Ex Parte Harding

219 U.S. 363, 31 S. Ct. 324, 55 L. Ed. 252, 1911 U.S. LEXIS 1642
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 20, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by122 cases

This text of 219 U.S. 363 (Ex Parte Harding) 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
Ex Parte Harding, 219 U.S. 363, 31 S. Ct. 324, 55 L. Ed. 252, 1911 U.S. LEXIS 1642 (1911).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice .White

delivered the opinion of the court.

By a motion for leave to file a petition for mandamus, George F. Harding seeks the reversal of the action of the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division, in taking jurisdiction over a cause as the result of a refusal to grant a request of Harding to reniand the case to a state court. The facts shown on the face of.the motion papers are these;

On October 19,1907, George F. Harding, the petitioner, alleging himself to be a resident of the State of California, sued in an Illinois state court various corporations alleged to be created by and citizens, of the State of New Jersey and fourteen individuals whose citizenship and residence were not given. The suit, was brought by Harding as a stockholder in the Corn Products Company, one of the defendants, and the object of the suit was to annul an al *367 leged unlawful merger of that company and for relief in respect of an asserted misappropriation of its assets. On November 6, 1907, the Corn Products Company applied to -remove to the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division, on. the ground that there was á separable controversy between it and Harding. By separate petitions all the. other defendants united in .the prayer for removal. The state court not having acted on the petition for removal, the judge of the United States court, upon the application of the Corn Products Company, Ordered the transcript of record from the state court to be filed and the case to be docketed. This being done, the Corn Products Company filed what was styled an amendment and supplement to the petition for removal,' stating the residence and citizenship of the individuals named as defendants in the original bill, four of them being averred to be residents of Chicago, Illinois, one of Pekin, Illinois, and the others citizens and residents of States other than Illinois.

In December, 1907, Harding moved to remand to the state' court, in substance upon the ground that there was no separable controversy and that the requisite diversity of citizenship was not shown by the petition for removal, and especially directed attention to the fact that at the time of the commencement of the suit in the state court. he, Harding, was not a resident of the district,, and that none of the corporate defendants were such residents.

Prior to the bringing of tibe Harding suit a suit had been brought in an Illinois state court by the Chicago Real Estate and Trust Company, an Illinois corporation and a stockholder in the Corn Products Company, upon substantially the same grounds as those subsequently alleged in the Harding suit, against the principal corporations and individuals who were thereafter made defendants in the Harding suit. This cause had been removed by the Corn Pródycts Company into the Circuit Court of the United *368 States for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division, and on its removal, at the instance of the Corn Products Company the court had restrained the real estate company, its officers, agents, attorneys, etc., from further prosecuting the cause in the state court. Immediately after the bringing of the Harding suit in the state court the Corn Products Coüipany applied to the Circuit Court, in the real estate ■ company suit, to restrain Harding from prosecuting his suit on the ground that the bringing of the same was a violation of the previous restraining order. The court issued a temporary restraining order. Thereafter, as we have said, -the Harding suit was removed on-the application of the Corn Products Company to the Circuit Court of the United States, and the motion'to which we have referred was' made by Harding to remand. That motion to remand, however, in consequence of the restraining order, which had been made permanent, was not heard until the summer of 1909, after the restraining order above referred to had been dissolved Iby the Circuit Court of Appeals. 168 Fed. Rep. 668. Before the motion to remand, however, was passed upon the. Circuit Court granted permission to the. Corn Products Company to amend its removal petition by alleging, that at the time of the commencement by Harding of his suit and continuously thereafter he was a citizen of Illinois and a resident of Chicago in that State. To this Harding objected on the ground that the court was without power to allow an amendment, and that its jurisdiction was to be tested by the averments of the original removal petition. The permitted amendment having been filed, the motion to remand was denied. Harding thereupon, reiterating his objection to the allowance of the amendment and to the jurisdiction of the court to do other than remand the cause, traversed the averment in the amended removal petition as to his Illinois citizenship and residence, and specially prayed “that there may be a. speedy hearing and a decision of such issue of citizen *369 ship and a remand of this cause to the state court by the order of this court, . . .” The request for hearing was granted. A large amount of evidence was introduced on such hearing, which extended, over a period of more than fifteen months, and the.taxable costs, it is said, “ran up into several thousands.of dollars.” Finally, on October 25, 1910, the issue was decided against Harding. 182 Fed. Rep. 421. The court, finding from the proof that Harding was, as alleged in the amended petition, a citizen and resident of the State of Illinois, expressly refused the prayer for removal made by Harding in his answer to the amended petition; in other words, the court reaffirmed and reiterated its previous action in refusing to remand the cause. Whether these facts give such color of right to the contention that we have jurisdiction to review the action of the trial court by the writ of mandamus as to lead us to be of opinion that further argument at bar is necessary, and therefore a rule to show cause should issue, is then the question for decision.

The doctrine that a court which has general jurisdiction over the subject-matter and the parties to a cause is competent to decide questions arising as to its jurisdiction, and therefore that such decisions are not open to collateral attack, has been so often expounded (see Dowell v. Applegate, 152 U. S. 327, 337, and cases cited), and has been so recently applied (Hine v. Morse, 219 U. S. 493), that it may be taken as elementary and requiring no further reference to authority. Nor is there any substantial foundation for the contention that this- elementary doctrine has no application to decisions of courts of the United States refusing to remand causes to state courts, since there is nothing peculiar in an order refusing to remand which differentiates it from any other order or judgment of a court of the United States concerning its jurisdiction. The importance of the subject which is involved in the contrary assertion, the apparent conflict between certain *370

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Bluebook (online)
219 U.S. 363, 31 S. Ct. 324, 55 L. Ed. 252, 1911 U.S. LEXIS 1642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-harding-scotus-1911.