Pacific Railroad v. Ketchum

101 U.S. 289, 25 L. Ed. 932, 1879 U.S. LEXIS 1918
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 22, 1880
Docket242
StatusPublished
Cited by194 cases

This text of 101 U.S. 289 (Pacific Railroad v. Ketchum) 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
Pacific Railroad v. Ketchum, 101 U.S. 289, 25 L. Ed. 932, 1879 U.S. LEXIS 1918 (1880).

Opinion

Mb. Chief Justice Waite,

after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.

The first question with which.we are met is one of jurisdiction. It is contended on the part of the appellees that a consent decree in the Circuit Court cannot be appealed from, but we do not so understand the law. ’ Sect. 692 of the Revised Statutes provides that an appeal shall be allowed from all final decrees in the circuit courts^ &c., when the matter in dispute exceeds $5,000, and that this court “ shall receive, hear, and determine such appeals.” This makes appeals to this court, within the prescribed limits, a matter of right, and requires us, when they are taken, to hear and decide them. If, when the case gets here, it appears that the decree appéaled from was assented to by the appellant, we cannot consider any errors that may be assigned which were in law waived by the consent, but we must still receive and decide the case. If all the errors complained of come within the waiver, the decree below will be affirmed, but only after hearing. We have, therefore, jurisdiction of this appeal.

This brings us at once to the inquiry whether the appellant, the Pacific Railroad, did consent to the rendition of the decree appealed from. It is stated affirmatively on the record'that all parties, through their solicitors, did consent; but the appellant insists that its solicitor had no authority in that behalf. Early- in the progress of the cause the company filed an answer *296 under its corporate seal, and signed with its authority by its secretary and solicitor of record, in which every material allegation in the bill was confessed, and it was, moreover, positively stated that the bonds sued for were in all respects valid obligations of the company and the mortgage a subsisting lien. In every instance in which the stockholders attempted to get into the case as parties, so that they might defend for the corporation, it was asserted that the directors of the company were false to their trust, and that they had either consented to, or would not resist, a decree. A solicitor may certainly consent to whatever his client authorizes, and in this case it distinctly appears of record that the company assented through its solicitor. This is equivalent to a direct finding by the court as a fact that the solicitor had authority to do what he did, and binds us on an appeal so far as the question is one of fact only. The remedy for the fraud or unauthorized conduct of a solicitor, or'the officers of the corporation, in such a matter, is by an appropriate proceeding in the court where the consent was received and acted on, and in which proof may be taken and the facts ascertained. We take a case on appeal as it comes.to us in the record, and receive no new evidence. Here the record states in terms that the company assented to all that has been done. This is equivalent to an admission by the company on the record that the facts exist on which the decree rests. On an 'appeal, therefore, we-must take all the facts as admitted, and consider only whether the case is one in which, ■under any state of facts, the -decree could be entered. The record showing as it does affirmatively that the company gave its consent to the decree, we need not inquire what we would do if the case depended alone on the consent of the solicitor. It may be true also that under the peculiar provisions of this charter the stockholders have a sort of supervisory power over the doings of the directors; but they cannot avoid what has been done by. the directors in a suit pending in a court against the company, except by the employment of such remedies as are consistent with the orderly course of judicial proceedings. They.cannot correct errors arising from what has thus been done by appeal any more than the company can. If they have been defrauded, they must apply for relief in *297 the first instance to the court in which the fraud was perpetrated.

This disposes of all mere errors in form which are alleged against the decree. Parties to a suit have the right to agree to any thing they please in reference to the subject-matter of their litigation, and the court, when applied to, will ordinarily give effect to their agreement, if it comes within the general scope-of the case made by the pleadings. It was within the power of the parties to this suit to agree that a decree might be entered for a sale of the mortgaged property without any specific finding of the amount due on account of the mortgage debt, or without giving a day of payment. It was also competent for them to agree that if the property was bought at the sale by or for the bondholders, payment of the purchase-money might be made by a " surrender of the bonds. And so of all the other provisions of the decree which are complained of. "All these were matters about which the parties might properly agree; and having agreed, it does not lie with them to complain of what the court has done to give effect to their agreement. Although this appeal may have been instigated by the stockholders in opposition to the wishes of the directors, it is still the appeal of the company which was one of the parties to the agreement, and must be treated accordingly.

This leaves for our consideration under the appeal from the decree of sale only the question which was most strenuously pressed in the argument, that is to say, whether the court below had jurisdiction of the cause so as to authorize it to enter any decree. The objection is, that as Vail, Fish, Joseph Seligman, Punnett, Clark, Morgan, Murdock, and Jesse Seligman were all citizens of the same State with Ketchum and the several parties who in the progress of the cause were admitted as co-complainant-s with him, the suit was not between citizens of different States, and therefore not within the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court.

The first section of the act of March 8, 1875 (18 Stat., part 8, 470), provides “ that the circuit courts of the United States shall have original cognizance ... of all suits of a civil nature at common law or in equity, where the matter in dispute *298 exceeds, exclusive of costs, the sum or value óf $500, ... in which there shall be a controversy between citizens of different States. ...”

The same general language is used in the second section of the same act in respect to the removal of suits from the State courts, and in Removal Cases (100 U. S. 457) we held it to mean that when the controversy about which the suit was brought was between citizens of different States, the courts of the United States might take jurisdiction without regard to the position the parties occupied in the pleadings as plaintiffs or defendants. For the purposes of jurisdiction, the court had power to ascertain the real matter in dispute, and arrange the parties on one side or the other of that dispute. If in such arrangement it appeared that those on one side were all citizens of different States from those on the other, jurisdiction might be entertained and the cause proceeded with. That ruling, we think, applies as well to the first section as to the second.

For the purposes of this appeal we need not inquire when the Circuit Court first got jurisdiction of. this suit. It is sufficient if it had jurisdiction when the decree appealed from was rendered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
101 U.S. 289, 25 L. Ed. 932, 1879 U.S. LEXIS 1918, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacific-railroad-v-ketchum-scotus-1880.