Cuthbert v. Galloway

35 F. 466, 1888 U.S. App. LEXIS 2489
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York
DecidedJuly 9, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 35 F. 466 (Cuthbert v. Galloway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cuthbert v. Galloway, 35 F. 466, 1888 U.S. App. LEXIS 2489 (circtsdny 1888).

Opinion

Wiijbhusr, J.

This is an action for malicious prosecution of special proceedings for an order of arrest and false imprisonment. On the trial the jury,found ior the plaintiff. The defendant has moved fora new trial on several grounds.

[468]*468The first is want of jurisdiction. The plaintiff alleged in his complaint that he was a citizen of Pennsylvania, and the defendant of New York. As to this the defendant, in his answer, denied “ any knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief,” and then answered to the merits. On cross-examination the plaintiff answered questions concerning his residence in a mannerwhich tepded to show that he was a citizen of New York, and on re-examination that he was a citizen of Pennsylvania. The defendant moved the court to direct a verdict for the defendant for want of jurisdiction. This was denied, and nothing further with reference to this question took place. That, where the jurisdiction of the courts of the United States depends upon citizenship of the parties, the requisite citizenship must be substantially set forth somewhere in the proceedings, appears to have been settled from the earliest times. That, when well set forth, the want of it, if to be relied upon to defeat the jurisdiction, nrust be set forth in advance of proceeding to the merits, was also well established. In De Wolf v. Rabaud, 1 Pet. 476, Mr. Justice Story said:

“It has been recently decided by this court, upon full consideration, that the question of such citizenship constituted no part of the issue upon the merits, and must be brought forward by a proper plea in abatement in an earlier stage of the cause. ” '

In Smith v. Kernochen, 7 How. 198, Mr. Justice Nelson said:

“The objection came too late after the general issue, for, when taken to the jurisdiction on the ground of citizenship, it must be taken by a plea in abatement, and cannot be raised in a trial on the merits.”

In Sheppard v. Graves, 14 How. 505, Mr. Justice Daniel said:

“ Thus it has ever been received as a canon of pleading that matters which appertain solely to the j urisdietion of a court, or to the disabilities of a suitor, should never be blended with questions which enter essentially into the subject-matter of the controversy; and that all defenses involving inquiries into that subject-matter imply, nay admit, the competency of the parties to institute such inquiries, and the authority of the court to adjudicate upon them.”

And, after stating tbe confusion and incongruities which would arise from blending judgments on verdicts that the court could or could not render judgment on with judgment on the merits, he’further said:

“That the true doctrine applicable to the question is this: that although in the courts of the United States it is necessary to set forth the grounds of their eognizance as courts of limited jurisdiction, yet whenever jurisdiction shall be averred in the pleadings in conformity with the laws creating those courts, it must be talcm-prima faeie as existing, and that it is incumbent on him who would impeach that jurisdiction for causes dehors the pleading to allege and prove such causes; that the necessity for the allegation and the burden of sustaining it by proof both rest upon the party taking the exception.”

The same doctrine was held in Spencer v. Lapsley, 20 How. 264; Bell v. Railroad Co., 4 Wall. 598; Railroad Co. v. Harris, 12 Wall. 65. In the latter case Mr. Justice Swayne said: “In the proper order of pleading, which is obligatory, a plea in bar waives all pleas, and the right to plead, in abatement.” These cases, with others to the same effect, were decided before the act of 1872, requiring the practice, pleadings, forms, [469]*469and modes of procedure in civil causes other than equity and admiralty to conform “as near as may be” to those of the courts of record of the state; and in New York its Code of Civil Procedure, and not the common-law system of pleading, prevails. This is, however, a rule of law which lies deeper than mere form and mode of procedure, as the language of the distinguished jurists quoted shows, and that was not altered by this adoption of'the systems of practice of the various states. Ex parte Fisk, 113 U. S. 713, 5 Sup.Ct. Rep. 724. In Farmington Village Corp. v. Pittsburg, 114 U. S. 138, 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 807, decided in 1885, the rule of pleading requiring objection to the jurisdiction on account, of citizenship to be brought forward before pleading to the merits as it existed before the act of 1872 was recognized and applied as being still in force. So, also, in Hartog v. Memory, 116 U. S. 588, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 521. In this case Mr. Chief Justice Waite stated the rule as existing up to the act of 1875, (18 St. 470,) and that in its general scope it had not been altered by that act. The Code of Civil Procedure, by section 513, recognizes dilatory defenses which do not involve the merits of the cause, and provides for their verification. And although by section 487 a defendant is allowed no pleading but a demurrer or an answer, section 488 provides for a demurrer when want of jurisdiction of the court, or of capacity of the plaintiff to sue appears on the face of the complaint; and section 498, that the objection may be taken by answer when it does not so appear. These provisions of the Code do not appear to attempt to abolish dilatory defenses, but to prepare the way for them. This denial of knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to the plaintiff’s citizenship would seem to be sufficient to put tlie plaintiff to proof of his statement, if it was a part of the cause of action, or material to his right of recovery. Sections 522, 524. As a plea to the jurisdiction its allegation of want of knowledge or information is wholly immaterial. A direct denial even of the citizenship alleged by the plaintiff would not be sufficient. Such a plea must be certain to a certain intent in every particular. 1 Chit. Pl. 444; Scott v. Sandjord, 19 How. 393. In this case it should either allege that the plaintiff was a citizen of NewYork, the same as the defendant, or deny that he was a citizen of Pennsylvania, or of any other state, or an alien. And this denial or averment, whatever it amounts to, was pleaded with defenses to the merits on which the parties proceeded to trial, and was, on the cases and principles stated, thereby waived. There was nothing left for trial but the merit of the cause of action, and this question of jurisdiction appears to have been properly disregarded.

This defendant, with others non-resident and not served with process, were a firm doing business of photographers in New York. His copartners, with still others, constituted other firms doing a like business in Boston and Philadelphia. These firms sent out agents to take negatives to be sent in to be printed and finished and returned to the agents to be furnished to customers. The firms divided the territory between themselves, and were not to encroach upon that of each other. The New York firm was to have Connecticut, and appointed the plaintiff agent for that territory, by writing, in which it was agreed that he should have the [470]

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Bluebook (online)
35 F. 466, 1888 U.S. App. LEXIS 2489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cuthbert-v-galloway-circtsdny-1888.