Robertson v. Cease

97 U.S. 646, 24 L. Ed. 1057, 7 Otto 646, 1878 U.S. LEXIS 1493
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 18, 1878
Docket46
StatusPublished
Cited by217 cases

This text of 97 U.S. 646 (Robertson v. Cease) 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
Robertson v. Cease, 97 U.S. 646, 24 L. Ed. 1057, 7 Otto 646, 1878 U.S. LEXIS 1493 (1878).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Harlan

delivered the opinion of tbe court.

Tbis action was instituted on the 25th of September, 1873, by Cease, as the assignee of a note for $4,190, executed in Texas by Robertson, plaintiff in error, on the 2d of October, 1860, and made payable July 1, 1861, to tbe order of W. J. Chamblin, with interest at tbe rate of ten per cent per annum from date.

Does it sufficiently appear from tbe record tbat tbe case is within the jurisdiction of tbe Circuit Court ? Tbat is tbe first question to be considered upon tbis writ of error.

Tbe payee, Chamblin, a citizen of Illinois, died in tbat State on tbe 29th of April, 1871. In September, 1873, tbe note sued on was assigned by bis administrators to Cease. It appears from tbe pleadings tbat tbe heirs and administrators of Chamblin were also citizens of Illinois, both when tbe note was assigned to Cease and at tbe commencement of tbis action. It is also averred tbat Robertson, when sued, was a citizen of Texas, but there is no allegation as to tbe citizenship of Cease. Tbe averment as to him is, tbat be “ resides in the county of Mason and State of Illinois.” It is, however, claimed by counsel to be apparent, or fo be fairly inferred from certain documents or papers copied into tbe transcript, tbat Cease was, at tbe commencement of tbe action, a citizen of Illinois. One of those documents is a written notice, served by Robertson upon Cease’s attorneys, that be would apply for a commission to examine as witnesses, in support of tbe plea in abatement, “ Chamblin, Winn, and Henry Cease, citizens of tbe county of Mason, State of Illinois.” The commission which issued, under tbat notice, from tbe clerk’s office directed tbe examination of these witnesses, who are, in tbat document also, described as citizens of Illinois. The other document referred to is tbe deposition of Cease, which opens thus: “ My name is Henry Cease; residence, Mason County, Illinois; age, 52 years; occupation, grain dealer and farmer.”

*648 It is the settled doctrine of this court that, in cases where the jurisdiction of the Federal courts depends upon the citizen ship of the parties, the facts, essential to support that jurisdiction, must appear somewhere in the record. Said the Chief Justice, in Railway Company v. Ramsey, 22 Wall. 322: “ They need not necessarily, however, be averred in the pleadings. It is sufficient if they are, in some form, affirmatively shown by the record.” That view was approved in the subsequent case of Briges v. Sperry, 95 U. S. 401. Under the doctrine of these cases, it is contended that the citizenship of Cease in Illinois is satisfactorily shown by the foregoing documents, which, it is insisted, are a part of the record upon this writ of error. But this position cannot be maintained. It involves a misapprehension of our former decisions. When we declared that the record, other than the pleadings, may be referred to in this court, to ascertain the citizenship of parties, we alluded only to such portions of the transcript as properly constituted the record upon which we must base our final judgment, and not to papers which had been improperly inserted in the transcript. Those relied upon here to supply the absence of distinct averments in the pleadings as to the' citizenship of Cease, clearly do not constitute any legitimate part of the record. They are not so made either by a bill' of exceptions, or by any order of the court referring to them, or in any other mode recognized by the law. As there is nothing to show that the deposition of Cease, or the commission or notice under which it was taken, was before the jury or the court for any purpose, during the trial, no fact stated in them can be made the foundation of any decision we might render, either upon the merits or the question of jurisdiction. Looking, then, at the pleadings, and to such portions of the transcript as properly constitute the record, we find nothing beyond the naked averment of Cease’s residence in Illinois, which, according to the uniform course of decisions in this court, is insufficient to show his citizenship in that State. Citizenship and residence, as often declared by this court, are not synonymous terms. Parker et al. v. Over man, 18 How. 137.

In the oral argument before this court, the inquiry arose, whether since the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment to the *649 Federal Constitution the mere allegation of residence in Illinois did not make such a prima facie case of citizenship in that State as, in the absence of proof, should be deemed sufficient to sustain the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court. That amendment declares that “ all persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States, and of the State where they reside.” It was suggested that a resident of one of the States is prima facie either a citizen of the United States or an alien, — if a citizen of the United States, and also a resident of one of the States, he is, by the terms of the Fourteenth Amendment, also a citizen of the State wherein he resides, — and if an alien, he was entitled in that capacity to sue in the Federal court, without regard to residence in any particular State. It is not to be denied that there is some force in these suggestions, but they do not convince us that it is either necessary or wise to modify the rules heretofore established by a long line of decisions upon the subject of the jurisdiction of the Federal courts. Those who think that the Fourteenth Amendment requires some modification of those rules, claim, not that the plaintiff’s residence in a particular State necessarily or conclusively proves him to be a citizen of that State, within the meaning of the Constitution, but only that a general allegation of residence, without indicating the character of such residence, whether temporary or permanent, made a prima facie case of right to sue in the Federal courts. As the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court is limited in the sense that it has none except that conferred by the Constitution and laws of the United States, the presumption now, as well as before the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment,'is, that a cause is without its jurisdiction unless the contrary affirmatively appears. In cases where jurisdiction depends upon the citizenship of the parties, such citizenship, or the facts which in legal intendment constitute it, should be distinctly and positively averred in the pleadings, or they should appear affirmatively, and with equal distinctness, in other parts of the record. And so where jurisdiction depends upon the alienage of one of the parties. In Brown v. Keene (8 Pet. 115), Mr. Chief Justice Marshall said: “ The decisions of this court require that the averment of jurisdiction shall be positive, that *650 tbe declaration shall state expressly the fact on which jurisdiction depends.

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Bluebook (online)
97 U.S. 646, 24 L. Ed. 1057, 7 Otto 646, 1878 U.S. LEXIS 1493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robertson-v-cease-scotus-1878.