Sands v. Smith

21 F. Cas. 345, 4 West. Jur. 189

This text of 21 F. Cas. 345 (Sands v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Nebraska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sands v. Smith, 21 F. Cas. 345, 4 West. Jur. 189 (circtdne 1870).

Opinion

DILLON, Circuit Judge.

By the constitution. the judicial power of the United States extends “to controversies between citizens of different states.”

In prescribing the jurisdiction of the circuit courts of the United States, the judiciary act did not confer it as broadly as it might have done under the constitutional provision just quoted, but limited it to cases where the “suit is between a citizen of the state where the suit is brought and a citizen of another state.” | Act Sept. 24, 17S9, g 11 [1 Stat. 73]. Under, ¡ this provision, one of the parties, either the i plaintiff or defendant, it matters not which, I must be a resident of the state where the suit j is brought, and the other not. In other | words, it must be a controversy or suit be- i tween a resident and a non-resident citizen. ' The next section of the judiciary act (section i 12) provides for the removal of causes, under ! certain circumstances, from the state courts j to those of the United States. Until very recently this was the only statute authorizing the removal on the ground of citizenship of the parties. It authorized the removal by the defendant (under the limitations therein I mentioned) where the suit is commenced in the state court “by a citizen of the state in which the suit is brought against a citizen of another state.” That is, if the suit is by a ! resident plaintiff, the non-resident defendant | may have it removed; but the resident plain- ! tiff could not. Under ¡section 11 of the judi-i ciary act, a non-resident plaintiff might sue in the circuit court a resident defendant; but if a non-resident plaintiff elected to sue in a state court, section 12 of that act would give | neither party the right to remove the cause ¡ from the state court to the United States ! court. The plaintiff was not given the right | because he had voluntarily selected the state I court in which to bring his action; the de- | fendant was not given the right because it I was not supposed that he would have any ; grounds to object that he was sued in the j courts of his own state. So that the right of 1 removal by the judiciary act is limited to the non-resident defendant when sued by a resi- ; dent plaintiff in the courts of the state.

\ By section 11 of the judiciary act, as we , have -seen,. the circuit court has jurisdiction i when the suit is between a citizen of the j state in which it is brought and a citizen of | another state.

j This was construed by the courts to mean j that if there were several plaintiffs and sev-j eral defendants, each one of each class must ¡ possess the. requisite character as to citizeu- ¡ ship. Strawbridge v. Curtiss, 3 Cranch [7 U. S.] 267.

For example, a citizen of New York and a citizen of Georgia could not join as plaintiffs in suing in New York a citizen of Massachusetts (if found in New York) because the , plaintiffs were not each competent to sue, for j the citizen of Georgia could not (under section 11 of the judiciary act) sue a citizen of Massachusetts in New York. Moffat v. Soley [Case No. 9,688].

But other and greater difficulties were experienced. Section 11 of the judiciary act also enacted “that no civil suit should be brought in any other district than the one whereof the defendant was an inhabitant, or in which he shall be found at the time of serving the writ.”

Bjr the common law, all parties jointly liable must be jointly sued and brought into court, and if any of them reside out of the district where the suit was brought, or in the state in which the plaintiff resided, the national court was deprived of jurisdiction.

To remedy this, the act of February 28, 1S39 (5 Stat. 321), was passed. This statute will be referred to more at large hereafter. In my opinion, it gives a citizen of one state the right to commence suit in the circuit court of the United States in any other state against such persons as reside there, or may [347]*347be found there, and the jurisdiction of that court is not defeated by the circumstance that other persons (proper but no longer necessary defendants) reside in some other state.

Under section 12 of the judiciary act above quoted, regulating removals, it was held that a cause could not be removed unless all the defendants asked for it; that to bring the case within the act, all the plaintiffs must be citizens of the state in which suit is brought, and all the defendants must be citizens of some other state or states. Beardsley v. Torrey [Case No. 1,190]; Ward v. Arredondo [Id. 17,148]; Hubbard v. Northern R. Co. [Id. 6, 818]; s. c., 25 Vt. 715.

But the rule did not apply to persons who were mere nominal or formal parties. Brown v. Strode, 5 Cranch [9 U. S.] 303; Wormley v. Wormley, 8 Wheat. [21 U. S.] 421; Ward v. Arredondo, supra; Wood v. Davis, 18 How. [59 U. S.] 467.

It will be borne in mind that the act of February 28, 1839, above mentioned, authorized suits against defendants who might be non-residents of the district in which suit is brought, or not found therein, and that the plaintiff might proceed to judgment against those served, and against such non-resident defendants as should voluntarily appear.

Under this act a citizen of New York may, as in the case at bar, sue a citizen of Nebraska in the United States circuit court sitting in the latter state, and may also make a citizen of Missouri a party defendant; and if the latter is served within the district of Nebraska, or voluntarily appears to the action, the suit may proceed to trial and judgment against all. So that it is not true, as urged by the defendants, that this suit could not originally have been brought in the circuit court of the United States for the district of Nebraska; and hence, by allowing its removal, the court does not get cognizance of a cause which could not in the first instance have been brought therein.

But if this were so, it would not necessarily follow that the right of removal did not exist; for the circuit court may by removal acquire jurisdiction of a cause which could not have been commenced therein. Sayles v. Northwestern Ins. Co. [Case No. 12,421]; Bliven v. New England Screw Co. [Id. 1,550]; Barney v. Globe Bank [Id. 1,031]..

Such being the law and the construction of the courts, congress passed the act of July 27, 1866 (14 Stat. 300), entitled “An act for the removal of causes in certain cases from the state courts.” This act provides for removal in cases where the citizenship of the defendants is different. In contemplates cases where the plaintiff in the state court is “a citizen of the state in which the suit is brought,” following in this respect the language of section 12 of the judiciary act. But it enlarges the provisions of the judiciary act in that it contemplates the case of several defendants. some residing in the state in which the suit is brought, and some in a state other than that in which suit is instituted; and it authorizes, in certain cases, the non-resident defendant to have the cause removed as to him and to proceed in the state court as to the resident defendants. The effect of this statute is plain: — without it no removal could be made, because all the defendants were not within the act, and under the ruling of the courts before mentioned, unless the cause was removable as to all, it was not removable as to any.

But, as in the judiciary act, the right of removal is confined by the act of July 27, 1866, to cases where the plaintiff is a resident and the defendant is a non-resident, and it is limited to the foreign defendant, and does not extend to the plaintiff.

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Related

Hubbard v. Northern Railroad
25 Vt. 715 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1853)

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Bluebook (online)
21 F. Cas. 345, 4 West. Jur. 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sands-v-smith-circtdne-1870.