v.
Peck
Lead Opinion
This action was prosecuted by appellee in the Cass Circuit Court to recover for personal injuries sustained on account of the negligence of appellant railway company. Prom a judgment awarding appellee the sum of $4,000, appellant, through its counsel, prayed and took an appeal to the Appellate Court, and the cause was docketed as an appeal pending in such court. Under the assign [*565] ment of errors, that each paragraph of the complaint was insufficient in facts, appellant’s counsel sought to raise the question that section one of the employers’ liability act (Acts 1893, p. 294, §8017 Burns 1908), upon which section it is claimed the action is founded, is unconstitutional, for the alleged reason that it violates the 14th amendment of the Constitution of the United States, because it denies to appellant the equal protection of the law. Thereupon appellant, through its same counsel who had appealed to the Appellate Court, moved that the latter court transfer the appeal to the Supreme Court, for the reason that the Appellate Court had no jurisdiction to decide the constitutional validity of §8017, supra. This motion the Appellate Court sustained, and transferred this appeal to the Supreme Court, and it was thereupon docketed by the clerk as a cause pending therein. On March 1, 1909, appellee moved that the Supreme Court remand and transfer this cause to the Appellate Court, on the gmmd that it had been decided by the Supreme Court in Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Rogers (1907), 168 Ind. 483, that the constitutional validity of §8017, supra, had been settled, and that the jurisdiction over the appeal was therefore lodged in the Appellate Court, as the judgment below was for $4,000. On March 9, after having fully considered the question of jurisdiction over this appeal, the Supreme Court, on the authority of Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Rogers, supra, again Reaffirmed that case, and held that the constitutional validity of the employers ’ liability act, as sought to be presented in the case at bar, had been fully determined and finally settled, and therefore the jurisdiction over the appeal was not in the Supreme Court, but was, under the law, lodged in the Appellate Court, and thereupon ordered and adjudged that this appeal be transferred to the latter court. See Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Peck (1909), ante, 19.
In the case of Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Rogers, supra, it appears that in five cases therein cited the employers’ lia [*566] bxlity act has been upheld as not being antagonistic either to the Constitution of Indiana or to the 14th amendment of the Constitution of the United States. It was further shown in the case last cited that appellant herein was also the appellant in each of the four appeals therein cited, in which it unsuccessfully assailed the constitutional validity of the employers ’ liability act. In Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Ross (1907), 169 Ind. 3, which is cited in Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Rogers, supra, the Supreme Court said: ‘ ‘ The appeal was taken directly to this court upon the claim that a constitutional question is involved and presented by the record for decision. The action is founded upon section one of the employers’ liability act' (Acts 1893, p. 294, §7083 Burns 1901). The validity of this act, so far as it applies to railroads, was upheld in the case of Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Montgomery (1898], 152 Ind. 1, 69 L. R. A. 875, 71 Am. St. 300, and that holding has been twice reaffirmed since this appeal was filed, in response to contentions of this appellant, and the constitutional validity of the law must be regarded as settled. Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Lightheiser [1907], 168 Ind. 438; Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Collins [1907], 168 Ind. 467.”
[*567] Upon the transfer to the Appellate Court of the appeal of Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Rogers, supra, that court considered and decided the cause upon its merits. In the course óf the opinion the court, speaking through Rabb, J., said: “Appellant presents an argument against the constitutionality of the employers’ liability act, involved in this case. This court has no jurisdiction to pass upon the question so discussed. The constitutionality of the law has been upheld by the Supreme Court in the cases of Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Lightheiser (1904), 163 Ind. 247, 256, and Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Lightheiser (1907), 168 Ind. 438, and, this case having been transferred from the Supreme Court to this. Court, it is conclusively presumed that the question discussed is not involved in this ease.” Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Rogers (1910), 45 Ind. App. —.
In Griffee v. Town of Summitville (1894), 10 Ind. App. 332, and Wagner v. Carskadon (1902), 28 Ind. App. 573, the Appellate Court held that the transfer of a cause by order of the Supreme Court necessarily determined the question of jurisdiction. In Van Camp, etc., Iron Co. v. O’Brien (1902), 28 Ind. App. 152, the appellant insisted that the act of 1899, which placed the burden of proving contributory negligence, in a personal injury case, upon the defendant, was unconstitutional. The Appellate Court, in that ease, in an opinion by Comstock, J., in referring to the constitutional question there raised, said: “Counsel asks that for this reason [the invalidity of the act] the cause be transferred to the Supreme Court. Counsel for appellant has presented a learned and lengthy argument, citing many decisions in support of this position. But the case of Southern Ind. R. Co. v. Peyton [1902], 157 Ind. 690, decided by the Supreme Court since appellant’s brief was written, holding the act constitutional as against the objections here urged, renders the transfer of the case to the Supreme Court unnecessary.” In addition to these cases, the records in the office of the Clerk of the Supreme and Appellate Courts dis [*568] close six or seven other cases, each of which was originally appealed to the Appellate Court, and by it transferred to the Supreme Court, and by the latter court retransferred to the Appellate Court and therein decided. The decisions of the Appellate Court, to which we have referred, certainly serve to show that the latter has uniformly, in the past, regarded and held that an order of the Supreme Court transferring an appeal to the Appellate Court, was, in effect, final and conclusive upon the latter court, at least until such order was set aside by the Supreme Court.
After the enactment of said act of 1891, creating the Appellate Court, the Supreme Court, in Benson v. Christian (1891), 129 Ind. 535, had occasion to consider and pass upon the question of its jurisdiction under said act, and the right [*570] of the Appellate Court finally to determine in an appeal therein whether a constitutional question was involved in the ease. In the latter appeal this court, speaking by Elliott, J., said! “The element which carries the appeal to this court is the one introduced by the attack upon the validity of the act, for where the question of the validity of a statute is fairly debatable, and does not rest on mere assertion, jurisdiction is in this court. Ex parte Sweeney [1891], 126 Ind. 583. This must be true, for if the Appellate Court could determine whether there was or was not a constitutional question involved, it would, in deciding that question, necessarily decide whether an appeal lies in the Supreme Court, and this would violate the fundamental rule that the higher court must determine its own jurisdiction; and it would also defeat the manifest purpose of the statute creating the Appellate Court. It is obvious that the court of last resort must determine the right of appeal; for if it were otherwise it would be in the power of a court of intermediate jurisdiction to prevent, by its decisions, a cause from reaching the court where the authoritative ultimate judgment must be pronounced. The authorities, however, so fully settle this question that prolonged discussion is unnecessary.” After this latter decision the legislature, in the light thereof, at its next session in 1893 discovered that it had violated a fundamental rule by declaring in section twenty-five of said act of 1891 that the action of the Appellate Court in transferring appeals to the Supreme Court should be final. Consequently, at said session it proceeded to amend section twenty-five of the original act. Acts 1893, p. 29, §3, §1429 Burns ,1908. By this amendatory act it was provided: “In any case wherein an appeal has been taken from a lower court to the Appellate Court, and the same should have been taken to the Supreme Court, it shall be the duty of the Appellate Court on its motion to cause such case to be transferred to the Supreme Court, and in any cause where an appeal has been taken to the Supreme Court when it should [*571] have been to the Appellate Court, it shall be the duty of the Supreme Court of its own motion, to cause such case to be transferred to the Appellate Court, and the action of such court in making such transfer shall he final.” (Our italics.)
By comparison it will readily be seen that the provision, ‘and' the action of each of said courts in making such transfer'shall be final,” as contained in the original section, was eliminated, and it was b^ the amendatory act declared, not that the action of each of the courts in making a transfer “shall be final,” but finality was accorded only to the action of the Supreme Court in transferring an appeal to the Appellate Court. The language of the section as amended is: “In any cause where an appeal has been taken to the Supreme Court when it should have been to the Appellate Court, it shall be the duty of the Supreme Court * * * to cause such case to be transferred to the Appellate Court, and the action of such court in making such transfer shall be final.”
It is evident that the words “such court,” as employed in section twenty-five as amended (Acts 1893, supra), were intended to and did refer only to the Supreme Court, as it was the action of that court which was last mentioned. Evans v. State (1898), 150 Ind. 651; Summerman v. Knowles (1868), 33 N. J. L. 202; 27 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law (2d ed.), 361.
By an act of the Legislature, approved March 12, 1901 (Acts 1901, p. 565, §1337a ct seq. Burns 1901), entitled “An act concerning appeals, increasing the number of judges of [*572] the Appellate Court, * * * defining’ their jurisdiction and the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court, repealing former laws, ’ ’ etc., the legislature revised and changed the law pertaining to the jurisdiction of the Supreme and Appellate Courts. Section twenty-one of this act declares that “all laws and parts of laws inconsistent with this act are hereby repealed.” Section thirteen of said act (§1337m, supra), provides as follows: “If any case^is erroneously appealed to the wrong court, that court shall make an order for its transfer to the proper court; and the appeal shall stand as if originally filed in the right court. ’ ’ • The Appellate Court in its opinion does not refer to this section, but proceeds upon the theory that section twenty-five, supra, is still in force, and governs the question of transfer of appeals from the Supreme to the Appellate Court and vice versa. Section thirteen, supra, being the later expression of the legislature in regard to the transfer of cases appealed to the wrong court, must be held to have repealed section twenty-five, supra, as amended, upon that question so far as the latter section is inconsistent or in conflict with the provisions of said section thirteen.
In the opinion of the Appellate Court upon the transfer here in question it is said: “We are convinced that, when this court, by its order, transferred this cause to the Supreme Court, it lost jurisdiction of the cause, and the order of the Supreme Court transferring the cause back to this court did not revest it with jurisdiction. If this be true, any decision this court might render upon the merits of this appeal would be void. While the wording of the statute under which this cause was transferred to the Supreme Court is to us perfectly clear and certain, yet, if, by any possible construction, a meaning other than that we have attributed to it can be given whereby said order of retransfer revested the Appellate Court with jurisdiction of this cause, it ought not to be [*574] stricken from the docket of this court, and for that reason we shall presume validity for said retransfer, and proceed under said section twenty-five, which provides ‘that in any ease pending in the Appellate Court, in which said Appellate Court shall conclude that any decision of the Supreme Court should be overruled or modified, it shall be their duty to transfer said cause, with their opinion of what the law should be held to be, to the Supreme Court, and the Supreme court shall thereupon have jurisdiction of and decide the entire case, the same.as if it had original jurisdiction thereof, and it may either modify, overrule or affirm its former decision, on that question as it shall deem right, and such decision of the Supreme Court shall be final.’ ” Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Peck (1909), 44 Ind. App. 62.
In Coulter v. Bradley (1904), 37 Ind. App. 697, the Appellate Court said: “For the reasons herein expressed, and upon the grounds shown in our original opinion, we will grant a rehearing, and, under the provision of §1337j Bums 1901, Acts 1901, p. 565, §10, will transfer the cause to the Supreme Court for its further consideration of the question of practice involved.” Cases of the Appellate Court other than those cited might be noted, but the ones cited will suffice.
[*576]
We reaffirm and hold, for the reasons given, that jurisdiedietion over this appeal is not in the Supreme Court, but in the Appellate Court, and we are constrained to conclude that the order of the Appellate Court, retransferring this ease to the Supreme Court, was, for the reasons herein shown, without authority of law. It is therefore ordered and ad [*578] judged that this appeal be retransferred to the Appellate Court, and that it be restored to the docket of that court, and given the same position thereon which it occupied on June 4, 1909, the date of the order of transfer as made by the Appellate Court.
Concurrence
Concurring Opinion.
I concur in the holding that the judgment of the Supreme Court upon the subject of jurisdiction is final and binding upon the Appellate Court, but in my opinion the case of Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co. v. Rogers (1907), 168 Ind. 483, should be overruled, that the first order transferring this cause to the Appellate Court should be vacated, and that in all eases wherein a constitutional question is involved and duly presented, however devoid of merit, jurisdiction over the entire case is lodged in the Supreme Court.