Arrendondo v. Arrendondo

223 U.S. 376, 32 S. Ct. 277, 56 L. Ed. 476, 1912 U.S. LEXIS 2241
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 19, 1912
Docket159
StatusPublished

This text of 223 U.S. 376 (Arrendondo v. Arrendondo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arrendondo v. Arrendondo, 223 U.S. 376, 32 S. Ct. 277, 56 L. Ed. 476, 1912 U.S. LEXIS 2241 (1912).

Opinion

223 U.S. 376 (1912)

CUEBAS Y ARREDONDO
v.
CUEBAS Y ARREDONDO.

No. 159.

Supreme Court of United States.

Submitted January 24, 1912.
Decided February 19, 1912.
APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR PORTO RICO.

*381 Mr. Frederick L. Cornwell and Mr. N.B.K. Pettingill, for appellant.

No brief filed for appellees.

Mr. F. Kingbury Curtis and Mr. Henry A. Stickney, by leave of the court, filed a brief as amici curiae on behalf of Banco Territorial y Agricola.

*385 MR. JUSTICE LURTON, after stating the facts as above, delivered the opinion of the court.

The bank is not a party to this appeal. The appellant has elected to dismiss her bill, both as to it and the other Porto Rican defendant, Antongiorgi, for the express purpose of creating jurisdiction of a suit between complainant, a citizen of the Island of Porto Rico, and the remaining original defendant, Felipe Cuebas, a citizen of the United States. Her bill, as amended, contains no reference to the bank, or even of its existence. It was the bill, as thus amended, which was dismissed by the court. We mention this because two of the errors assigned and argued in the brief of counsel for appellant relate to the action of the court, first, in holding that the bank was in law a citizen of Porto Rico, and, second, in holding that, that being so, the jurisdiction of the court to maintain the suit, with citizens of Porto Rico, on both sides of the case, would be defeated. The action of the court in respect to the matter first mentioned is not here for review, and the other only in so far as it may become necessary to deal with it for the purpose of determining the force and effect to be given to the decree pro confesso against Felipe Cuebas.

It was not error in the situation of this case to deny a final decree against the succession of Felipe Cuebas upon the foundation of the pro confesso order made on a rule day five years theretofore. When that pro confesso was *386 taken against Cuebas the suit was one of which the District Court had no cognizance. The sole complainant was a citizen of Porto Rico, and Cuebas was a citizen of the United States and therefore subject to be sued in that court by the complainant, if the citizenship of the other persons on the same side was such as not to defeat jurisdiction. But that was not the case. One of them, Francisco Antongiorgi, was alleged in the bill to be a citizen of the Island of Porto Rico. The other defendant, the bank, was averred to be a corporation organized under the laws of Spain and a citizen thereof. But later, as we have already stated, the bank's plea that it was a corporation under the laws of Porto Rico and a citizen of Porto Rico was sustained. The case was, then, one which, upon the face of the bill, showed that one of the defendants had a citizenship common with that of the complainant, and later it turned out that a second had a like citizenship.

It is not and cannot be claimed that the complainant's bill asserted any right, title or claim arising under the laws or Constitution of the United States. If, therefore, the District Court had jurisdiction, it must depend upon diversity of citizenship alone.

It is claimed that the fact that one of the three defendants was a citizen of the United States conferred jurisdiction, although the other two were Porto Ricans, with a citizenship identical with that of the complainant. That this would not have been so under the Foraker act of 1900 is conceded. That act gave to the District Court for Porto Rico the jurisdiction of the United States District Courts, and added to that the jurisdiction of cases cognizable in Circuit Courts of the United States. The contention is that this extraordinary stretch of jurisdiction is conferred by the third section of the act of March 2, 1901, c. 812, 31 Stat. 953. That section reads as follows:

*387 "That the jurisdiction of the district court of the United States for Porto Rico in civil cases shall, in addition to that conferred by the Act of April twelfth, nineteen hundred, extend to and embrace controversies where the parties, or either of them, are citizens of the United States, or citizens or subjects of a foreign State or States, wherein the matter in dispute exceeds, exclusive of interest or costs, the sum or value of one thousand dollars."

Shortly stated, the construction placed upon this section is, that the word "parties" is not used collectively, meaning all of the litigants on the one side or the other, but is intended as if the word "litigants" had been used, and that the words "or either of them" means "any of them," and that the jurisdiction conferred embraces all controversies in which any litigant on either side is a citizen of the United States or a subject of a foreign country.

The construction contended for is out of accord with that placed upon the act in Vallecillo v. Bertran, 2 P.R. Fed. Rep. 46, a construction constantly adhered to by the court below since 1906. It is also a construction out of harmony with a long line of decisions of this court construing the jurisdictional clauses in the various statutes dealing with the question of jurisdiction dependent upon diversity of citizenship. The first of the decisions referred to involved the meaning of the clause in the Judiciary Act of 1789, conferring jurisdiction over controversies "where an alien is a party, or the suit is between a citizen of a State where the suit is brought and a citizen of another State." The question arose in Strawbridge v. Curtiss, 3 Cranch, 267, whether it was essential to jurisdiction that all of the parties on one side should have a citizenship different from that of all of the parties on the other. In that case the complainants were citizens of Massachusetts and some of the defendants were citizens of the same State. But one of the defendants was a citizen *388 of Vermont, and this fact was claimed to give jurisdiction. To this, the court, by Chief Justice Marshall, said:

"The court understands these expressions to mean, that each distinct interest should be represented by persons, all of whom are entitled to sue, or may be sued, in the federal courts. That is, that where the interest is joint, each of the persons concerned in that interest must be competent to sue, or liable to be sued, in those courts."

This construction of that clause and of like words in later statutes, concerning jurisdiction dependent upon diversity of citizenship has been followed in many cases, among them being Coal Co. v. Blatchford, 11 Wall. 172, and Smith v. Lyon, 133 U.S. 315. In the case first referred to Mr. Justice Field stated the matter in words quite as applicable here, by saying: "If there are several co-plaintiffs, the intention of the act is that each plaintiff must be competent to sue, and if there are several co-defendants each defendant must be liable to be sued, or the jurisdiction cannot be sustained."

In view of these decisions we should be slow to conclude that Congress intended any other rule as to the arrangement of the parties where diversity of citizenship is the basis of jurisdiction than that laid down in construing like statutes upon the same subject.

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Related

Strawbridge v. Curtiss
7 U.S. 267 (Supreme Court, 1806)
Gray v. Brignardello
68 U.S. 627 (Supreme Court, 1864)
Coal Co. v. Blatchford
78 U.S. 172 (Supreme Court, 1871)
Frow v. De La Vega
82 U.S. 552 (Supreme Court, 1872)
Mitchell v. Overman
103 U.S. 62 (Supreme Court, 1881)
Smith v. Lyon
133 U.S. 315 (Supreme Court, 1890)
Vallecillo y Mandry v. Bertran
2 P.R. Fed. 46 (D. Puerto Rico, 1906)
Cuebas v. Cuebas
223 U.S. 376 (Supreme Court, 1912)

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Bluebook (online)
223 U.S. 376, 32 S. Ct. 277, 56 L. Ed. 476, 1912 U.S. LEXIS 2241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arrendondo-v-arrendondo-scotus-1912.