Mulcahey v. Lake Erie & W. R.

69 F. 172, 9 Ohio F. Dec. 178, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 3086
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Ohio
DecidedJuly 27, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 69 F. 172 (Mulcahey v. Lake Erie & W. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mulcahey v. Lake Erie & W. R., 69 F. 172, 9 Ohio F. Dec. 178, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 3086 (circtndoh 1895).

Opinion

HAMMOND, J.

On its merits the motion for a new trial in this case must be overruled. I do not think the exclusion of the testimony of Andrew Shainer, which was found in the stenographic notes of the former trial, was error. The act of congress (Acts 52d Cong., 1st Sess., c. 14) which provides “that in addition to the mode of taking the depositions of witnesses in cases pending at law or equity in the district and circuit courts of the United States it shall be lawful to taire the depositions or testimony of witnesses in the mode prescribed by the laws of the states in which the courts are held” has not changed the ordinary rule of tbe federal courts that the witness must be produced and his testimony taken orally. Con[173]*173gress has inscribed the only conditions under which depositions may be substituted for pral testimony, and we can use other than oral testimony only in compliance with those conditions, which are 00 familiar that it is unnecessary to cite them. All that the recent act of congress above quoted has done is to permit depositions authorized by congress to be taken according to the mode in vogue in the state. It has not enlarged or changed the conditions under which depositions may be substituted for oral testimony, and the state of Ohio cannot, therefore, prescribe other and different conditions than those prescribed by congress. Except, therefore, in directing how a deposition may be formally taken, section 5243 of the He vised (statutes of Ohio (Laws Ohio 1894, p. 80) has no effect upon this question. Our acts of congress prescribe that the deposition ol‘ a witness beyond the jurisdiction of a court may be taken under certain conditions, and the testimony of this witness so beyond the jurisdiction of this court might: have been taken under that act of congress in any mode authorized by the laws of Ohio. But it is quite another thing to say that his testimony found in the stenographic report of a former trial may be used in evidence, and, congress not having said this, the legislature of Ohio cannot prescribe such a rule of evidence for us. The recent act of congress was not intended to have any such effect.

In regard to the objection that the court excluded from the jury the evidence of the negligence of the conductor it is sufficient: to say that for the reasons so fully stated in the charge itself I still think that: was the correct view of the rights of the parties. The result is that the verdict here must be sustained and the motion for a new trial overruled.

But we are now confronted with another and an anomalous ground for a new trial, one that, so far as I know, has not been presented before; at least no case has been cited in which it has occurred. This case lias been twice expensively tried in this court, once resulting in a mistrial and now in this verdict for the defendant. Yet, for the first time, attention is called to a defect of pleading in the petition for removal which is said to he fatal to our jurisdiction. And we are asked to get this verdict aside and grant a new trial in order that we may then hear a motion to remand the case to the state court from wliich it came for want of jurisdiction here1.'. It does seem to me that if ever a new trial should be refuged upon such a ground as that it should be done in this case. It is entirely true that the recent legislation of congress has made it quite unnecessary to make any objection to the jurisdiction, and the court is required, whenever the want of it appears, to dismiss the caso. This legislation is in hostility to the jurisdiction of the federal courts, and reverses the general rule for quieting all questions of jurisdiction by the appearance and waiver of the parlies, and the final judgment in the case. And these cases are dismissed in the appellate courts where the want of jurisdiction appears, and often on the motion of the courts themselves. But it does not follow from this, in my judgment, that the court: here must aid ibis objection to the jurisdiction by changing the attitude of the party making it, releasing him from the technical obstructions that [174]*174exist to his motion, and complacently putting him in an attitude where he may make it. Evidently and technically the obligation of this court to dismiss a suit whenever a want of jurisdiction appears terminates with verdict and judgment. The right of the party to object to the jurisdiction, like all other rights preceding ■ judgment, is by verdict and judgment technically terminated. This is the technical condition here. It is true the court still has power to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial, and until the term is adjourned that power subsists, although an execution may in the meantime issue upon the verdict and judgment, if it be not before that time suspended. It is not impossible that the money may have been collected and be in the pocket of a plaintii'f before the term adjourns and the execution is satisfied. Upon good grounds a new trial may nevertheless be granted and restitution commanded; but it would hardly be said that these acts of congress would require us to do that in order to entertain an objection to the jurisdiction. It would not, in such a case, be a good ground for a new trial that we had no jurisdiction. But none the less is this verdict and judgment final in the sense we are now considering it from its rendition and entry. It must be a mere matter of grace and favor to the plaintiff to grant him a new trial in order that he may object to the jurisdiction.

And I am not disposed, for sound and substantial reasons, to grant that indulgence in this case, but shall leave the plaintiff where the verdict and the judgment left him in that behalf. It may be that, through the effect of a writ of error, the plaintiff can take this case to an appellate tribunal, and there have the case dismissed for want of jurisdiction. This would be to transfer to the appellate court the determination of the question whether or not this petition is insufficient and the jurisdiction wanting; and also the question whether or not, even in the appellate court, it be not too late, after verdict and judgment, to take this objection, unless there be ■substantial ground for vacating the judgment and restoring the case to a condition in which the objection to the jurisdiction would be technically available. And in my judgment, after verdict, that is the proper tribunal to determine these questions, and only that tribunal) and it would be unwise for the trial court, if not unlawful, to assume the decision of them, possibly to usurp it after verdict by exercising the power of granting a new trial in order to take hold of the question of jurisdiction again, and decide it. I have here and now no power to decide this question of jurisdiction, and the appellate court has, through the medium of a writ of error, the power to decide it, and should be permitted to exercise that power in all justice to the parties involved. I could, through the medium of a preliminary and previous grant of a neAv trial, again acquire the power of decision, but I doubt if a court should by such means assume the function of decision, and for this reason: If it does, and the case be remanded, the defendant is finally, and conclusively precluded, upon the question of jurisdiction, by the judgment here that the jurisdiction does not exist'because there is no appeal from an order remanding the case. If, however, the court should decide in favor of the [175]*175jurisdiction, the objecting plaintiff could take tbe case to the supreme court of the United States under the recent act of congress. This would seem an unfair advantage.

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Bluebook (online)
69 F. 172, 9 Ohio F. Dec. 178, 1895 U.S. App. LEXIS 3086, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mulcahey-v-lake-erie-w-r-circtndoh-1895.