Source: https://openjurist.org/274/us/181
Timestamp: 2019-04-25 20:28:19+00:00

Document:
PENNSYLVANIA R. CO. GOODBODY v. SAME.
Submitted on Motion to Transfer March 21, 1927.
Messrs. Rufus S. Day, Wm. L. Day, and Luther Day, all of Cleveland, Ohio, for plaintiffs in error.
Messrs. Andrew Squire, Thomas M. Kirby, and Andrew P. Martin, all of Cleveland, Ohio, for defendant in error.
This is a motion to set aside the dismissals and to substitute therefor orders transferring them to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit.
On April 10, 1920, the yard employees of the Pennsylvania Company struck. That company notified the Timken Company that it would be unable to switch freight cars for it from the Pennsylvania's interchange tracks to the customary delivery of the Timken plant at Canton, Ohio. The Pennsylvania Company then provided the Timken Company with a yard locomotive, and from April 13, 1920, to about September 30, 1920, the Timken Company, with the knowledge and consent, and at the request, of the Pennsylvania Company, did the switching service itself. The Pennsylvania Company made to the Timken Company its customary charges for such switching service at its regular freight rates, which the Timken Company paid. During that period the Timken Company switched 1,640 freight cars for the Pennsylvania Company, the reasonable value of which service was $6,534.61. This amount was included in the line haul freight charges paid by the Timken Company to the Pennsylvania Company. The Pennsylvania Company was thus unjustly enriched in the amount above stated, and the Pennsylvania Company owed to the Timken Company the reasonable value of the service as stated.
(a) That the matters complained of in the plaintiff's petition essentially involved the making of a rate, as to which the District Court had no power.
(b) The subject affected the reasonableness of rates and the reasonableness of a practice in interstate commerce, which were administrative questions, confided primarily to the Interstate Commerce Commission, and there was no allegation in the plaintiff's petition that the Interstate Commerce Commission had prescribed any rule, rate, or practice which would regulate, control, or govern the rights or obligations of the plaintiff and defendant in the matter complained of.
(c) That to compensate the plaintiff for the expense of the switching service set forth in plaintiff's petition would be tantamount to giving him a rebate, contrary to law.
'This court of its final order dismissed the suit solely for want of jurisdiction.
Thereupon a writ of error from this court to the District Court was allowed by the District Judge.
When the case was argued here in open court, this court ordered the dismissal of the writ of error as above, for the reason that the question of jurisdiction passed on by the District Court in this case was not such a question as was covered by section 238. As interpreted by repeated decisions of the court, such a question is in issue only when the District Court's power to hear and determine the cause as defined and limited by the Constitution or statutes of the United States is in controversy, and where a District Court is vested with jurisdiction of a cause, as where diversity of citizenship exists, and the matter in controversy is of the requisite value, the question whether it has the power to afford the plaintiff a particular remedy does not present a jurisdictional issue. Smith v. Apple, 264 U. S. 274, 278, 44 S. Ct. 311, 68 L. Ed. 678; Oliver Trading Co. v. Mexico, 264 U. S. 440, 442, 44 S. Ct. 390, 68 L. Ed. 778; Transportes Maritimos Do Estado v. Almeida, 265 U. S. 104, 105, 44 S. Ct. 449, 68 L. Ed. 932.
In this case there was no question about the jurisdiction of the court, for there was diverse citizenship and the value of the matter in controversy was of requisite amount. The real question was whether, in the absence of an administrative decision by the Interstate Commerce Commission, the plaintiff had a cause of action. See Great Northern Ry. Co. v. Merchants' Elevator Co., 259 U. S. 285, 42 S. Ct. 477, 66 L. Ed. 943. It went to the merits, and not to the jurisdiction, and therefore this court had no jurisdiction by writ of error under section 238 to consider the case.
There is no doubt that under this section, if it applies to the present case, the motion to dismiss should not have been granted as it was, but the case should have been transferred to the Circuit Court of Appeals for a review of the issue on the merits as to the cause of action set up by the Timken Company in its petition.
The motion now made to set aside the dismissal and enter an order of transfer is resisted by the attorneys for the Pennsylvania Company, on the ground that section 238a does not now apply to the present case. This suit was filed in the common pleas court of Cuyahoga county on May 31, 1924, and was removed to the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio June 30, 1924, and upon the defendant's motion was dismissed by the District Court for lack of jurisdiction; the judge's certificate to that effect being filed January 30, 1925. The writ of error was allowed by the District Court on April 6, 1925, was issued on that date, and served upon the defendant in error April 18, 1925-all before the taking effect of the Act of February, 1925, on May 13, 1925. The return on the writ of error was transmitted by the clerk of the District Court on July 3, 1925; the transcript of record being filed on July 13, 1925.
The Act of September 14, 1922, § 238a, was expressly repealed by the Act of February 13, 1925, § 13 (43 Stat. at Large, 942). Section 14 provides that the act 'shall take effect after three months after its approval; but it shall not affect cases then pending in the Supreme Court, nor shall it affect the right to a review, or the mode or time for exercising the same, as respects any judgment or decree entered prior to the date when it takes effect.' The defendant contends that section 14 cannot be construed to continue the effect of section 238a of the Act of September 22, 1922, because section 14 only saves cases then pending in the Supreme Court; that as this court has now found it had no jurisdiction of the writ of error issued by this court to the District Court, it cannot be said that it was a case pending in this court, and therefore did not come within the saving clause; and that the order dismissing the case for lack of jurisdiction must stand. We think that this is much too narrow a construction of the saving provision of section 14. A writ of error duly issued by a judge having authority to issue writs of error from this court to the District Court of the United States, in a case there pending, even though the writ of error is erroneously issued, is, when the writ is executed and the record brought here, to be regarded as having been a case pending in this court from the allowance and issuing of the writ of error and as then removed from the control and jurisdiction of the District Court-and to continue as such for the purposes of section 14 until the writ of error is dismissed. The effect of section 14, therefore, is to impose on this court the duty of granting the transfer to the Circuit Court of Appeals if that is the court, as it is, to which this case should have been taken on error. The previous dismissal of the case is set aside and the transfer of the case to the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit is ordered.
A similar order will be made in the case of Goodbody v. Pennsylvania Company (No. 178) 47 S. Ct. —.

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