Palmer v. Texas

212 U.S. 118, 29 S. Ct. 230, 53 L. Ed. 435, 1909 U.S. LEXIS 1801
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 25, 1909
Docket224
StatusPublished
Cited by189 cases

This text of 212 U.S. 118 (Palmer v. Texas) 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
Palmer v. Texas, 212 U.S. 118, 29 S. Ct. 230, 53 L. Ed. 435, 1909 U.S. LEXIS 1801 (1909).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Day

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case grows out of the proceedings in the State of Texas to forfeit the permit of the Waters-Pierce Oil Company to do business in that State, and the subsequent proceedings for the appointment of a receiver of the property of the company in the state court, just decided, Waters-Pierce Oil Co. v. Texas, Nos. 1 and 2, cases Nos. 359 and 360, ante, pp. 86, 112. It is unnecessary, in view of the recital of the facts contained in those cases, to repeat herein what is there said in this connection.

On the nineteenth day of June, 1907, after the appointment of a receiver in the state case and the acceptance and approval of his bond, an appeal was taken from the District Court of Travis County to the Court of Civil Appeals of Texas, and bond given to supersede the receivership. Immediately thereafter and upon the same day a bill was filed by Bradley W. Palmer, one of the petitioners herein, against the Waters-Pierce Oil Company, in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Texas, praying for the appointment óf a receiver for the Waters-Pierce Company. Palmer filed the bill as a stockholder in the company. The bill is quite lengthy and recited the proceedings in the District Court of Travis County, Texas, stated in cases Nos. 359 and 360, ante, recites the appeal from the order appointing a receiver, to the Court Of Civil Appeals, also the appeal from'the judgment terminating, the right to do business in Texas, and for the recovery of penalties.

The prayer of the bill is for the appointment of a receiver to take possession'-'of the property belonging to the company in Texas, that the business of the company might be wound up, *124 and its property sold, .that the receiver be authorized to operate and manage the property, etc. .

On'the same day the Waters-Pierce Oil Company waived the service of subpoena, confessed the averments of the bill, and the Circuit Court appointed Chester B. Dorchester receiver.

On the same day H. C. Pierce intervened, and, repeating the allegations of the original bill, prayed the same relief. On June 20, 1907,'Dorchester qualified and gave bond as receiver, and was put in possession of the property.

The cases involved in Nos. 359 and 360, ante, having been appealed to the Court of Civil "Appeals, Robert J. Eckhardt, the state receiver appointed in the District Court of Travis County, applied in the Court of Civil Appeals for an order to obtain possession of the property which had'been placed in the hands of the Federal receiver.

The Court of Civil Appeals on June 28, 1907, handed down an opinion (103 S. W. Rep. 836), in which it declined to make an order directing the receiver in the Federal court to surrender possession, but did direct its receiver, in conjunction with the law officers of the State of Texas, to appear before the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Texas, and to there urge the rights of the State ánd the prior jurisdiction of its courts over the property in question, and to ask for such orders, decrees and judgments as might .be proper and necessary to protect that jurisdiction.

Thereafter, on July 1, 1907, the State of .Texas, through its officers and Eckhardt as receiver, applied to the Circuit Court of the United States and prayed it to set aside and annul its order appointing a Federal receiver. On July 15 the Circuit Court'refused to grant the prayer of the State of Texas and the state receiver. The State of Texas and Eckhardt as receiver took an appeal from the order of June 19,1907, appointing the Federal receiver, and from the order.of July 15, 1907, refusing to vacate the order appointing Dorchpster receiver. Thereupon the matter came on for hearing in the Circuit Court of Appeals, and that court, holding that the state- court had first acquired *125 jurisdiction in the matter, reversed and vacated the order of the Circuit Court appointing a receiver, and remanded the case to the Circuit Court, with directions to-discharge the receiver, and to tax all the costs of the receivership against the complainant. 158 Fed. Rep. .705. -

If the state court had acquired jurisdiction over the property by the proceedings for the appointment of its receiver, ami. had not lost the same by the subsequent proceedings, then, upon well-settled principles^ often recognized and enforced in this court, there should be no interference with the action'of the state courts while thus exercising its authorized jurisdiction. The Federal and state courts exercise jurisdiction within the same territory, derived from and controlled by separate and distinct authority, and are therefore required, upon every principle of justice and propriety, to respect the jurisdiction once acquired over propferty.by a court of the other sovereignty. If a court of competent jurisdiction, Federal ór state, has taken possession of property,k>r by its procedure has obtained jurisdiction over the same, such property is withdrawn from the jurisdiction of the courts of the other authority as effectually as if the property had been entirely removed to the territory of another sovereignty. Wabash Railroad v. Adelbert College, 208 U. S. 38, and previous cases in this court cited therein at page 54.

The Circuit Court of the United States, in the appointment of a receiver in this case, seems to have proceeded upon the theory that the proceedings in the state court had left the property in such a situation that it was no longer in custodia legis, and was liable to seizure by adverse proceedings.

This situation had arisen,- in the view of the Circuit Court, because the Waters-Pierce Oil Company had given a bond securing the amount of penalties awarded against it by the judgment, and had also given a bond in the sum of 1100,000 in order to suspend the powers of the receiver to act pending the appeal; and, in the view of the learned circuit judge, the court of last resort of the State of Texas had established the rule that *126 an appeal from such order, and the giving of the security*.re--, quired by the court, had the effect of returning the property to the owner, and to make the order appointing the receiver inoperative. “It appears to me,”says.the learned judge, “that they [the Texas cases] announce the doctrine that the powers of the receiver cease, and that the adverse party takes the security which the law furnishes, and the defendant takes his property, with the right to use, control and dispose of the same.”. 158 Fed. Rep: 717.

■The Circuit Coürt of Appeals in this cage, after reviewing the Tex-as cases, reached-a different conclusion, and held that the rulings of the Supreme Court of Texas-showed-"that the appeal and the giving of the bond had only the effect of suspending the order appointing the receiver, and that the court had not lost jurisdiction- over the property by -the bond given to supersede the order made.

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Bluebook (online)
212 U.S. 118, 29 S. Ct. 230, 53 L. Ed. 435, 1909 U.S. LEXIS 1801, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmer-v-texas-scotus-1909.