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Opinion of the Court.

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within the statute, though it be clear that it cannot be performed within a year except in the event the contingency happens." "If the contingency is beyond the control of the parties, and one that may, in the usual course of events, happen within the year, whereby the contract will be performed, the law will presume that the parties contemplated its happening, whether they mention it in the contract or not. The statute only applies to contracts not to be performed within the space of one year from the making thereof.' If the contingency is such that its happening may bring the performance within a year, the contract is not within the terms of the statute; and this is true whether the parties at the time had in mind the happening of the contingency or not. The existence of the contingency in this class of cases, and not the fact that the parties may or may not have contemplated its happening, is what prevents the agreement from coming within the scope of the statute. Applying these principles to the case under consideration, we think it clear that the contract above set out was not within the statute. The agreement to give the pass and stop the trains was personal to Wood and his family. He could not transfer it. In case of his death within the year, the obligation of the company to him would have been performed, and no right thereunder would have passed to his heirs or executors. If it be held that each member of his family had an interest in the agreement, the same result would have followed the death of such member, or all of them, within the year. If the agreement had been to give Wood a pass for life, it would, under the above authorities, not have been within the statute; and we can see no good reason for holding it to be within the statute because his right could not have extended beyond ten years. The happening of the contingency of the death of himself and family within a year would have performed the contract. in one case as certainly as in the other." 88 Texas, 195, 196.

In the case at bar, the contract between the railroad company and the plaintiff, as testified to by the plaintiff himself, who was the only witness upon the point, was that if he would furnish the ties and grade the ground for the switch at

VOL. CLXIV-28

Opinion of the Court.

the place where he proposed to erect a saw-mill, the railroad company would "put down the iron rails and maintain the switch for the plaintiff's benefit for shipping purposes as long as he needed it."

The parties may well have expected that the contract would continue in force for more than one year; it may have been very improbable that it would not do so; and it did in fact continue in force for a much longer time. But they made no stipulation which in terms, or by reasonable inference, required that result. The question is not what the probable, or expected, or actual performance of the contract was; but whether the contract, according to the reasonable interpretation of its terms, required that it should not be performed within the year. No definite term of time for the performance of the contract appears to have been mentioned or contemplated by the parties; nor was there any agreement as to the amount of lumber to be sawed or shipped by the plaintiff, or as to the time during which he should keep up his mill.

The contract of the railroad company was with, and for the benefit of, the plaintiff personally. The plaintiff's own testimony shows (although that is not essential) that he understood that the performance of the contract would end with his own life. The obligation of the railroad company to maintain the switch was in terms limited and restricted by the qualification "for the plaintiff's benefit for shipping purposes as long as he needed it"; and no contingency which should put an end to the performance of the contract, other than his not needing the switch for the purpose of his business, appears to have been in the mouth, or in the mind, of either party. If, within a year after the making of the contract, the plaintiff had died, or had abandoned his whole business at this place, or for any other reason had ceased to need the switch for the shipping of lumber, the railroad company would have been no longer under any obligation to maintain the switch, and the contract. would have been brought to an end by having been fully performed.

The complete performance of the contract depending upon a contingency which might happen within the year, the con

Opinion of the Court.

tract is not within the statute of frauds as an "agreement which is not to be performed within the space of one year from the making thereof."

Nor is it within the other clause of the statute of frauds, relied on in the answer, which requires certain conveyances of real estate to be in writing. The suggestion made in the argument for the defendant in error, that the contract was, in substance, a grant of an easement in real estate, and as such within the statute, overlooks the difference between the English and the Texan statutes in this particular. The existing statutes of Texas, while they substantially follow the English statute of frauds, so far as to require a conveyance of any "estate of inheritance or freehold, or for a term of more than one year, in lands and tenements," as well as "any contract for the sale of real estate, or the lease thereof for a longer term than one year," to be in writing, omit to reënact the additional words of the English statute, in the clause concerning conveyances, "or any uncertain interest of, in, to or out of" lands or tenements, and, in the other clause, "or any interest in or concerning them." Stat. 29 Car. II, c. 3, §§ 1, 4; Texas Rev. Stat. of 1879, arts. 548, 2464; 1 Paschal's Digest, arts. 997, 3875; James v. Fulcrod, 5 Texas, 512, 516; Stuart v. Baker, 17 Texas, 417, 420; Anderson v. Powers, 59 Texas, 213.

Judgment reversed, and case remanded to the Circuit Court, with directions to set aside the verdict and to order a new trial.

Argument against the Motion.

CHAPMAN v. UNITED STATES.

ERROR TO THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA.

No. 513.

Submitted November 2, 1896. - Decided November 30, 1896.

This court has no jurisdiction to review, on writ of error, a judgment of the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia in a criminal case, under § 8 of the act of February 9, 1893, c. 74, 27 Stat. 434.

CHAPMAN was indicted in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia for an alleged violation of section 102 of the Revised Statutes, in refusing to answer certain questions propounded to him by a special committee of the Senate of the United States, appointed to investigate charges in connection with proposed legislation then pending in the Senate. To this indictment the defendant demurred on the ground, among others, that section 102 of the Revised Statutes was unconstitutional, and that, therefore, the court was without jurisdiction in the premises. This demurrer was overruled by the trial court and its judgment thereon affirmed by the Court of Appeals of the District. 5 D. C. App. 122. Defendant was thereupon tried and convicted, and motions for new trial and in arrest of judgment having been made and overruled (the question of the constitutionality of section 102 being raised throughout the proceedings), was sentenced to be imprisoned for one month in jail and to pay a fine of one hundred dollars, which judgment was affirmed on appeal. 24 Wash. Law Rep. 251.

A writ of error from this court was then allowed, 24 Wash. Law Rep. 297, which the United States moved to dismiss.

Mr. Solicitor General for the motion submitted on his brief. Mr. George F. Edmunds, Mr. Jeremiah M. Wilson and Mr. A. A. Hoehling, Jr., opposing, submitted on their brief.

I. After the plaintiff in error had been indicted, and before trial was had, he prayed leave of this court to file a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, 156 U. S. 211, 218. That application was denied.

Argument against the Motion.

In the case, In re Belt, 159 U. S. 95, 100, subsequently decided by this court, in the opinion of the Chief Justice, it is said: "We have heretofore decided that this court has no appellate jurisdiction over the judgments of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia in criminal cases, or on habeas corpus, but whether or not the judgments of the Supreme Court of the District reviewable in the Court of Appeals may be ultimately reviewed in this court in such cases when the validity of a statute of, or an authority exercised under, the United States is drawn in question, we have as yet not been obliged to determine": citing, In re Chapman, Petitioner, 156 U. S. 211.

Prior to the passage of the act of the 9th of February, 1893, 27 Stat. 434, establishing the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia, this court had held that it had no jurisdiction to review criminal cases from the Supreme Court of the District. In re Heath, 144 U. S. 92; Cross v. United States, 145 U. S. 571. In neither of these cases, however, was jurisdiction sought to be maintained by reason of the fact that there was drawn in question the validity of a statute of, or an authority exercised under, the United States.

Section 8, of said act of February 9, 1893, provides as follows: "Any final judgment or decree of the said Court of Appeals may be reëxamined and affirmed, reversed or modified, by the Supreme Court of the United States, upon writ of error or appeal, in all cases in which the matter in dispute, exclusive of costs, shall exceed the sum of five thousand dollars, in the same manner and under the same regulation as heretofore provided for in cases of writs of error on judgments or appeals from decrees rendered in the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia; and also in cases, without regard to the sum or value of the matter in dispute, wherein is involved the validity of any patent or copyright, or in which is drawn in question the validity of a treaty or statute of, or an authority exercised under, the United States."

In section 5 of the Judiciary Act of March 3, 1891, 26 Stat. 827, appeals and writs of error are provided for from the District Courts, or from the existing Circuit Courts of the United

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