2. The patent of November 21, 1885, to Joseph T. Dunham, for an im- provement in tag envelopes, with a flap so constructed that it can be opened and the contents taken out without tearing the envelope or removing or breaking the fastenings, is not infringed by an envelope in which the flap is fastened down so that it cannot be opened with- out injury, and the contents are taken out by opening a flap at the opposite end of the envelope. Ib.
1. Dismissed by stipulation of counsel. The Niagara v. Van Pelt, 533. 2. A decree entered by consent of parties modifying the decree of the court below. Coggeshall v. Hartshorn, 533.
3. It appearing that this cause was brought here for delay only, the court dismisses it on motion of the defendant in error, and awards damages at the rate of ten per cent a year. Watterson v. Payne, 534.
4. A motion made by the plaintiff in error after the entry of such judg- ment to appear and for leave to file a brief comes too late. Ib.
5. Two records from the court below being docketed here in the same case and one being heard and disposed of by decree of reversal, the second is dismissed. United States v. Osio, 535.
6. The appellant was a proper party defendant in the court below, and duly took his appeal. Connellsville & Southern Pennsylvania Railroad v. Baltimore, 553.
7. The order assigning the case for hearing at this term is rescinded. Ib. 8. After a cause is at issue, and on the day when it is set for trial before a jury, it is too late to take a peremptory exception that a partner with plaintiff in the transaction sued on is not a party plaintiff. Bur- bank v. Bigelow, 558.
9. An objection in an action at law that the matter of plaintiff's demand is one of equitable cognizance in Federal courts cannot be taken for the first time in this court. Ib.
10. A certified question is answered coupled with a statement that, through subsequent legislation, it has ceased to be of any importance. United States v. Stafford, 590.
11. This case is dismissed without an opinion, as no exceptions appear to have been taken during the trial. Bank of New Orleans v. Caldwell, 592. 12. A judgment is entered according to the stipulation of the parties. Woodman Pebbling Machine Co. v. Guild, 597.
13. A bill of exceptions cannot bring up the whole testimony for review whether the case has been tried by the court, or by a jury. Betts v. Mugridge, 644.
14. The refusal of a charge asked for which is wholly immaterial is no ground for reversal. Bank of Montreal v. White, 669.
PRESCRIPTION.
See LOCAL LAW.
1. A loan was negotiated through a banker, who received the money from the lender, and failed before the borrower called for it. Held, on the facts disclosed by the proof, that he held it as the agent of the bor- rower. Merriam v. Haas, 542.
2. B., who had transactions with the appellees who were bankers, delivered to them his five promissory notes secured by mortgage. The appel- lant was also a creditor of B. and had a claim upon the fund in the appellees' hands. Held, (1) That the fact that the notes were in the possession of the appellees raised a legal presumption that they were their property; (2) that the weight of the evidence was in favor of the position that the appellees were to be first paid before transferring the notes to appellants. Finley v. Isett, 561.
See EXECUTOR AND ADMINISTRATOR.
1. By the grant of public land made to the Northern Pacific Railroad Company by the act of July 2, 1864, c. 217, 13 Stat. 365, all mineral lands other than iron or coal are excluded from its operation, whether known or unknown; and all such mineral lands, not otherwise specially provided in the act making the grant, are reserved exclusively to the United States, the company having the right to select unoccupied and unappropriated agricultural lands in odd sections, nearest to the line of the road, in lieu thereof. Barden v. Northern Pacific Railroad Co., 288.
2. Proceedings to obtain a Mexican grant in California commenced in 1845 and diligently prosecuted up to May, 1847, when judgment is rendered in the applicant's favor, and title issues to him, are held to be binding upon the United States, in the absence of fraud. United States v. Olvera, 538.
3. A plat made in 1853 of land adjudged to be covered by a Mexican grant, and confirmed in 1862, is sustained as the correct designation of the property covered by the grant. United States v. De Haro, 544. 4. After a careful examination of the proof relating to the identity of the appellants' ancestor with the grantee from the Mexican government, the court affirms the judgment of the court below, without deciding the questions of law. Hardy v. Harbin, 598. 5. The treaty of Guadaloupe Hidalgo had no relation to property within the State of Texas. Busse v. Brownsville, 610.
6. When it does not appear that a grant from the Mexican Republic had been deposited and recorded in the proper public office, among the public archives of the republic, this court must decide adversely to a claim under it. Berreyesa v. United States, 623.
2. The patent of November 24, 1885, to Joseph T. Dunham, for an im- provement in tag envelopes, with a flap so constructed that it can be opened and the contents taken out without tearing the envelope or removing or breaking the fastenings, is not infringed by an envelope in which the flap is fastened down so that it cannot be opened with- out injury, and the contents are taken out by opening a flap at the opposite end of the envelope. Ib.
1. Dismissed by stipulation of counsel. The Niagara v. Van Pelt, 533. 2. A decree entered by consent of parties modifying the decree of the court below. Coggeshall v. Hartshorn, 533.
3. It appearing that this cause was brought here for delay only, the court dismisses it on motion of the defendant in error, and awards damages at the rate of ten per cent a year. Watterson v. Payne, 534.
4. A motion made by the plaintiff in error after the entry of such judg ment to appear and for leave to file a brief comes too late. Ib. 5. Two records from the court below being docketed here in the same case and one being heard and disposed of by decree of reversal, the second is dismissed. United States v. Osio, 535.
6. The appellant was a proper party defendant in the court below, and duly took his appeal. Connellsville & Southern Pennsylvania Railroad v. Baltimore, 553.
7. The order assigning the case for hearing at this term is rescinded. Ib. 8. After a cause is at issue, and on the day when it is set for trial before a jury, it is too late to take a peremptory exception that a partner with plaintiff in the transaction sued on is not a party plaintiff. Bur- bank v. Bigelow, 558.
9. An objection in an action at law that the matter of plaintiff's demand is one of equitable cognizance in Federal courts cannot be taken for the first time in this court. Ib.
10. A certified question is answered coupled with a statement that, through subsequent legislation, it has ceased to be of any importance. Unite States v. Stafford, 590.
11. This case is dismissed without an opinion, as no exceptions appear have been taken during the trial. Bank of New Orleans v. Caldwell, 59 12. A judgment is entered according to the stipulation of the partie Woodman Pebbling Machine Co. v. Guild, 597.
13. A bill of exceptions cannot bring up the whole testimony for revie whether the case has been tried by the court, or by a jury. Betts Mugridge, 644.
14. The refusal of a charge asked for which is wholly immaterial ground for reversal. Bank of Montreal v. Whit
1. A railroad company is bound to furnish sound machinery for the use of its employés, and if one of them is killed in an accident caused by a defective snow-plough, the right of his representative to recover damı- ages therefor is not affected by the fact that some two weeks before he was sent out with the defective machinery, he had discovered the defect, and had notified the master mechanic of it, and the latter had undertaken to have it repaired. Northern Pacific Railroad Co. v. Babcock, 190.
2. Some alleged errors in the charge of the court below are examined and held to have no merit. Ib.
3. If an assessing board, seeking to assess for purposes of taxation a part of a railroad within a State, the other part of which is in an adjoining State, ascertains the value of the whole line as a single property and then determines the value of that within the State, upon the mileage basis, that is not a valuation of property outside of the State; and the assessing board, in order to keep within the limits of state jurisdic- tion, need not treat the part of the road within the State as an inde- pendent line, disconnected from the part without, and place upon that property only the value which can be given to it if operated separately from the balance of the road. Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railway Co. v. Backus, 439.
4. Where an assessing board is charged with the duty of valuing a certain number of miles of railroad within a State forming part of a line of road running into another State, and assesses those miles of road at their actual cash value determined on a mileage basis, this does not place a burden upon interstate commerce, beyond the power of the State, simply because the value of that railroad as a whole is created partly and perhaps largely by the interstate commerce which it is doing. lb.
5. A railroad company which runs its line by telegraph, is bound to have a suitable telegraph line, with a proper number of operators, and in case of an accident it is for the jury to decide whether their duty in this respect has been performed. Grand Trunk Railway Co. v. Walker, 653.
See COMMON Carrier, 2;
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW, 3, 5;
MASTER AND SERVANT; TAX AND TAXATION, 1, 2.
1. A French vessel leaving France for New Orleans in May, 1861, with knowledge of the blockade, and obtaining full knowledge of the same at the Bahamas, continued its voyage and attempted to enter that port. Held, that it was subject to capture, and that so much of the cargo as belonged to citizens of New Orleans was subject to condem- nation as enemy's property, and so much as belonged to citizens of
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