dissenting. Before I came upon this bench, tbis court, as then constituted, bad denied tbe appellate jurisdiction of tbe supreme court of the United States, by refusing to allow a return to be made to its writ of error in tbe Booth Oase. I bad examined tbe subject, and bad come to tbe conclusion that, as an original question, and according to tbe true principles of interpretation, that action of tbis court was correct, although, contrary to tbe decision of the supreme court of tbe United States, which bad been generally acquiesced in by tbe state courts. That was at a time when tbe decisions of that court were rapidly tending toward tbe broad and fatal doctrine that slavery was legal wherever tbe constitution of tbe United States extended. Tbis doctrine I believed to be so gross and enormous a perversion, not only of tbe spirit, but of tbe letter, of tbe constitution, so alarming and revolutionary in its effects, that -I felt that tbe free states would be justified in pressing to tbe very verge of them reserved powers to oppose it by legal forms, and, if necessary, to pass beyond them and resist it by actual revolution. It is true that it was under such circumstances that I first examined tbe question of tbe appellate jurisdiction. But I endeavored not to allow my feelings, or my apprehensions as to results, •to affect my judgment upon tbe legal question of interpretation.- Still I am aware how easily and unconsciously men often fail in such efforts.
And tbe counsel who argued tbis case seemed to suppose that those members of tbis court who bad denied' tbe appellate jurisdiction bad been influenced, in arriving • at that result, by 'their feelings in respect to tbe peculiar condition of tbe country at that time upon tbe slavery question; and it was suggested, that, inasmuch as *151that condition of things had passed away,-' the conrt should now acquiesce in that jurisdiction, in accordance with the general current of authority.
Influenced somewhat by this suggestion, I have reexamined the question. I have read again the argument of the supreme court of the United States in favor of this appellate jurisdiction, and the argument of the court-of appeals of Virginia against it, the latter being supported and illustrated by the subsequent opinions of Chief Justice Bautley of Ohio, and of the supreme courts of Georgia and Califprnia. And, as a question of pure legal interpretation, I am still of the opinion that the reasoning of the state judges against the jurisdiction has never been answered. I do not propose to repeat their arguments, and little, if any thing, could be added to them.
But the subsequent historical developments of the question, and of the general relations between the states and the federal government, and subsequent adjudications by the supreme court of the United ‘ States concerning the principles governing those relations, furnish some considerations that may properly be referred to in further illustration of their position.
It is obvious that this question constitutes the sole ground of any legitimate controyersy upon the vexed subject of state rights. To say that the states have the right to- continue to exercise the reserved powers is a general proposition that would never be controverted by any one. But when we reach the question, Who is to judge for both parties what powers are reserved ? we approach ground upon which the probability of collission is imminent. If this appellate jurisdiction exists, if the judicial systems of the states and the federal government were, by the constitution, blended into one, holding to each other the relations of inferior and superior tribunals, then there is no room left for controversy. Whenever ■ any question of difference • arose, *152the judgment of the supreme court would put an end to it legally. It would be as undisputed that the state must relinquish the power which that judgment held not to have been reserved, as that it might continue to exercise the powers which, in the judgment of the court, were reserved. Under such a system it • would be as inappropriate to dignify any claims which the state might assert, by the title of state rights, as it would be in a single state to speak of county rights or town rights.
But if, under our system, where the powers of sovereignty are divided' between the federal and state governments, this jurisdiction does not exist, then no common arbiter has been provided to decide conclusively for both such questions of difference as may arise concerning the delegated and reserved powers. It would then be proper to speak of state rights as such, for the states would then hold the reserved powers by a tenure as valid as that by which the federal government holds the delegated powers. The powers of neither could be wrested horn it by the judgment of the other. And this is all that .the idea of state rights, properly understood, ever involved. It asserts no claim that the judgment of the state tribunals is at all binding upon the federal government, upon questions involving their respective powers. It claims only that the judgments of the federal court are alike ineffica-cious to bind the state.
I am aware that the idea of state rights is at present exceedingly odious and unpopular. It is branded as a legal and political heresy, and held directly responsible for the attempt at secession with all its disastrous consequences. But the two claims are entirely distinct and dissimilar.
Secession is revolutionary; state rights not. Secession seeks to withdraw and overthrow the powers admitted to ' have been delegated to the federal government. State rights makes no such effort. Secession throws off entirely all obligation under the constitution of the *153United States. State rights throws off none of that . obligation, but concedes that- that constitution and laws made in pursuance of it are the supreme law of the state, and that it is the sworn duty of its tribunals to regard and enforce them as such.
The difference between the two claims is, therefore, broad and obvious. And the fact that the section of the country which has most prominently advocated the theory of state rights is the one which also attempted secession, can have no just tendency to confound the two, or to hold the former doctrine responsible for the consequences of the latter. The fact that those who assert a right under a government may afterward resort to revolution' in support of it, does not make the legal assertion of it revolutionary or justly responsible for the revolution. . And it is worthy of remark in this connection, that the attempt at secession was not in consequence of any difference of opinion between those states and the federal supreme court in respect to their rights .as to the institution of slavery under the constitution; for the judgments of that court not only kept pace with, but anticipated, their most extravagant demands in that direction.
It is natural enough, in view of our late rebellion, that the tendencies in the popular, and perhaps in the legal, mind should be toward a strong assertion of federal power; and that those who were advocates of state rights, when the northern states were turned into hunting ground for fugitive slaves, and the entire people of the north required to become slave hunters, by the laws of congress, which were sustained by the federal court, without a syllable in the constitution conferring any authority upon congress to legislate at all upon the' subject, should now be ready to brand the doctrine as a pestilential heresy. But these fluctuations in the popular feeling and opinion can have no legitimate influence upon the question of legal interpretation. Nor can *154they make it true, that, under oúr system of divided sovereignty, it is not a question of the gravest delicacy and importance, and, at least, of doubt, whether the states, 'the original sovereignties, hold their reserved powers wholly subject to the judgment of the federal court.
That it is a question between sovereignties is conceded. Not absolute sovereignties, but governments between which the powers of sovereignty are divided, and each sovereign within its own sphere. In the bank case, the 'supreme court of the United States said: “In America the powers of sovereignty are divided between the government of the union and those of the states. They are each sovereign with respect to the objects committed to it, and neither sovereign with respect to the objects committed to the other.” This fact, in. connection with the other, that the power in question is nowhere found expressed in the constitution, but, if it exists at all, must be derived entirely from inference and implication, is certainly sufficient to rescue those who make the claim of state rights, in the sense in which it has been before defined, from any charge of mere folly or presumption.
The question being of this high character, it is certainly something against the existence of this appellate jurisdiction, that it is not found anywhere distinctly expressed in the constitution. It would seem that a matter of such grave and vital moment, »if provided for at all, would have been expressly provided for and regulated.
And it is not only not expressly provided for, but the inference by which it is attempted to be sustained is neither a necessary nor even a natural one. The constitution of the United States established a judicial system of its own. The article upon the subject does not refer to nor purport to regulate any other judicial system., It provided that the judicial power of the United States should be vested in one supreme court, and in such inferior courts as congress might establish. *155It provided that in certain of the cases to which'the judicial power extends, the supreme court should have original jurisdiction; and in all the others “appellate jurisdiction both as to law and fact, with such .exceptions and under such regulations as the congress shall make.” And in the opinions of the state courts before referred to, particularly in those of the court of appeals of Virginia, and the'able and exhaustive discussion by Chief Justice Babtley, of Ohio, it was demonstrated, I think, that, by every rule of interpretation, the appellate jurisdiction there provided for related only to appeals from the inferior tribunals of that judicial system; As a part of the argument, it y?as shown-that if it was held to be applicable also to the state tribunals, it necessarily involved a power on the part of congress and the appellate court, for the purpose of regulating and enforcing the jurisdiction, which it was conceded did not exist, and could not without destroying the independence and existence of the state governments.
This argument seems- to me one of controlling force. If this provision was applicable to the state courts, it necessarily involved a power in congress to regulate the proceedings in the inferior tribunal, so as to give full effect to the appellate jurisdiction both as to law and fact, and also a power on the part of the appellate court to enforce its directions, orders and judgments upon the inferior, by all the usual and established means, including commitment for contempt in case of refusal to obey.
The force of this argumentáis not to be tested upon the assumption that the legislation heretofore enacted, and the means heretofore used, by the supreme court to enforce this jurisdiction, have gone to the extent of the power that may be employed against the state tribunals, if it is applicable to them at all. On the contrary, it may well be doubted whether, -in that event, these means have not fallen so far short of what the subject *156and the occasion demanded, as to have been really incompatible with the dignity of the government of the United States. The position being once arrived at, that the constitution established this appellate power over the state courts, it seems hardly adequate to the enforcement of a due respect for the high powers committed to the federal government, for congress to provide, that, where the state tribunal refuses to obey the mandate of the supreme court, the latter may devise some' other mode for executing its decrees, or for that court, when the inferior tribunal refuses to obey its process, to shrink from enforcing obedience, and exercise its jurisdiction upon a mere private copy of the records.
The strength of the argument, therefore, is not to be tested by what has been, but by what may be, done under this power. And there can be no doubt that under it congress might adopt the most extensive regulations of proceedings in the state courts, so as to insure a review both upon fact and law, and that the supreme court of a state might be committed to prison for contempt in refusing to obey the directions of the supreme court of the United States, and the state government thus virtually dismembered and destroyed, by being deprived of one of its coordinate departments.
Such a result would be in violation of principles of constitutional law, establishing the independence and exemption of the state governments and tlxeir departments from any coercion by the federal government or its departments, that have been fully recognized by’ the supreme court. The state of Kentucky asked of that court a mandamus to compel the governor of Ohio to deliver up a fugitive from justice under the law of congress. The court held, that, although it was the duty of the governor, there was no power to compel its performance. It said: ‘£ The act does not provide any means to compel the execution of this duty, nor inflict any punishment for. neglect or refusal on the part of the executive of the *157state, nor is there any clause or provision in the constitution which arms the government of the United States with this power. Indeed, such a power would place every state under the control and dominion of the general government, even in the administration of its internal concerns and reserved rights. And we think it clear that the federal government, under the constitution, has no power to impose on a state officer as such any duty whatever, and compel him to perform it.” 24 How. 107.
It is impossible to reconcile this position, which is clearly correct, with the one that the constitution intended to establish this appellate power over the state courts. Such an appellate power, if put to the test, loses its vital efficacy unless accompanied with the power of regula-tioh and compulsion over the inferior tribunal. And whatever shifts congress and the supreme court may have resorted to, to avoid carrying their doctrine to its logical results, there can be no doubt, as a question of interpretation, that, if the constitution grants the power at all, it grants it with all the means essential to its complete execution.
Those opinions also show, by reasoning that seems to me unanswerable, that full effect is given to the general provision, that “the judicial power shall extend to all cases at law and in equity arising under the constitution, the laws of the United States,” etc., when it is held that the party having the option of bringing any one of those suits may bring it in the federal court.
Certainly, such would be the construction of similar language found anywhere else. This state has, in several instances, conferred civil jurisdiction to a limited extent on the county courts. Suppose a law should l?e passed for that purpose, and should provide that the jurisdiction of the county court of a particular county should extend to all cases at law and in equity, where the amount in controversy did not exceed a certain sum. .Would it be contended for a moment that such language could be *158construed, either as depriving the circuit court of that county of concurrent jurisdiction over the same class of cases, or as giving the county court any power, by appeal or otherwise, to get jurisdiction of such a case first brought in the circuit court ? Most certainly not! And yet such a construction would not seem so inadmissible, where both the courts belong to the same judicial system, as it is, in construing the constitution of the United States, to make the same language the basis of extending an appellate jurisdiction over the courts of another judicial system, organized under another constitution of government. The plain object of such a provision is to give authority in law to bring the specified cases in the federal court; not to require that, in fact, every such case should, in some mode or other, absolutely get there. Even those who support the construction which d.erives the appellate jurisdiction from this language would not insist upon the latter literal effect.
Suppose a plaintiff should bring an action in a state court, in which he claimed some right under a law of congress, and the highest court of the state should decide against that right. This would present a case to which, by the constitution and judiciary act, the judicial power and the appellate jurisdiction would extend. But suppose the party did not choose to appeal. There would be a case to which the judicial power extended, which it could not reach in fact. But it will be said, that, inasmuch as the party had the right to appeal, the constitutional provision was satisfied, because the case might, in law, be carried to the federal court. But if this is a good answer, as it is, undoubtedly, then it is a good answer to this whole argument to say that the constitutional provision was fully satisfied by the option of the party to have brought his suit in the federal court in the first instance. Where the party bringing the suit has that option, the judicial power of the United States extends in law to the case, and it is an unwarrantable construe*159tion to assume that it must be absolutely extended to it, in fact, without regard' to the question whether the party suing exercises his option to bring it in the courts of another judicial system having concurrent jurisdiction. And it will appear evident on a close examination of this theory, and of the provisions of the laws of congress on the subject, that the object is not merely to.give effect to the constitutional provision, which, as we have seen, is fully satisfied when the party bringing the suit has the option to bring it in the federal court, but to give effect to certain views of policy founded in distrust of the fairness’ and fidelity of the state tribunals, and which make it necessary to go far beyond what was necessary to give full effect to the constitution, and extend the option to the particular party who is supposed to stand in need of the superior fairness and exemption from local prejudice of the federal court. And the accomplishment of this object leads necessarily to the inconsistency of holding that the judicial power of the United States does not ■ extend to the case, though the .party bringing the suit might have brought it in the federal' court; but that it does extend to the case whenever the party supposed to stand in need of the protection of that court has the option to take it there, either by removal or appeal, without regard to the question whether he actually exercises that option or not.
That this legislation had its origin in such views of policy, merely, is apparent from the fact that, instead of providing for a fair review by either party dissatisfied with the decision of the state court, the judiciary act confines the right of review entirely to cases where the decision of the state court is against the right claimed under the constitution or laws of the United States.
But the great argument in favor of the jurisdiction is one of policy rather than of interpretation, founded upon the extreme necessity of some common arbiter between the two governments, to decide authoritatively *160for both, upon the extent of the powers of each. Considered as a question of policy, this argument is unanswerable. There ought to be such an arbiter. If none was provided, it was undoubtedly a serious defect in the system. If one was provided, it was still a serious defect that it was done in such a manner as to leave room for all the doubt and uncertainty that have since existed upon the subject.
This great apparent necessity has been relied upon to show that men so wise as those who framed the constitution must have intended, by the provisions that have been considered, to establish such an arbiter. The argument is fair and forcible^ but at the same time not conclusive. For it is obvious that there was the same necessity for an appellate jurisdiction and a common arbiter in another direction, in which, it is conceded, none were provided. Both judicial systems administer the state constitutions and laws over the same people and territory. And it is apparent that the same evils, the same lack of uniformity of decision, and the liability io collisions, might result from the absence of a common arbiter, as in a similar attempt by both to administer the federal laws. Yet there is no appeal from the federal to the state courts upon those questions, relating, as they do, to matters over which the state is admitted to be sovereign and supreihe. And if the. framers of the constitution left us liable to conflict and collision from the attempt by two judicial systems to administer, over the same territory and people, the laws of the .one government, it is not so utterly improbable that they may have hazarded the same results from a similar attempt to administer .the laws of the other, without any common arbiter.
The fact that the federal courts have professed to adopt and follow the decisions of the state courts as authoritative, in the construction of state laws, makes no difference. If they have done so, they have done it *161voluntarily,, and without any power on the part of the state to compel such conformity. And it cannot be assumed that, while it would be wholly-unsafe to trust the interests of the federal government to the action of the state courts, without the- power of enforcing conformity by appeal, it would still be entirely safe to trust the interests of the state to the voluntary action of the federal tribunals. For the truth is, that, while the latter may have, in general, practiced upon the rule of following the state decisions upon state laws, they have occasionally violated it, and seem recently to have discarded it altogether.
As an illustration of the- truth of the assertion that they have occasionally violated it, reference may be made to the case of Williamson v. Berry, 8 How. 495. In that case, the supreme couft, in determining the question of jurisdiction in a judicial proceeding before the chancellor of Hew York, which depended wholly upon the laws of that state, disregarded the decision of the highest court of the state upon the very question, and held the proceeding before the chancellor void for want of jurisdiction,' though drawn in question collaterally. There was furnished an ample opportunity for collision, in the attempt to enforce the rights of the claimant under the proceeding in the state court, and of the one claiming under the judgment of the federal tribunal.
So in the cases from the state of Iowa which have recently attracted so much attention, involving the validity of certain .municipal bonds, depending for their validity solely upon the state law, that court disregarded the decisions of the state court then in force. It is true, this was done upon the ground that, by prior ’ decisions of 'the state court in force at the time of the, bonds were-issued, they were valid. This seems to involve the principle, that, where a decision of the state court is overruled, it is, nevertheless, to be regarded as having been, not only binding in the case in which it was made, *162but as tbe general law of the state down to the time when it was so overruled — a proposition novel in the law, at war with all the reasoning upon which the maxim of stare decisis lias been established, and which places a change of decisions by a court upon the same footing with a change of the law by a legislature. According to the ideas that have ordinarily prevailed on this subject, the .fact that 'there was such a prior decision ought to have constituted a controlling reason with the state court against a change; and this upon the very ground that a change necessarily uprooted all transactions which depended for their validity on the construction previously given. But it was for the state court to decide the matter according to its - own judgment and conscience. And whether it was right or wrong, it furnished no warrant for the federal court to attempt to impose any restrictions upon the liberty of the state court to change its decisions, by inventing new and unheard of theories as to the effect of such change.
If such a precedent is established, the states may begin to inquire whether questions involving their reserved and sovereign powers are not of as grave moment as the validity of private contracts between individuals. And they may be led to inquire whether it is possible, on the strength of prior adjudications, to save any portion of their sovereignty over the navigable lakes and rivers of the country above tide water, which, having been conceded by the universal judgment of the .bar of the country, and by the decisions of the supreme court of the United States itself for more than fifty years after the formation of the government, is now being swept to destruction by recent changes in the decisions of that court.
They might also, doubtless, be led to remember that by its former decision a federal court would have had no jurisdiction at all in these very bond cases, in which they have now been imprisoning the municipal officers *163of the state, on whose freedom and ability to act it may have depended for the collection of its revenues, and its ability to discharge its civil and political functions.
In Havermeyer v. Iowa County, "3 Wall. 294, that court disregarded the decisions of this court upon the' question whether the law under which the bonds there involved were issued was a general law, within the provision of our constitution that no general law should be in force until published. It applied in that' case the-doctrine on which it had acted in the Iowa case, without any previous decision by this court on which to rely. For, although there had previously been a Case in this court in which it was assumed that such an act was a mere private act, and a question made only whether as • such it was sufficiently pleaded, the court of the United States expressly says, in its opinion referring to it, “the question whether it was a private act was not made in the case.” And therefore, by all the established principles applicable to the subject, it was no decision and no authority upon the question. It served for-no higher purpose than, as the supreme court says, “to show the understanding of the bar and the bench ¡down to that time.” And yet, without any decision whatever contrary to the one made by this court when the question was first raised and argued before it, upon this mere “understanding” and assumption, and upon the action of mere administrative officers in classifying the laws for publication, that court deliberately disregards and sets aside the decision of this court upon a matter depending wholly upon the constitution and laws of this state.
In a still later case, The City v. Lamson, 9 Wall. 477, it disregarded a decision of this court holding void a provision in the charter of the city of Kenosha, because it conferred an unlimited power on the city to loan its credit. And the court professes to bring this within the doctrine of the other cases, by stating generally that, at. the time the bonds were issued, “the decisions of the *164court of the state favored the validity of the law.” This is wholly untrue in point of fact. There was no prior decision or assumption by this court'to the contrary of the one thus disregarded. The cases referred to by the reporter as supporting the statement of the court involved no such question. And, what is an equally significant fact in answer to the purpose for which they are here referred to, they were both made sometime after the bonds there involved were issued.
And in the case of Butz v. The City of Muscatine, 8 Wall. 575, that court openly repudiates its obligation to follow the state decisions upon state law, and declares that it will not follow them when they deprive parties of rights or remedies which they would have according to what the federal court thinks the proper construction of the law. The attempt to assimilate the question there presented with the class like Bank v. Skelly, 1 Black, 436, where the question is whether the state law impairs the obligation of a contract, or is itself a contract, seems utterly indefensible. And the case must stand as a distinct repudiation by the federal court of its obligation to follow the state decisions on questions purely of state law, when contrary to its own judgment.
If the supreme court' of the United States has been influenced either by the praises sung by some interested counsel, or by his libels upon, the people and judiciary of his state, contained in intimations that the latter were elected for purposes of repudiation, and made decisions to win popular favor, to assume a superior regard for the sanctity and inviolability of either public or private faith, and, in consequence, a guardianship over the judi- ' cial morals of the state courts in the administration of state law, it has committed a serious mistake, which, if persisted in, will lead inevitably to difficulty and disaster. For, however much the states may be disposed to acquiesce in the binding authority of its decisions upon federal law, it is not to be expected that they will permanently *165submit to any attempt on its part to usurp the same high function in respect to questions depending wholly upon the constitutions and laws .of the states themselves.
I have thus alluded to these decisions for the purpose of showing that the liability to collision and serious difficulties, growing out "of differences of opinion in administering the same laws over the same territory and people, by two judicial systems, without a common arbiter, is not by any means sufficient to show conclusively that the framers of the constitution intended to provide such.
I cannot but regard the line of decisions to which I have referred as just cause for serious alarm on the part ■ of the states, and of all the friends to the perpetuity of our system of government. I think the whole matter should be made the subject of a constitutional amendment, establishing and regulating with clearness and precision the appellate jurisdiction of the federal court upon questions of federal law, and protecting by a similar appeal, or otherwise if possible, the supremacy of the ■ states as to the reserved powers.
I freely concede that the appellate jurisdiction as to federal questions would be naturally and appropriately vested in the supreme court of the United States, and inasmuch as it has been already so long asserted and exercised, and so generally acquiesced in, I would also, on grounds of policy and authority, now acquiesce in it, if I could feel that no more extreme measures would ever be resorted to in enforcing it than those which have hitherto been used. But because I can feel no such assurance, and because I regard the jurisdiction, in its present undefined and uncontrolled form, as a source from which great danger is ultimately to be apprehended, I have concluded to place on record my protest against; it, almost solitary and wholly ineffectual though it be.
*166As the power of removal is only claimed as a branch of the appellate power, in the opinion of the supreme court in Martin v. Hunter’s Lessee (1 Wheaton, 349), it follows, that, if the appellate jurisdiction does not exist, the power of removal falls with it, and the order appealed from should be affirmed.
By the Court. — The order of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to grant the order of removal.
*167JANUARY TERM, 1870.