Putnam v. New Albany

20 F. Cas. 79, 4 Biss. 365
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana
DecidedJuly 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 20 F. Cas. 79 (Putnam v. New Albany) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Putnam v. New Albany, 20 F. Cas. 79, 4 Biss. 365 (circtdin 1869).

Opinion

MCDONALD, District Judge.

This is'a bill in chancery filed January 29,1868, by John P. Putnam, a citizen of Massachusetts, and Herman Ely and Stevenson Burke, citizens of Ohio, against the New Albany and Sandusky City Junction Railroad Company" and the city of New Albany, — both Indiana corporations,— and Thomas L. Smith and thirty-three others, citizens of Indiana, and subscribers to the stock of said company.

On the 20th of June, 1868, the defendants, the city of New Albany, Thomas L. Smith, John S. McDonald, Benjamin F. Scribner,. Horatio N. Duval, Thomas Danforth, William-S. Culbertson, John B. Crawford, Ephraim S.. Whistler, Bela C. Kent, Alexander J. Kent, Michael C. Kerr, Isaac P. Smith, John H. McMahon, Lawrence Bradley, James Montgomery, Samuel Montgomery, George V„ Howk, Bradford E. Scribner, John F. Anderson, John B. Winstandley, Jesse J. Brown, and Augustus Bradley, filed a demurrer to the-bill. Ezekiel It. Day, one of the defendants, has filed his answer to the bill, and a cross-bill against his co-defendants. Henry Behar-rel, a mere volunteer, has entered an appearance, and filed his answer and a cross-bill. The defendants, who have demurred to the-original bill, also demur to these cross-bills. The case is now before the court on these demurrers.

As to the answer and cross-bill of Beharrel, we may as well say at once, that, as he is not named in the original bill, and has not been admitted a defendant by the court, he is an intruder, and his answer and cross-bill are ordered to be taken off the files. We have no concern with him in this suit, and advise him not to intermeddle in other people’s business.

I. We will first consider the demurrer to the original bill. This bill charges that, on the 14th of November, 1857, in the Floyd circuit court, Indiana, one William F. Pierson and. Harvey Seymour recovered a judgment against said railroad company for fifty-four thousand eight hundred and fifty-five dollars, as trustee for the present complainants and those whose interests they represent, in certain proportions stated in the bill; that about the 30th of March, 1838, thirteen thousand three hundred and sixty-eight dollars and eighty-three cents was paid on that judgment, leaving then due thereon in principal, interest and costs, forty-two thousand seven hundred and twenty dollars and forty-one cents, no part of which has ever been paid; that after-wards execution was duly issued on said judgment and returned nulla bona; and that said company then was, ever since has been, and now is, wholly destitute of property subject to execution, and long since abandoned its enterprize, and ceased to maintain an official organization.

The bill further alleges that the city of New Albany, for subscriptions made November 19, 1853, to the capital stock of said railroad company, is indebted to that corporation in the sum of three hundred and ninety-three thousand dollars, with interest thereon payable semi-annually, at six per cent., from and after the first of January, 1856 — the principal being payable January 1st, 1S74; that no part of said principal or interest has been paid; that more than seventy thousand dollars of said interest is now due; and that “by some pretended compromise made between said city and said railroad company, after said railroad company became insolvent, said city obtained possession” of the bonds which had [81]*81been issued on said subscription, and procured an attempted concellation oí said subscription, — all of wbicli doings were and are illegal, null, and void.

The bill also avers that the other defendants to the bill severally subscribed large sums of money to the capital stock of said company in the year 1855, the amount of each of which subscriptions is stated in the bill. And it is averred that all these draw interest from the first of January, 1855; and that no part of the principal or interest has been paid. The bill prays that the amount of money due by each of the defendants to the railroad company be ascertained; that enough of the money so found due to pay off the said judgment be ordered to be applied to the payment thereof; and that such other relief as justice and equity require be decreed.

In support of the demurrer, the following objections are urged to the bill:

1. It is argued that, upon the face of the bill this court has no jurisdiction of the cause. The bill sufficiently states that the complainants and defendants are citizens of different states; so that, under the provisions of the constitution and the judiciary act, there can be no doubt of our jurisdiction over the persons of the parties.

But it is argued that we have no jurisdiction of the subject matter of this suit This objection stands on the fact that the judgment mentioned in the bill, and sought to be enforced in this proceeding, was rendered by a state court; and that suitors having elected to pursue their remedy in a state court of competent jurisdiction, and having obtained a judgment there, cannot then abandon that forum, and seek the satisfaction of that judgment in a national court. It is undoubtedly a general rule that when the courts have concurrent jurisdiction of the same subject matter, the first that takes the jurisdiction excludes the other. Shelby v. Bacon, 10 How. [51 U. S.] 56; Taylor v. Carryl, 20 How. [61 U. S.] 583; Freeman v. Howe. 24 How. [65 US.] 450. But this rule is subject to many exceptions. Indeed, it seems to apply only in cases where the parties are the same or stand in privity to each other, and where the points in litigation and the redress sought in both courts are identical. Thus, in the case oBuck v. Colbath, 3 Wall. [70 U. S.] 334, it is held that the rule in question is subject to some limitations, and is confined to suits between the same parties or privies seeking the same relief or remedy, and to such questions or propositions as arise ordinarily and properly in the progress of the suit first brought, and does not extend to all matters which may by possibility become involved in it. And Mr. Justice Miller, in delivering the opinion in that case, said “in examining into the exclusive character of the jurisdiction of such cases, we must have regard to the nature of the remedies, the character of the relief sought, and the identity of the parties in the different suits. For example, a party having

notes secured by a mortgage on real estate, may, unless restrained by statute, sue m a court of chancery to foreclose his mortgage, and in a court of law to recover a judgment on his notes, and in another court of law, in an action of ejectment, to get possession of the land. Here in all the suits, the question at issue may be the existence of the debt mentioned in the notes and mortgage; but as the relief sought is different, and the mode of proceeding is different, the jurisdiction of neither court is affected by the proceeding in the other. And this is true notwithstanding the common object of all the suits may • be the collection of the debt.” This reasoning appears to be sound; and it is applicable to the case at bar. Its test is to “regard the nature of the remedies, the character of relief sought, and the identity of the parties in the different suits.” Here the nature of the remedies is different. The remedy sought in the state cottrt was an action at law, followed by a fieri facias; but the remedy in this court is by a bill in chanceiy to force the company’s debtors to pay this judgment In that case, the character of relief sought was to oblige the company to pay the debt; in this case, the character of relief sought is to make the debt from others than the company. And in that action, the parties were not the same as in this.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 F. Cas. 79, 4 Biss. 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/putnam-v-new-albany-circtdin-1869.