HARTER ACT. See MARITIME LAW.
HIGHWAYS. See CONSTITUTIONAL LAW, 2;
STREETS AND HIGHWAYS.
HOMESTEAD CLAIMS. See Public LANDS, 5, 8.
HUSBAND AND WIFE.
See BANKRUPTCY, 7.
INHERITANCE TAX. See WAR REVENUE ACT.
INJUNCTION. See COMBINATIONS IN RESTRAINT JURISDICTION, B 1; OF TRADE;
REMOVAL OF Causes, 1; TAXATION, 7.
INSTRUCTIONS TO JURY. 1. Instruction on failure to agree; impropriety of inquiry as to proportion of
division. When a jury is brought before the court because unable to agree, it is not
material for the court in order to instruct it as to its duty and the pro priety of agreeing to understand the proportion of division of opinion, and the proper administration of the law does not require or permit such a question on the part of the presiding judge. Burton v. United States, 283.
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2. Rights of defendant as to statement of prayers granted. Certain of defendant's requests to charge which were allowed were referred
to as mere abstract propositions of law and not otherwise specifically charged; after having been out thirty-eight hours the jurors returned and were instructed by the court in relation to their duty as jurors, and the foreman having stated in answer to questions of the court that they stood eleven to one, the court charged that it was their duty to agree if possible. Counsel then asked the court to instruct that defendant's requests to charge which had been allowed were as much a part of the charge as that which emanated from the court. This was refused. Held error, and, under the circumstances of this case, it was a matter of right, and not of discretion, that the jury should be charged as to the character of the requests. Ib.
See Wills, 3.
INSURANCE. Construction of policy--Contract of insurance a personal one. A policy of insurance provided that it should be void if the interest of the
insured was other than the unconditional and sole ownership or if the property were encumbered by a chattel mortgage. It was in fact subject to certain trust deeds which the insured claimed after loss were different instruments in law. Held, that a deed of trust and a chattel mortgage with power of sale are practically one and the same instruments as understood in the District of Columbia. The rule that in case of attempted forfeiture if the policy be fairly susceptible of two constructions the one will be adopted which is more favorable to the insured was inapplicable to this case. The contract of an insurance company is a personal one with the assured and it is not bound to accept any other person to whom the latter may transfer the property. Hunt v. Springfield F. & M. Ins. Co., 47.
INTEREST. See NATIONAL BANKS.
INTERSTATE COMMERCE. 1. Freedom of contract concerning. Bowman v. Chicago, 125 U. S. 465, Leisy v. Hardin, 135 U. S. 100, Rhodes
v. Iowa, 170 U. S. 412, Vance v. Vandercook Co. No. 1, 170 U. S. 438, rest on the broad principle of the freedom of commerce between the States, or the right of citizens of one State to freely contract to receive and send merchandise from and to another State, and on the want of power of one State to destroy contracts concerning interstate com- merce valid in the States where made. The right of the parties thereto to make a contract, valid in the State where made, for the sale and purchase of merchandise and in so doing to fix the time when, and conditions on which, completed title shall pass is beyond question.
American Express Co. v. Iowa, 133. 2. Original package; term defined. The term original package is not defined by statu and while it may be
impossible to judicially determine its size or shape, under the principle upon which its exemption while an article of interstate commerce is founded, the term does not include packages which cannot be com- mercially transported from one State to another. Cook v. Marshall County, 261.
3. Original package; cigarette boxes held not to be. This court adheres to its decision in Austin v. Tennessee, 179 U. S. 343, that
small pasteboard boxes each containing ten cigarettes, and sealed and stamped with the revenue stamp, whether shipped in a basket or loosely, not boxed, baled or attached together, and not separately or otherwise addressed but for which the express company has given a receipt and agreement to deliver them to a person named therein in another State, are not original packages and are not protected under the commerce
clause of the Federal Constitution from regulation by the police power of the State. Ib.
4. Shipment of intoxicating liquors C. 0. D.; seizure under state laws prior
to delivery. Without passing on the questions whether the property in a C. O. D. ship-
ment is at the risk of buyer or seller and when the sale is completed, a package of intoxicating liquor received by an express company in one State to be carried to another State, and there delivered to the con- signee C. 0. D. for price of the package and the expressage, is inter- state commerce and is under the protection of the commerce clause of the Federal Constitution and cannot, prior to its actual delivery to the consignee, be confiscated under prohibitory liquor laws of the State. American Express Co. v. Iowa, 133; Adams Express Co. v. Iowa, 147.
5. Unusual method of transportation for evasion of police laws of State -
Commerce clause of Constitution not invokable as a cover for fraudulent
dealing. While a perfectly lawful act may not be impugned by the fact that the
person doing it was impelled thereto by a bad motive, where the law- fulness or unlawfulness of the act is made an issue, the intent of the actor may be material in characterizing the transaction, and where a party, in transporting goods from one State to another, selects an unusual method for the express purpose of evading or defying the police laws of the latter State the commerce clause of the Federal Constitution cannot be invoked as a cover for fraudulent dealing. Cook v. Marshall County, 261.
tribunal. The certificate of the lower court is an absolute prerequisite to the exercise of power here unless the record clearly and unequiv- ocally shows that the court sends up for consideration the single and definite question of its jurisdiction as a court of the United States. Courtney v. Pradt, 89.
2. Direct appeal from District Court sitting in bankruptcy. The bankruptcy court has jurisdiction to determine on a claim asserted by
the bankrupt whether property in the hands of the trustee is exempt; and while an erroneous decision against the asserted right may be corrected in the appropriate mode for the correction of errors, the jurisdiction of the court is not in issue within the meaning of the act of March 3, 1891, and a direct appeal to this court will not lie. Lucius v. Cawthon-Coleman Co., 149.
3. To review decisions of state courts—Proper reservation of Federal question. This court has no general power to review or correct the decisions of the
highest state court and in cases of this kind exercises a statutory juris- diction to protect alleged violations, in state decisions, of certain rights arising under Federal authority; and if the question is not properly reserved in the state court the deficiency cannot be supplied in either the petition for rehearing after judgment or the assignment of errors in this court, or by the certification of the briefs which are not a part of the record by the clerk of the state Supreme Court. This court will not reverse the judgment of a state court holding an alleged Federal constitutional objection waived, where the record discloses that no authority was cited or argument advanced in its support and it is clear that the decision was based upon other than Federal grounds and the constitutional question was not decided. Harding v. Illinois, 78.
4. Review of final judgment of Supreme Court of Oklahoma. Under $ 9, act of May 2, 1890, 26 Stat. 81, c. 182, final judgments of the
Supreme Court of the Territory of Oklahoma in actions at law can only be revised by this court as are judgments of the Circuit Courts of the United States in similar actions-by writ of error and not by appeal. Comstock v. Eagleton, 99.
5. Where Federal question properly invoked, although verdict and judgment
below rendered according to law. Although when the charge of the state court is not before this court, and
the record contains no exception to any part of it, the verdict and judgment must be held to have been rendered according to law, never- theless, if a provision of the Federal Constitution was properly in- voked the motion to dismiss may be denied. Hamburg American Steamship Co. v. Grube, 407.
6. Writ of error to District Court-Review not restricted to constitutional
question. Whether a Senator of the United States has waived his privilege from
arrest and whether such privilege is personal only or given for the purpose of always securing a representation of his State in the Senate are not frivolous questions; and, if properly raised in the court below and denied, this court has jurisdiction to issue the writ of error directly to the District Court, and then to decide the case without being re- stricted to the constitutional question. It is not the habit of this court to decide questions of a constitutional nature unless absolutely necessary to a decision of the case. Burton v. United States, 283.
See APPEAL AND ERROR; Cases EXPLAINED, 1; BANKRUPTCY, 2, 4;
FEDERAL QUESTION.
OF Circuit COURT OF APPEALS (see Bankruptcy, 2).
1. Amount in controversy-Jurisdiction in action to remove cloud on title. Complainants, who were heirs at law of an intestate leaving real estate the
undivided interest of each being valued at over $2.000, and situated within the jurisdiction of the court, filed their bill in the proper Cir- cuit Court of the United States against proper parties, citizens of other States, alleging that defendants had combined to procure and had fraudulently procured orders of the probate court allowing their claims against one of the heirs at law as claims against the intestate whereby such claims became liens upon the intestate's real estate; the claim of each defendant was less that $2,000 but the aggregate amount exceeded $2,000. So far as the allegations of the bill were concerned if any one of the claims was good all were good and the prosecution of one could not be enjoined unless all were enjoined. The bill prayed that the cloud on title of the intestate's real estate be removed by declaring the claims invalid and enjoining proceedings under the judgments of the probate court. The defendants were proceeded against under the act of March 3, 1875, 18 Stat. 470. The Circuit Court dismissed the bill for want of jurisdiction. Held error and that it was competent for the Circuit Court upon the case made by the bill to deprive defendants acting in combination of the benefit of the orders made in the probate court allowing their respective claims. In this case the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court does not depend, within the judiciary act of 1887, 1888, on the value of complainants' interest in the real estate from which the cloud is sought to be removed but on the aggregate amount of the liens of all of the defendants' claims which had been allowed by the probate court against the intestate's estate
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