government (see 17 U.S.C. 105).

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