Finney v. Guy

189 U.S. 335, 23 S. Ct. 558, 47 L. Ed. 839, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1357
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 6, 1903
Docket180
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 189 U.S. 335 (Finney v. Guy) 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
Finney v. Guy, 189 U.S. 335, 23 S. Ct. 558, 47 L. Ed. 839, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1357 (1903).

Opinion

*339 Mr. Justice Peckham,

after making the foregoing statement of .facts, delivered the opinion of the court.

The demurrer raises the question whether thd complaint states facts' sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The plaintiffs contend that their cause of action is based upon the decisions and judgments of the courts of the State of Minnesota, and upon the statutes of that State, and that the Wisconsin Supreme Court in sustaining the demurrer has thereby failed to give that full faith and credit to the laws and judgments of the State of Minnesota and its courts which they receive in that State and which they are entitled to under the Constitution and laws of the United States, and that by reason thereof a Federal right has been .denied them.

They urged that, under the judgment of the American Savings & Loan Association v. Farmers' & Merchants' State Bank, which was recovered in the Minnesota court, and is referred to in the foregoing statement of facts, the defendant is concluded as to her defence to the same extent she would have been had she appeared and contested her liability in the Minnesota courts, and that as a consequence the Wisconsin courts are bound to give the same effect to that judgment in their courts that it has in the courts of Minnesota; that if such effect'had been awarded that judgment, then this action could have been maintained; and the Wisconsin court in sustaining the demurrer denied such effect to the judgment, which was a violation of a right founded upon the Federal Constitution.

It- is stated by the Supreme Court of Wisconsin that that State for many .years has had a statute for the enforcement of the liability of stockholders in corporations similar to that which exists in Minnesota, and that it had been frequently decided under such statute that an action of the nature of the one at bar could not be maintained in her courts, and also that it was against the public policy of Wisconsin to permit it; that the remedy under the Wisconsin statute was exclusive, and consisted iti a suit in equity at the home of the corporation, in'the nature of a partnership accounting, the parties to which would be all the creditors or»a creditor-in his own behalf and. in behalf of all *340 others similar]} situated who would come in and make themselves parties, and the stockholders who could be served with process in the State.

Whether a cause of action is stated in a pleading, is generally to be decided with reference to the law of the State where the action is pending. If the state court hold that no cause of action is set forth in the pleading and that it is against the public policy of the State to permit an action for such a purpose, we should generally hold that there was no Federal question involved in such determination. The plaintiffs, however, urge that there is • here an exception to that rule founded upon the considerations just stated, and that if under the Minnesota law this action could be maintained, the courts of Wisconsin are bound to entertain jurisdiction to the same extent. It. is not, however, the case that every decision regarding the proffer construction of the statute of another State, involves a Federal question. Where the case turns upon the construction and not the validity of the statute, a decision of that question is not necessarily of a Federal character. Johnson v. New York Life Insurance Company, 187 U. S. 491, 496. Without precisely determining just how far questions of this kind can in all cases be regarded ás coming under the rule giving full faith and credit to the public acts, records and judicial proceedings of another State, depending, as such questions must, upon the particular facts of each case and the manner in which they are presented, we may, nevertheless, examine the contentions of the plaintiffs in error to see how far they are justified in the law.

After quite a full examination of the Minnesota decisions on the question, we have just decided in Hale v. Allinson, 188 U. S. 56, that a receiver appointed in Minnesota, under these same statutes, could not maintain an action outside of that State to enforce the liability of a stockholder, and it was said that the courts of Minnesota had held the same thing for many years. An examination of the decisions of the Minnesota courts shows that they had held .that the remedy provided by the statutes of the State for the enforcement of stockholders’ liability was a suit in equity in that State by a creditor in his own behalf and that of all other creditors, against all the stockholders of the *341 corporation, or so many of them as could be served with process, and that it was exclusive, and no other remedy could be availed of even within the jurisdiction of the courts of Minnesota. That being the law of Minnesota, it would, of course, prevent an action outside the State, by a receiver as well as by any other plaintiff, to enforce the stockholders’ liability. Hence, in the Hale-Allinson case, we held the receiver could not maintain such an action in a foreign jurisdiction and in a Federal court.

The case of. Allen v. Walsh, 25 Minnesota, 543, has been cited as sustaining this rule. Many other cases have been cited as holding the same rule, an exclusive remedy under the statute and to be pursued only in the courts of the State. Allen v. Walsh does hold (and it has been followed by many others to the same effect) that the only remedy is that created by the statute, and that remedy is an action in equity in the home courts wherein all the creditors and all the stockholders are parties, or as many of the latter as can be served, and in that action all the rights of the different parties can be adjusted. The remedy being exclusive, the statute must be followed, and the result is that no other action to enforce the liability can be availed of in another'State. This would call for an affirmance of the judgment-but for the claim now urged by. counsel for plaintiffs, that-the. case of Allen v. Walsh has been overruled by subsequent cases in Minnesota, and that the law is correctly set forth in the complaint. He calls attention to the fact that this case has not gone to trial upon an issue of any question of fact, but the questions to be determined have arisen on demurrer to the complaint; that the complaint avers as a fact that by the law of Minnesota such an action as this can be maintained in the courts of a foreign jurisdiction after a judgment has been recovered in an action in the state court, such as is referred to in the complaint, and that' the defendant by demurring admits that the law is as stated in the complaint, and therefore the court is bound .to give effect'to the law of Minnesota such as is set forth in that pleading. This is too broad a claim to be maintained.

If the case had been on trial upon issues of fact, among them *342 being one as to wbat the law of Minnesota was, and the statutes as well as the decisions above mentioned had been proved and a witness learned in the.

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Bluebook (online)
189 U.S. 335, 23 S. Ct. 558, 47 L. Ed. 839, 1903 U.S. LEXIS 1357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/finney-v-guy-scotus-1903.