Riverdale Cotton Mills v. Alabama & Georgia Manufacturing Co.

198 U.S. 188, 25 S. Ct. 629, 49 L. Ed. 1008, 1905 U.S. LEXIS 1120
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 8, 1905
Docket194
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 198 U.S. 188 (Riverdale Cotton Mills v. Alabama & Georgia Manufacturing Co.) 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
Riverdale Cotton Mills v. Alabama & Georgia Manufacturing Co., 198 U.S. 188, 25 S. Ct. 629, 49 L. Ed. 1008, 1905 U.S. LEXIS 1120 (1905).

Opinion

*192 Mr. Justice Brewer,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

For over ten years, from January 21, 1891, the date of the filing of the original bill, litigation was carried on in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of Georgia, and in appellate courts, in the foreclosure of a trust deed executed by the Alabama and Georgia Manufacturing Company. In the course of that litigation decrees were entered and reversed, sales were made and set aside, possession of property was transferred and retransferred, accountings had as to the proceeds of property in possession, and when it seemed that at last litigation was at an end, the foreclosure consummated and the title established in the purchaser, we are told that it all amounted to nothing; that parties, lawyers and courts have been spending their time and labor in simply beating the air,, the title to the property conveyed by the trust deed being exactly where it was before the litigation commenced, and the party which had acquired possession by that litigation subject to an obligation to account as a mortgagee in possession.

Upon what is this contention based? The respondents say that the property conveyed by the trust deed was all in Alabama, although the deed recites that part of it was in Georgia;' that it originally belonged to the Alabama company; that that company executed the trust deed, although the resolution incorporated in the trust deed purports to have-been passed at a meeting of the directors held at the office of the company in West Point, Georgia; that the Alabama company was not made a party to the foreclosure proceedings and could not have been, because the plaintiff was a citizen of Alabama, and. making the Alabama company a defendant would have ousted the court of jurisdiction; that the subsequent owner of the property, another Alabama company, was also not made a party to those proceedings, and that therefore they were, res inter alios acta, and in no way binding upon either Alabama company. It is also insisted by the respondents that the so- *193 called ancillary bill filed by the petitioner was not in any sense of the term an ancillary but in fact an original bill, and that, under section 720, Rev. Stat., the Federal court had no power, to restrain the further proceedings in the state Chancery Court.

Prima facie, the United States Circuit Court had jurisdiction of the foreclosure bill. Diverse citizenship, was alleged and admitted, and the relief sought was the foreclosure of a trust deed covering property partially in Georgia and partially in Alabama. The bill in the state court challenged the decree in the United. States Circuit Court, denied‘its efficacy to transfer title, on the ground that the Alabama and Georgia Manufacturing Company (the grantor in thé trust deed and the original owner of the property) and the Huguley Manufacturing Company (a purchaser and subsequent owner) were both corporations of Alabama and citizens of the same State with the plaintiff, whereby a case was presented of which the Federal courts could not. take jurisdiction. The specific, allegations were these:

. “That a corporation, known'as the ‘Alabama and Georgia Manufacturing Company,’ alleged to be.a corporation organized under the laws of Georgia only, and said Huguley Manufacturing Company, together with the said W; T. Huguley, were the sole defendants to said bill, said W. T. Huguley being made defendant as co-trustee, alleged to be interested adversely. The Alabama and Georgia Manufacturing Company, originally chartered and organized as a corporation under said act of the general assembly of the State of Alabama, never has been made a defendant thereto, and never appeared as á party to said cause, the president of said corporation, to wit, W. H, Huguley, himself likewise a citizen and resident of the county of Chambers, State of Alabama, never having been served with, notice either of said alleged default of . interest, as expressly required under the terms of the trust deed, or notice of'said suit of foreclosure against said Alabama and Georgia Manufacturing Company. No attempt was made, by either *194 direct or ancillary proceedings, to subject the property lying in the State of Alabama to this súit. A portion of the property was erroneously described in the said mortgage as lying within the county of Harris, in the State of Georgia, while the orators aver that all of said property was and is situated within the county Of Chambers, in the State of Alabama. '
“'The property was not advertised in the State of Alabama, nor was any sale or pretense of sale conducted in said State.”

And again —

“The Huguley Manufacturing Company, a corporation, avers that it purchased and ‘acquired all the property herein above described subjéct to said mortgage, ánd is now the owner of the same, subject to said mortgage.”

The answer filed to .the ancillary bill alleges that both plaintiffs in the. state court were corporations chartered under, the laws of'Alabama. It further states:-'

“That while said Alabama and Georgia Manufacturing Co. may have been incorporated in the State Of Georgia, it-was also': incorporated in the State of Alabama prior to the incorporation in the State of Georgia. And these respondents aver that there never was, by the action of the-State of Georgia and Alabama,''any merger or consolidation of. said two corporations. They, therefore, allege that said Alabama and Georgia Manufacturing Company, incorporated under the -. laws of Alabama, was a distinct and separate- legal entity from the Alabama and Georgia Manufacturing Company incorporated under the laws of Georgia.
* * * * * * * * *
“That while said Huguley Manufacturing Company was alleged in said bill to have been incorporated under the laws of Georgia, the defendants aver that as a matter of fact' it was never so incorporated.”

It also avers that the property is all in the State of Alabama. The case was submitted on bill and answer.

It thus appears that a party carries on a litigation in a Federal court on its merits, and when beaten in that court" goes. *195 into a state court and claims that, by reason of his own untruthful admission of citizenship, the Federal court assumed a jurisdiction which in fact it could not take, and that all the proceedings in that court must go for naught. Under such circumstances there can be no doubt that the Federal court may inquire and determine whether its proceedings were & nullity, and such inquiry is not an original proceeding, but ancillary to those which have already been had. In other words, a Federal court, exercising a jurisdiction apparently belonging to it, may thereafter, by ancillary suit; inquire whether that jurisdiction in fact existed. It may protect the-title which it has decreed as against every one a party to the original suit and prevent that party from relitigating the questions of right which have already been determined. French, Trustee, v. Hay, 22 Wall. 250; Cole v. Cunningham,

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Bluebook (online)
198 U.S. 188, 25 S. Ct. 629, 49 L. Ed. 1008, 1905 U.S. LEXIS 1120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riverdale-cotton-mills-v-alabama-georgia-manufacturing-co-scotus-1905.