Third Nat. Bank of Baltimore v. Teal

5 F. 503, 4 Hughes 572, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2079
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 28, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 5 F. 503 (Third Nat. Bank of Baltimore v. Teal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Third Nat. Bank of Baltimore v. Teal, 5 F. 503, 4 Hughes 572, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2079 (circtdmd 1881).

Opinion

Morris, D. J.

This court having by its rules (as authorized by section 915 of the U. S. Devised Statutes,) adopted the Maryland law of 1864, c. 306, giving to plaintiffs a remedy by attachment on original process, the plaintiff in this case, upon giving bond and filing an affidavit alleging tlia-t it had good reason to believe that the defendant had disposed of some portion of liis property with intent to defraud his creditors, obtained an attachment, which was levied on certain of the defendant’s real estate.

[504]*504The Maryland statute, prescribing the practice and proceedings in attachment cases, provides that “there shall be /issued with every attachment a writ of summons against the defendant; and a declaration or short note expressing the plaintiff’s cause of action shall be filed, and a copy thereof shall be sent with the writ to be set up at the court-house door.”

In the present case the affidavit described the plaintiff as “The Third National Bank of Baltimore.” The short note or declaration used the same words and no others. The bond described the obligors as “ The Third National Bank of Baltimore, a duly incorporated body under the statutes of the United States of America, and Thomas Y. Canby, of the city of Baltimore, in the State of Maryland.”

The defendant was returned “summoned, ” and has appeared and demurred to the short note or declaration, and a trustee, to whom the defendant executed a deed of trust for creditors after the attachment was levied, claims the property and moves to quash the attachment. The causes of the demurrer are that the declaration does not set out facts sufficient to show that the federal court has jurisdiction of the case, and also that the plaintiff is not alleged in the declaration to be a corporation.

The claimant of the property attached moves the court to quash the attachment for the reason that the jurisdictional facts and other necessary allegation do not appear, contending that if the declaration is demurrable the attachment is void.

We will first consider the alleged defects in the statement of the facts on which the jurisdiction of the federal court depends. By section 629, subsection 10, of the U. S. Revised Statutes, it is provided that the United States circuit courts shall have jurisdiction “of all suits by or against any banking association established in the district for which the court is held, under any law providing for national banking associations.”

The title of the plaintiff, “The National Bank of Baltimore,” is not in itself an averment either that the plaintiff is a bank[505]*505ing association, established in the district of Maryland, or that it is established under the law of the United States providing for national banking associations. There are other Baltimores than the one in Maryland, and there does not appear to be in the national bank act anything to prohibit an association formed in any other state from having been the first to take the title of the plaintiff, if they had seen fit, and if the comptroller of the currency had approved. The name of the bank is subject only to the approval of the comptroller of the currency, and we find nothing in the act itself which would prevent an association from adopting any name which he approves of. It is argued that as section 5243 imposes a fine upon any firm or corporation, not organized under the national bank act, which shall use the word “national” as part of the name of such corporation or partnership, it follows that the title “National Bank of Baltimore” necessarily implies that it is lawfully established under that act. This we do not think is a necessary inference, or that it is equivalent to the positive averment required. It is quite supposable that the name might be used unlawfully, notwithstanding the fine imposed by the statute.

The supreme court has never relaxed the rule that the facts essential to jurisdiction must be affirmatively shown by the record, and cannot be argumentatively deduced from other averments. In Robertson v. Case, 97 U. S. 646, the case had been instituted in the United States circuit court for the district of Texas, and the pleadings stated that the plaintiff resided in “the county of Macon, in the state of Illinois.” It was strongly argued that, as the fourteenth amendment to the federal constitution 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, the plaintiff was prima facie either an alien or a citizen of the state of Illinois, in which he resided, and in either capacity entitled to sue in the circuit court for the district of Texas; but the supreme court, while acknowledging that there was force in this suggestion, declared it to be unwise to modify the long-established rule on the subject of [506]*506jurisdiction. They say: "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 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. In Brown v. Keene, 8 Pet. 115, Mr. Chief Justice Marshall said: “The decisions of this court require .that the averment.of jurisdiction shall state expressly the fact on which jurisdiction depends. It is not sufficient that jurisdiction may be inferred argumentatively from its averments.”

It is to be noticed that in Robertson v. Case the particular objection to the jurisdiction relied upon was made after verdict, by a motion in arrest of judgment, when ordinarily the presumption would be that the necessary facts had been proved and every fair intendment allowed to uphold the verdict. The present case, arising upon a demurrer, is one in which much greater strictness might well be insisted upon. If we look to the bond which the plaintiff in this case filed as a condition precedent to obtaining the attachment, and consider it, as we are urged to do, as part of the record, and examine it for an averment of the jurisdictional facts, we find that it relieves the plaintiff in one particular, but as we think in one only.. -It describes the plaintiff as “The Third National Bank of Baltimore, a duly incorporated body under the statutes of the United States of America,” and describes the other obligor as “Thomas Y. ’Canby, -of the city of Baltimore, in the state of Maryland.” This may amount to an averment that the plaintiff is a banking association, established under the law providing for national banking associations, but it is not equivalent in our judgment, for reasons before suggested, to the equally necessary averment that the association is established within the district of Maryland. We must, there[507]*507fore, sustain the demurrer to the declaration for want of proper averments showing the plaintiff’s right to sue in this court.

Objection is also made that the declaration does not allege that the plaintiff is a corporation.

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5 F. 503, 4 Hughes 572, 1881 U.S. App. LEXIS 2079, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/third-nat-bank-of-baltimore-v-teal-circtdmd-1881.