Barney v. Baltimore

2 F. Cas. 886, 1 Hughes 118
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maryland
DecidedMarch 15, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2 F. Cas. 886 (Barney v. Baltimore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barney v. Baltimore, 2 F. Cas. 886, 1 Hughes 118 (circtdmd 1863).

Opinion

GILES, District Judge.

This cause is submitted for final decree on bill, answer, evidence, and admissions filed. The counsel for the respective parties have been fully heard, and in the very learned and able arguments that have been made, almost every case has been cited that could in any way sustain the positions and views of the respective parties. The original bill in this cause was filed on the 20th September, 1S4S. Various changes have taken place since,- in reference to the parties, by death or otherwise, which it will not be necessary to notice; as on the 28th of June, 1860, this court passed the following order; “that the complainant have leave to file an amended and supplemental bill and bill of reviver, as prayed for by her petitions filed 5th July, 1859, and 16th June, 1800; said bill to be filed on or before the first Monday of July next; all questions touching the jurisdiction of this court, in this court, in the said case, either on the original bill or on the bill which may be filed under this order, and also all questions as to the complainant’s right of relief in this proceeding, are reserved under the final hearing." The amended bill under this order was filed on the 30th of June, 1800, and the answer of the mayor and city council of Baltimore thereto, on the 21st July, 1S60; and it is on the issues which this amended bill and answer present, that this cause has been argued, and upon which I am now to decide. The bill alleges in substance, that the complainant, as one of the heirs of Judge Samuel Chase, is tenant in common with the other defendants, his grandchildren, and with the mayor and city council of Baltimore, grantees of Samuel and Thomas Chase, sons of Judge Chase, of the fee in the bed of West Falls avenue (formerly called “Liffy Street,”) and of the City Block, and as such, that she is entitled to a share of the wharf-age collected by the city on the west side of Jones’s Falls and on the City Block, and to one-sixth part of the City Block. And the bill prays for an account and for a partition between the parties entitled. The bill also states that three of the defendants, to> wit, William G. Ridgely, Ann Ridgely, and [887]*887Matilda Ridgely are residents of tlie District of Columbia; that since the filing of the original bill in this case, to wit, on the 8th day of June, 1S5S, they had conveyed all their interest in the property in question to their brother, Samuel Chase Ridgely; that said Samuel Chase Ridgely has since died, and by his last will and testament devised the said property so conveyed to him by his said brother and sisters bach to them. All of the defendants, except the mayor and city council of Baltimore, have filed a joint answer admitting the facts stated in the said bill of complaint. The mayor and city council of Baltimore file a plea, demurrer, and answer, in which they allege that the conveyance made by the said William G. Ridgely and others to Samuel Chase Ridgely was without consideration, colorable and fictitious, and was executed with the intent to give jurisdiction to this court. And that the said grantors in said deed have no legal standing as devisees of Samuel Chase Ridgely to be parties to this bill.

There are also filed in the cause two papers, stating in detail the several facts which have been admitted by the parties. These relate principally to the relationship of the said parties to Judge Chase, and contain the agreement, that either party may offer in evidence the record of the • ejectment suit brought by the complainant for this property against the mayor and city council of Baltimore in Baltimore county court; and that the plats, deeds, and evidences may be read from the record in said case, as evidence in the trial of this cause. The only parts of these admissions which it becomes necessary for me*to notice particularly, are the following: “It is admitted in this case, that the deed of the 8th of June, 1858, to Samuel Chase Ridgely from William G. Ridgely and others, was made without valuable consideration, and to enable the court to dispose of the case, as if the grantors in the deed had no interest in the matter in question in the cause; it being further understood, that on request of the grantors, the property conveyed by that deed should be passed to the grantors.”

Also, “the said William G. Ridgely, Ann C. Ridgely, and Matilda L. Ridgely executed a deed of all their property in Maryland to John G. Proud, Jr., bearing date the 5th of October, 1859; and it is admitted that no consideration was paid by Proud for the grant to him in said deed, but that the same was executed to remove a difficulty in the way of the exercise of the jurisdiction of this court.” It is also admitted that Samuel Chase Ridgely died in the summer of 1859. John G. Proud, Jr., is not made a party to the amended bill. The first difficulty which we encounter on the threshold of this case is that in reference to the jurisdiction of this court. The bill shows that three of the defendants are residents of the District of Columbia, and this was also one of the allegations of the original bill. Resting on that statement, if these defendants are indispensable parties to the cause, the case would be one clearly without the jurisdiction of this court; for, by the eleventh section of the judiciary act of 1789, the circuit courts of the United States have jurisdiction in civil suits at common law or in equity only where the matter in dispute exceeds, exclusive of costs, the sum or value of five hundred dollars, and the United States are plaintiff or petitioners, or an alien is a party, or the suit is between a citizen of the state where the suit is-brought and a citizen of another state. And the supreme court, as early as 1806, in the-case of Strawbridge v. Curtiss, 3 Cranch, [7 U. S.] 267, decided that where there are two or more joint plaintiffs or defendants, each of them must be capable of suing or being sued in the courts of the United States to-give the court jurisdiction. And this doctrine has never been departed from; for in 1854, in the case of Shields v. Barrow, 17 How. [58 U. S.] 141, the supreme court, in speaking of the act of congress of February 28, 1839, which hau been supposed to have altered the rule, say, that “this act does not affect any case where persons having an interest are not joined, because their citizenship is such that their joinder would defeat the jurisdiction.” And the court again affirm what they had before decided in Elmendorf v. Taylor, 10 Wheat. [23 U. S.] 167, that, “if the case may be completely decided as between the litigating parties, the circumstance that an interest exists in some other person, whom the process of the court cannot reach, as if such a party be a resident of another state, ought not to prevent a decree upon its merits. But if the case cannot be completely decided, the court should make no decree.” And this seems to have been the opinion of the learned-counsel for the complainant, for in July, 1859, they file a petition, stating the execution of the deed from William G. Ridgely and others to Samuel Chase Ridgely, and praying that the bill may be dismissed as to them; and by their subsequent petition, filed after the death of Samuel Chase Ridgely, they pray to make the three residents of the District of Columbia parties to the cause, as the devisees of Samuel Chase Ridgely.

Taking these facts, in connection with the written admission (to which I have referred! of the character and objects of this deed to-Samuel Chase Ridgely, it shows, beyond any doubt, that the learned counsel felt that unless they could remove this difficulty they could hope for no relief in this court; for this is a bill for partition, and for an account of wharfage received by the mayor and city council of Baltimore.

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Bluebook (online)
2 F. Cas. 886, 1 Hughes 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barney-v-baltimore-circtdmd-1863.