Redmond v. Smith

54 S.W. 636, 22 Tex. Civ. App. 323, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 100
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 13, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 54 S.W. 636 (Redmond v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Redmond v. Smith, 54 S.W. 636, 22 Tex. Civ. App. 323, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 100 (Tex. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

—This suit was brought by appellant against appellees, Thad W. Smith, P. Ornelas, Juan E. Barrera, and Oscar Bergstrom, upon a promissory note made and signed by each of them as principals for $550. The note is dated August 16, 1898, and is made payable to Redmond six months after its date.

Ornelas pleaded, in abatement to the jurisdiction of the County Court, that he is and has ever been a citizen of the Republic of Mexico; that he is not and hath never been a citizen of the Hnited States nor of the State of Texas; that he is and hath been for more than ten years past the duly accredited consul of the Republic of Mexico at San Antonio, *324 Texas, and that therefore he is not subject to the jurisdiction of the court wherein sued.

Subject to this plea, he answered that he signed the note sued on as surety for his codefendants, and prayed that, in the event of a recovery by plaintiff, execution should be directed and first levied on their property.

Thad Smith answered that he was surety on the note for Ornelas, who is the principal.

Barrera, that he signed the note as surety for Smith and Ornelas, wlio are principals.

Bergstrom, not having been personally served, did not appear nor answer.

The court, upon evidence establishing the facts pleaded by Ornelas, sustained the plea and dismissed the action as to him. Then, without hearing evidence on the pleas of suretyship of the other parties, dismissed the suit as to all of them.

The action of the court in sustaining Ornelas* plea to its jurisdiction, and in dismissing the suit, is assigned as error by appellant.

By the Constitution of the United States (part of section 2 of article 3) their judicial power extends to all cases affecting ambassadors, other - public ministers, and consuls: and the judiciary act of September 24, 1789, section 9 (1 Stats., 76), gave to the district courts of the United States, exclusive of the courts of the several States, jurisdiction of all suits against consuls and vice-consuls, except for certain offenses mentioned in the act.

In Osborn v. Bank, 9 Wheaton, 738, Chief Justice Marshall distinctly expressed the opinion, so strongly contended for by him in Marbury v. Madison, 1 Cranch, 137, that the original jurisdiction granted to the Supreme Court is exclusive and can not be given by Congress to any other, tribunal.

But by subsequent opinions of the Supreme, Circuit, and District courts of the United States, the constitutionality of the act conferring jurisdiction on the district court in cases affecting consuls and vice-consuls has been sustained. Bors v. Preston, 111 U. S., 252; Claflin v. Housman, 93 U. S., 130; Davis v. Packard, 7 Pet., 281; Gettings v. Crawford, Taney, 1, 10 Fed. Cas., 447 (Case No. 5465); Froment v. Duclos, 30 Fed. Rep., 385; Pooley v. Luco, 72 Fed. Rep., 561.

Section 713, Revised Statutes of the United States, as originally enacted, declared: “The jurisdiction vested in the courts of the United States, in cases and proceedings hereinafter mentioned, shall be exclusive of the several States. * * * Eighth. Of all suits or proceedings against ambassadors or public ministers or against consuls and vice-consuis.*’ By the Act of February, 18, 1875 (18 Stats., 36), entitled “'An act to correct errors and supply omissions in the Revised Statutes of United States,” section 711 was amended by striking out subdivision 8. Rev. Stats, of 1878, sec. 711, 2 Desty’s Fed. Proc., 9 ed., sec. 225. Prior to this.amendment, as was generally held, State courts had no jurisdie *325 tian of such cases, because the •jurisdiction of such courts ivas expressly excluded by the act.

But section 687 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, 1878 (second edition), which took effect on December 1, 1873, provides that the Supreme Court “shall have exclusively all such jurisdiction of suits or proceedings against ambassadors, or other public ministers, or their domestics or servants, as a court of law can have consistently with the law of nations; and original, but not exclusive, jurisdiction of all suits brought by ambassadors, or other public ministers, or in which a consul or vice-consul is a party.”

And section 563, that “the district court shall have jurisdiction" as follows: * * . * of all suits against consuls or vice-consuls, except for offenses above the description aforesaid.” Clause 14 of said section.

This clause was by the Supreme Court, in Bors v. Preston, 111 U. S., 261, held constitutional.

Thus it seems that jurisdiction of suits against consuls and vice-consuis is by the clause of the section quoted given to the Federal district courts. Does this jurisdiction exclude that of State courts in like causes ?

In annotating clause 14 of section 563, Gould and Tucker, in Rotes on the Revised Statutes of the United States, say: “By repeal of clause 8 of section 711, by 18 St. 316, chapter 80, the United States courts have no longer exclusive jurisdiction, the State courts being thereby given concurrent jurisdiction,” and cite Froment v. Duclos, supra, as sustaining this proposition.

In Gettings v. Crawford, supra, it is said by Chief Justice Taney: “If the arrangement and classification of the subject of jurisdiction into appellate and original, as respects the Supreme Court, do not exclude that tribunal from appellate power in the cases where original jurisdiction is granted, can it be right, from the same clause, to employ words of exclusion as respects other courts whose jurisdiction is not thereby limited or prescribed, but left for future regulation of Congress ? The true rule in this case is, I think, the rule which is constantly applied to ordinary acts of legislation, in which the grant of jurisdiction over a certain subject matter to one court does not, of itself, imply that that jurisdiction is to be exclusive.” This language is quoted with approval by the Supreme Court in Bors v. Preston, supra.

Again, in the same case, Chief Justice Taney says: “The State courts are not and can not, from the nature of our institutions, be excluded from all jurisdiction in such matters, and the grant of power to the courts of the United States has never been held to exclude them.” And that “a consul is not entitled, by the laAvs of nations, to the immunities and priA'ileges of an ambassador or public minister. He is liable to civil suits, like airy other individual, in the tribunals of the country in Avhich he resides.”

In the case of Wilcox v. Luco, 118 California, 639, it is held by the Supreme Court of California that the amendment of section 711, Re *326 vised Statutes of United States, removing from the statutes the. express provision that the jurisdiction of the Federal courts in suits and proceedings against consuls should be exclusive of the courts of the several States, Congress must have intended to declare that such jurisdiction should no longer be exclusive, unless it was made exclusive by the Constitution itself, or by other existing' legislation.

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Bluebook (online)
54 S.W. 636, 22 Tex. Civ. App. 323, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redmond-v-smith-texapp-1899.