After a suit in equity involving title to real estate and
priority of lien had been long pending in a state court, and the
highest court in the state had decided some of the points in
controversy, and had remanded the cause to the court below to have
other issues determined, A became interested in the property by
grant from one of the parties to the suit, and intervened in it by
leave of the state court to protect his rights at a time when the
right of removing the cruse from the state court to the federal
court had expired as to all the parties.
Held that under
the circumstances, the intervention of A was to be regarded as
incident to the original suit, and that he was subject to the
disabilities resting on the party from whom he took title, and that
the time for removal having expired before he intervened, his right
of removal was barred by that fact.
Bill in equity to determine priority of liens upon real estate
in Illinois and for other relief. The only question decided was as
to the right of removal of the cause from a state court to a
circuit court of the United States. The facts which make up the
case are stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 110 U. S. 390
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from an order of the circuit court remanding a
suit removed from a state court. From the confused mass of
pleadings, exhibits, proofs, orders, and decrees, making a volume
of more than five hundred printed pages, sent here as a transcript
of the record below, and the reports of the decisions of the
Supreme Court of Illinois in
Sumner v. Waugh, 56 Ill, 531;
Cable v. Ellis, 86 Ill. 525, and
Ellis v. Sisson,
96 Ill. 105, referred to on both sides as part of the case, we
have, with the help of the briefs of counsel, extracted the
following facts which, in our opinion, are decisive of the present
controversy:
On the 3d of June, 1858, Thomas B. Ellis bought of John M. Waugh
and Henry B. Ellis certain lands and mill property in Illinois.
Waugh and Henry B. Ellis were at the time indebted to Thomas B.
Ellis to the amount of $8,000, or thereabouts, and the mill
property was encumbered by a mortgage to Benjamin T. Sisson for
$9,280. Thomas B. Ellis paid for the property by releasing the debt
due himself, assuming the mortgage to Sisson, and giving his own
notes to Waugh and Henry B. Ellis, secured by mortgage on the
property for $14,984.54. On the 30th of September, 1858, Thomas B.
Ellis entered into a written contract with Sisson and John B.
Rathbun for the sale, release, and conveyance of "all his paid-in
interest" in the property, for which the purchasers were to pay as
in the agreement specified, including with the rest such a sum to
Thomas B. Ellis, personally, as from authenticated bills it should
appear he had "paid in." To secure the payment of such sum as
should be found to be due him, a mortgage was to be given on the
property. Under this contract, possession was delivered to the
purchasers.
Disputes having arisen as to the amount of the "authenticated
bills," Thomas B. Ellis, on the 21st of March, 1861, filed a bill
in chancery in the Mercer County Circuit Court, to enforce a
specific performance of the contract. To this bill Waugh, Sisson,
and Rathbun were made defendants, and the prayer was that the
mortgages of Waugh and Henry B. Ellis to Sisson, and Thomas B.
Ellis to Waugh and Henry B. Ellis
Page 110 U. S. 391
might be cancelled, and that the amount of purchase money due
Thomas B. Ellis from Sisson and Rathbun might be ascertained and
adjudged to be the paramount lien on the property in the hands of
the purchasers. As to Waugh, the averments were in substance that
he was "in fact and in equity" a purchaser of the property with
Sisson and Rathbun, and that by the terms of the contract, the
notes and mortgage of Thomas B. Ellis, then held by Waugh and the
mortgage to Sisson were to be cancelled, and a first lien on the
property given to Thomas B. Ellis as security for the purchase
money to be paid to him. In 1862, Sisson assigned his notes and
mortgages to Austin, Sumner & Co., and in 1864 they began a
suit for foreclosure in the Mercer County Circuit Court, making
Waugh, Sisson, Thomas B. Ellis, and Henry B. Ellis defendants.
Thomas B. Ellis answered, and also filed a cross-bill, in which he
set up his sale of the property and a cancellation under that sale
of the mortgage to Sisson before the transfer to Austin, Sumner
& Co. The circuit court decreed against Austin, Sumner &
Co. and dismissed their bill, but upon appeal to the Supreme Court,
the decree dismissing the bill was reversed in 1869, but the lien
of Austin, Sumner & Co. was postponed to that of Thomas B.
Ellis for the purchase money under his contract of sale.
As to the mortgage of Thomas B. Ellis to Waugh and Henry B.
Ellis, the language of the opinion is as follows:
"This contract postponed also the mortgage in question to the
mortgage executed by T. B. Ellis to Waugh and H. B. Ellis. They
were not parties to it, and could not be bound by its provisions.
Although the contract seems to contemplate that their mortgage was
also to be cancelled, it does not appear how or in what mode, and
not being parties to the agreement, they cannot be affected by it.
It is therefore the first lien on the property, and must be so
held. The whole case, somewhat complicated, it is true, shows a
contest between equities. That the complainants have some which
should have been regarded by the circuit court and decreed to them
we cannot doubt. The bill should not, therefore, have been
dismissed. In order that the equities of the complainants may be
enforced, it seems necessary that there should be a foreclosure of
the Waugh and Ellis mortgage. . . .
Page 110 U. S. 392
The pleadings are not framed with a view to any relief as to the
Waugh and Ellis mortgage, or as to any substitution of the
complainants to the rights of Waugh in the Waugh and Ellis
mortgage. Leave will be given to amend the pleadings as the parties
may be advised, and to take further proofs."
Sumner v. Waugh, 56 Ill. 541, 542.
The case was then remanded for further proceedings in conformity
with the opinion, in which suggestions were made as to what should
be done if the Waugh and Ellis mortgage should be found to be a
valid and subsisting lien.
After this decision, Philander L. Cable took from Waugh an
assignment of the note and mortgage of Thomas B. Ellis to Waugh and
Henry B. Ellis, and in 1872 began a suit in the Mercer County
Circuit Court for a foreclosure. To this suit Thomas B. Ellis,
Sisson, and Austin, Sumner & Co. were made defendants. Thomas
B. Ellis answered, setting up his contract of sale, and claiming a
cancellation of the mortgage thereby.
On the 6th of May, 1873, an order was entered in the circuit
court consolidating the three suits, to-wit, that of Thomas B.
Ellis, that of Austin, Sumner & Co., and that of Philander L.
Cable. From that time these three suits were proceeded in as one
and involving the same general matter. On the 10th of June, 1875,
the circuit court entered a decree establishing the claim of Thomas
B. Ellis as against Cable. From this decree Cable appealed to the
Supreme Court, where, in 1877, after holding that the Sisson
mortgage could not be enforced as against Thomas B. Ellis, it was
said in the opinion delivered:
"It was doubtless the intention of the contract of September 30
that the latter mortgage also [that to Waugh and Ellis], as well as
the former [that of Sisson], should be cancelled, so as to give T.
B. Ellis a superior lien upon the property for the security of the
payment of his paid-in interest, and for the carrying out of such
intention, and being impressed with the justice of the claim of T.
B. Ellis that he should have such security, we have anxiously
sought for some satisfactory ground upon which we might rest the
support of such a claim, but we have not been able to discover any.
. . . The written contract of September
Page 110 U. S. 393
30, 1958, was not signed by Waugh, and we cannot hold him as
bound by that contract to discharge and release his mortgage,
although we may strongly suspect there was a secret understanding
to that effect."
Cable v. Ellis, 86 Ill. 539, 540. The result was a
decision that the Waugh and Ellis mortgage should be first paid,
and an order was entered remanding the suit to the circuit court
for further proceedings in accordance with the opinion.
The case was redocketed in the circuit court at or before the
May term, 1878, and on the 25th of November, Thomas B. Ellis, by
leave of the court, filed an amended bill in which it was averred,
in substance, that while Waugh did not sign the contract of
purchase by Sisson and Rathbun, he did, in fact agree with Ellis at
the time that if the sale was made on the terms proposed, he would
postpone his mortgage on the property to the lien of Ellis for the
purchase money and release Ellis from the payment of the notes.
Answers were filed and new testimony taken. Upon the hearing in the
circuit court the lien of Cable, in preference to that of Thomas B.
Ellis, was established, and Ellis appealed. In 1880, the supreme
court reversed the decree of the circuit court, and in the opinion,
when speaking of the former decision in the case, it was said:
"There was no proof of such a joint written contract, or of such
a joint contract by Waugh, Sisson, and Rathbun as alleged. The
allegations and proofs did not agree. The amendment which has been
made to the bill of Ellis, since the case was remanded, removes the
difficulty which before existed. It sets up a separate verbal
agreement on the part of Waugh to release the mortgage."
Then, after an examination of the testimony, the opinion
proceeds:
"We are satisfied from the evidence that outside of this written
agreement there was a verbal agreement between Waugh and Ellis to
the purport that if Ellis would sell out to Sisson and Rathbun, he,
Waugh, would accept such sale in satisfaction of the debt of Ellis
to Waugh and H. B. Ellis. We think that by virtue of this
agreement, and the transfer of the property, which
Page 110 U. S. 394
was made by T. B. Ellis, and the full enjoyment ever since by
Sisson, Rathbun, and Waugh among them, the notes and mortgage to
Waugh and H. B. Ellis were satisfied, and as those to Sisson are
also satisfied, that T. B. Ellis is entitled to the first lien on
the property for his paid-in interest."
Cable thereupon filed a petition for rehearing, and from the
opinion it appears that one of the grounds relied on was that the
court below had no right to allow the amendment of the bill after
the decision on the former appeal, by setting up in substance that
the agreement of Waugh was by parol instead of in writing, as was
originally alleged, but this petition was overruled and the case
remanded to the circuit court for further proceedings in accordance
with the opinion.
Ellis v. Sisson, 96 Ill. 114, 119,
122.
When the case got back to the circuit court, on the 10th of
February, 1881, a receiver of the property was appointed on the
application of Thomas B. Ellis, and against the objections of
Cable.
During the year 1876, while the several suits were pending,
Philander L. Cable caused a small part of the property to be laid
off into lots, one of which went into the possession of Hiram
Cable. On the 14th of May, 1881, after the receiver was appointed,
Hiram Cable filed in the circuit court his petition of intervention
in the cause, on the ground that he was
"pecuniarily interested in the subject matter of the litigation,
. . . and that the orders and decrees that may be entered
concerning the same may very materially affect him pecuniarily and
conclude him with respect to his rights in the premises."
He then states in substance that
"on or about the ___ day of December, 1876, Philander L. Cable
was in the actual and exclusive possession of part of the premises
described in the pleadings, and represented that he had bought the
Waugh and Ellis mortgage; that the mortgage had been declared by
the Supreme Court to be a first lien on the property; that in a
short time there would be a final and conclusive decree for a sale
of the property; that he should buy the property at
Page 110 U. S. 395
the sale, and that in that way and others, he would acquire an
indefeasible title in the course of two or three years at the
most."
Relying on these representations, Hiram Cable, "on the said ___
day of December, 1876," orally agreed with Philander Cable to
purchase one of the lots that had been laid out, and to pay the
reasonable and fair value thereof when a title was made. Under this
agreement, with the leave of Philander, he went into the possession
of the lot, relying on
"the said decision and determination of the said supreme court,
and then being fully advised by the pleadings and proceedings
herein of the extent and character of the claim of the said Thomas
B. Ellis in and to said premises, and fully believing the said
claim of the said Ellis was not other or different than he had
himself stated the same in his pleadings, and that he would forever
thereafter be estopped in equity and right, as against your
petitioner or the said Cable, to assert and maintain that the same
was other or different than as stated in his said pleadings herein,
your petitioner did enter upon and take possession of said lot and
parcel of said premises, and has ever since remained in possession
of the same."
After entering into possession, and while the rights of the
parties remained the same, he erected on the property permanent and
lasting improvements of the value of $1,800. He then charges that
long after the improvements were made it was adjudged and
determined by said supreme court,
"upon and by virtue of a new and distinct claim (not germane to
or consistent with his original claim in the premises) made and
asserted by said Ellis, in and by an amendment to his pleadings,
long since said improvements were so made, . . . that the said
mortgage so purchased by said Cable from said Waugh was not a first
lien upon said premises, but that the same was in equity . . .
satisfied and discharged,"
and the lien of Ellis was established for more than the property
and all the improvements thereon were worth.
"But your petitioner says that the said Ellis ought not to be
allowed in a court of equity to insist and maintain, as against
your
Page 110 U. S. 396
petitioner, such a new claim, so made by his amendment
aforesaid, but that in equity and good conscience he ought to be
stayed and estopped from so interposing the same. That the said
Cable has in all things acted in good faith and fairly with your
petitioner, and has strenuously endeavored to maintain his claimed
rights in the premises, but that, as your petitioner believes, in
case such premises shall be sold in behalf of the said claim of the
said Ellis, without the decree and direction of this court that the
value of said improvements shall be first paid to your petitioner
out of the proceeds of such sale, your petitioner will wholly lose
all costs, disbursements, labor, and expenses he has incurred in
making the same, as in such case the said Cable will not purchase
said premises at such sale, and as your petitioner is advised that,
under the facts and circumstances aforesaid, the said Cable will
not be liable in law or equity to your petitioner for the same, or
in any respect, on account of said agreement so made with him as
aforesaid."
He then asserted the priority of the lien of the Waugh mortgage
over that of Sisson, and that, although Ellis had notice of his
acts and proceedings, no objection was made to what he did in the
way of improvements. After referring to the pleadings and
proceedings in the cause for further particulars, he submitted his
rights to the court and prayed that if the premises should be sold
under the decree,
"it shall be ordered and directed that out of the proceeds of
such sale there shall be paid to your petitioner such part thereof
as shall bear the same ratio to the whole amount of the proceeds of
such sale as the value of said improvements shall bear to the whole
value of said premises, or an amount equal to the value of said
improvements, such ratio or value of said improvements to be first
determined, as the court shall order and direct, in accordance with
chancery practice, and for such other and further relief in the
premises as shall seem meet and proper."
This petition was answered by Ellis on the 21st of July, and by
the other parties in opposition within a few days after, but on the
29th of July, Ellis moved to strike the intervening petition from
the files for reasons stated. Before this motion was disposed of,
and at the same term, to-wit, on the 30th of July,
Page 110 U. S. 397
Hiram Cable filed his petition for the removal of the causes as
consolidated to the Circuit Court of the United States for the
Northern District of Illinois, alleging that the value of the
matter in dispute exceeded $500; that he was a citizen of Iowa and
Ellis a citizen of Missouri, and Austin, Sumner & Co. citizens
of Massachusetts; that none of the other parties to the causes were
citizens of Iowa; that
"there is a controversy presented and made by his intervening
petition . . . which is wholly between citizens of different
states, and which can be fully determined as between the sole
parties interested therein in the circuit court of the United
States,"
and that such controversy was solely between him and Ellis and
Austin, Sumner & Co.
On the 29th of August, the state court made an order staying all
further proceedings in that court and transferring the causes to
the circuit court of the United States. Afterwards, all parties
entered their appearance in the circuit court, and thereupon Ellis
moved to remand. This motion was granted on the 6th of April, 1882,
and from that order the present appeal was taken.
Both Philander Cable and Hiram Cable acquired their respective
interests in the property involved in this litigation during the
pendency of the suit brought by Thomas B. Ellis in 1861 to
establish his alleged superior lien. Philander Cable is concluded
by all that has been done, because he was and is an actual party to
the suit. There has been no time since the first term of the Mercer
County Circuit Court, after the Act of March 3, 1875, c. 137, was
passed, that he could remove the suit from the state court.
Removal Cases, 100 U. S. 457.
Hiram Cable made the arrangement with Philander Cable on which all
his rights depend long after that time had gone by. In fact, the
decree of June 13, 1875, was the result of a hearing begun after
the act went into effect. So that the question here is whether
Hiram Cable has by his petition of intervention, after twenty years
of litigation between the original parties, introduced a new and
separate controversy into the suit, which entitles him on his own
application to transfer the whole case to the circuit court of the
United States.
Page 110 U. S. 398
If Hiram Cable is not to be concluded by anything done in his
absence, he ought not to be allowed to force himself into the suit
at this late day. No sale made under a decree to which he is not
actually or constructively a party can cut off his rights. If he
can be bound by a decree in his absence, it is because he has been
all the time represented in the suit by Philander Cable under whom
he claims, and as an intervenor he can do nothing that might not
have been done for him by his representative without his
intervention. He took his place by intervention in the suit subject
to all the disabilities that rested at the time on the party in
whose stead he is to act. If his application to have his rights in
respect to the improvements he has put on the property settled in
this suit can be entertained at all, it will be only as an incident
to the original controversy, and whatever would bar a removal of
suit before he intervened will bar him afterwards, even though by
his intervention he may have raised a separate controversy.
This disposes of the case, for, as has already been seen, the
right to remove this suit was barred long before Hiram Cable
intervened. Without, therefore, determining whether Hiram Cable can
claim the benefit of his improvements, notwithstanding the pendency
of the suit, or whether, if his petition had been filed in time, he
would have been entitled to a removal of the suit on the showing
made,
We affirm the order remanding the cause.