It is again held that when the jurisdiction of a circuit court
depends alone on citizenship, an averment that the plaintiff is a
"resident" in one state named, and that the defendant is a
"resident" in another state named confers no jurisdiction, and a
judgment rendered below in such case in favor of the defendant and
brought up in error by the plaintiff is reversed with costs in this
Court against the plaintiff in error.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This record does not show that the circuit court had
jurisdiction of the suit, which depended alone on the citizenship
of the parties. The petition states that Edmund Menard, the
plaintiff, "resides in Randolph County, in the State of Illinois,"
and that the defendants, of whom Thomas Goggan, the defendant in
error, was one, "reside in the City of Galveston, in the State of
Texas." There is nothing else from which the citizenship of either
party can be inferred, and this is not enough. We have so held at
the present term in
Continental Insurance Company v.
Rhoads, 119 U. S. 237,
where the authorities are cited;
Halsted v. Buster,
119 U. S. 341.
This judgment must therefore be reversed on the authority of those
cases, and, as the fault rests with the plaintiff in error, whose
duty it was when bringing the suit to make the jurisdiction appear,
the reversal will be at his costs in this Court.
Hancock v.
Holbrook, 112 U. S. 229;
Halsted v. Buster, supra. If the necessary citizenship
Page 121 U. S. 254
actually existed at the time the suit was begun, it will be for
the court below to determine, when the case gets back, whether the
record shall be amended so as to show that fact and thus make out
the jurisdiction.
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed at the costs
of the plaintiff in error and the cause remanded for further
proceedings.