Iowa Homestead Co. v. Des Moines Navigation & Railroad

8 F. 97, 3 McCrary's Cir. Ct. Rpts 95, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2326
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa
DecidedJune 1, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 8 F. 97 (Iowa Homestead Co. v. Des Moines Navigation & Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Iowa Homestead Co. v. Des Moines Navigation & Railroad, 8 F. 97, 3 McCrary's Cir. Ct. Rpts 95, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2326 (circtsdia 1881).

Opinion

Love, D. J.,

(giving the judgment of the court.) Thus it appears that, after many vicissitudes, this cause is again before us upon a motion to remand. Mr. Justice Miller, in denying a former motion, said that if the plaintiff would dismiss his claim to a lien upon the land, the cause should be remanded. , This opinion must have proceeded upon the ground that upon the withdrawal of that claim by the plaintiff there would be no jurisdiction here. It could not have stood upon any other ground whatever, for upon no other ground than a want of jurisdiction could the cause have been remanded by the order of the court without the consent of the defendant Litch-field. The plaintiff accordingly withdrew or dismissed his claim to a lien upon the land. At that moment, according to Mr. Justice Miller’s opinion, as we understand it, the jurisdiction failed here and the cause ought to have been remanded. But the defendant Litch-field, at this stage of the case, obtained from the court leave to file a cross-bill, by which he sought to make a new case, showing an interest other than that of defeating the lien asserted by the plaintiff. The writer of this opinion, Judge McCrary concurring, granted the order giving leave to file the cross-bill. We are both now, however, convinced, upon further argument and fuller consideration, that the order granting leave to file the cross-bill ought to have been denied.

In the first place, if Mr. Justice Miller’s opinion was correct, there was no jurisdiction after the withdrawal of the plaintiff’s claim of lien; and how could there be any further proceeding in the cause without jurisdiction? The only thing to be done was then to remand the cause to the state court. But again the plaintiff dismissed a material part of his claim, upon the opinion and suggestion of the court that it would thereby entitle itself to an order remanding the cause. Having thus, at the suggestion of the court and in accord-[100]*100anee with its opinion, abandoned its claim to a- lien, — the only claim that affected the defendant Litchfield, — it was certainly error for the court to allow. Litchfield to set up a wholly new claim against it, and thus defeat its right to have the cause remanded, — the only consideration upon which it dismissed its claim of lien. Considering the matter, therefore, in the light of Mr. Justice Miller’s opinión alone, the court ought to have denied the application for leave to amend and file a cross-bill. The motion to remand ought to have been sustained upon the withdrawal of the claim of lien by the plaintiff; for there was then nothing whatever before the court but a controversy between two citizens of the state of Iowa. But we areof opinion that the same conclusion might be reached by a different course of reasoning. We incline to the opinion that the original motion to remand ought to have been sustained without any conditions whatever. What was the case ? Let us assume that a suit was pending in the state court, in which there were two distinct and independent controversies, — one between two citizens of Iowa, and the. other between the plaintiff and a citizen of New York. Litchfield, the citizen of New York, was not a party to the original suit in the state court. No judgment which could have been rendered in that court could have affected him. If he had not voluntarily intervened, any judgment in that forum, affecting his title to the land, could have been questioned by him by an independent bill in equity in this court; but Litchfield did intervene in the state court, as he had a right to do under the state practice, and he thus by his own act brought his rights into question in the state court. Thus arose the double controversy in question. Mr. Litchfield then removed the suit with this dual controversy here, and the question is, was it competent for this court to overrule the motion to remand, and to hear and determine the controversy in the suit between two citizens of Iowa, as well as the controversy between the plaintiff, a citizen of Iowa/and the defendant Litchfield, a citizen of New York?

It is of no avail whatever to say that the defendant navigation company is insolvent, and therefore a mere nominal party, since Litchfield will be compelled to pay any sum that may be adjudged against the land. The plaintiff demands a personal judgment against the navigation company, and a party has a perfect right to judgment against his insolvent debtor, if he chooses to insist upon it. Moreover, a defendant who is insolvent to-day may become quite solvent in the future. Lastly, we have no evidence of the insolvency of the [101]*101navigation company. It may turn out otherwise upon the proofs. The mere allegation of its insolvency does not establish the fact. If this question of jurisdiction were to be determined by the true construction of the second section of the act of 1875 alone, there might bo room for grave doubt. The last clause of that section is as follows :

“And when in any suit mentioned in this section there shall be a controversy which is vjholly between citizens of different states, and which can be fully determined as between them, then either one or more of the plaintiffs or defendants actually interested in such controversy may remove said suit into the circuit court of the United States for the proper district.”

But it must be borne in mind that upon every question of federal jurisdiction we are to consider not the law alone, nor the constitution alone, but the constitution and the law. These must concur in order to confer jurisdiction upon a federal tribunal. The constitution is the fountain of federal jurisdiction; the laws of congress are the streams through which the waters of jurisdiction flow to the courts: though the streams exist, yet, if the fountain be empty, the, jurisdiction fails; and though the fountain be full, yet, if the streams exist not, the jurisdiction equally fails. The constitutional provision is that the judicial power shall extend to controversies between citizens of different states. This, as well by construction as by the very nature of our national constitution, excludes all controversies between citizens of the same state from the judicial cognizance of the federal courts. Clearly, then, we can have no jurisdiction of the controversy between the two citizens of Iowa in the present case. Standing alone and unconnected with the controversy between the plaintiff and Litchfield, there is a controversy in this suit between two citizens of different states. Does that fact give ns jurisdiction to hear and determine a controversy between two citizens of Iowa of which otherwise we could have no jurisdiction whatever? Does the fact that a controversy between citizens of the same state is united in the same suit with a controversy between citizens of different states, bring the former controversy within our jurisdicton ?

The whole course of legislation and of judicial decision hitherto has proceeded upon the principle that whore in a suit a controversy between citizens of the same state is so blended with a controversy between citizens of different states as to be inseparable, the suit must remain in the state court. The reason is obvious. The state court is competent to decide both of such inseparable controversies and do full [102]*102justice. The federal court is not competent to decide tñe controversy .between the citizens of the same state, and therefore in such cases it can render only partial justice.

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Bluebook (online)
8 F. 97, 3 McCrary's Cir. Ct. Rpts 95, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iowa-homestead-co-v-des-moines-navigation-railroad-circtsdia-1881.