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Murdock v. City of Memphis U.S. 590 (1875)

handle is hein.slavery/ussccases0461 and id is 1 raw text is: MURDOCK V. CITY OF MEMPHIS.

[Sup. Ct.

Syllabus.
actions on all written contracts, sealed or unsealed, began to
run against the coupons in suit from their respective ma-
turities; and accordingly            AFFIRM    THE JUDGMENT.
CLIFFORD, J.: I dissent from the opinion of the court,
upon the ground that the case is governed by our prior
decisions.
MURDOCK V. CITY OF MEMPHIS.
1. The second section of the act of Feb. 5th, 1867 (14 Stat. at Large, 385),
to amend the Judiciary Act of 1789, operates as a repeal of the
twenty-fifth section of that act; and, the act of 1867, as it is now found
in the Revised Statutes of the United State3,   709, is the sole law
governing the removal of causes from State courts to this court for
review, and has been since its enactment in 1867.
2. Congress did not intend, by omitting in this statute the restrictive clause
at the close of the twenty-fifth section of the act of 1789 (limiting the
Supreme Court to the consideration of Federal questions in cases so re-
moved) to enact affirmatively that the court should consider all other
questions involved in the case that might be necessary to a final judg-
ment or decree.
3. Nor does the language of the statute, that the judgment may be re-
examined and reversed or affirmed on a writ of error . . . in the same
manner and under the same regulatians, and the writ shall have the
same effect as if the judgment or decree complained of had been ren-
dered or passed in a court of the United States, require the examina-
tion of any other than questions of Federal law.
4. The phrase above quoted has reference to the manner of issuing the writ,
its return with the record of the case, its effect in removing the case to
this court, and the general rules of practice which govern the progress
of such cases to final judgment, and is not intended to prescribe the
considerations which should govern this court in forming that judgment.
5. But the language of the statute in making the jurisdiction of this court
dependent on the decision of certain questions by the State court against
the right set up under Federal law or authority, conveys the strongest
implication that these questions alone are to be considered Vhen the
case is brought here for revision.
6. This view is confirmed by the course of decisions in this court for eighty
years, by the policy of Congress, as shown in numerous statutes, con-
ferring the jurisdiction of this class of cases in courts of original juris-
diction, viz , the District and Circuit Courts, whether originally or by
removal from State courts, when it intends the whole case to be tried,
and by the manifest purpose which caused the passage of the law.

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