When a case is removed from a state court to a circuit court of
the United States on the ground that the controversy is wholly
between citizens of different states, and the adverse party moves
in the circuit court to remand the case, denying the averments as
to citizenship, the burden is on the party at whose instance the
suit was removed to establish the citizenship necessary to give
jurisdiction to the Circuit Court.
Page 121 U. S. 422
A petition filed in a state court showing on its face sufficient
ground for the removal of the cause to a circuit court of the
United States may be amended in the latter court by adding to it a
fuller statement of the facts, germane to the petition, upon which
the statements in it were grounded.
In order to give jurisdiction to a circuit court of the United
States of a cause by removal from a state court under the removal
clauses of the Act of March 3, 1875, c. 137, it is necessary that
the construction either of the Constitution of the United States or
of some law or treaty of the United States should be directly
involved in the suit; but the jurisdiction for review of the
judgments of state courts given by § 709 of the Revised
Statutes extends to adverse decisions upon rights and titles
claimed under commissions held or authority exercised under the
United States, as well as to rights claimed under the Constitution
laws or treaties of the United States.
Provident Savings Society v. Ford, 114 U.
S. 635;
Dupasseur v.
Rochereau, 21 Wall. 130, and
Crescent City
Livestock Co. v. Butchers' Union Co., 120 U.
S. 141, distinguished.
A mortgage made in enemy's territory to a loyal citizen of the
United States does not necessarily imply unlawful intercourse
between the parties, contrary to the nonintercourse proclamation
and act.
A petition for the removal of a cause from a state court should
set out the facts on which the right is claimed, not the
conclusions of law only.
This was an appeal from an order of a circuit court remanding a
case to the state court from which it had been removed. The case is
stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal under § 5 of the Act of March 3, 1875, c.
137, 18 Stat. 470, from an order of the circuit court remanding a
suit which had been removed from a state court. The record shows
that on the 11th of August, 1886, C. T. Dunham, the appellee, filed
a bill in equity in the Court of Common Pleas of Berkeley County,
South Carolina, against Caroline Carson to foreclose a mortgage
made by William McBurney
Page 121 U. S. 423
and Alfred L. Gillespie to Edmund Hyatt, which had been assigned
to Dunham. It is alleged that Mrs. Carson is in possession of the
mortgaged property, and that she and the plaintiff are the only
necessary parties to the suit. Service was made on Mrs. Carson by
publication for the reason, as shown by affidavit, that she did not
reside in South Carolina, but in Rome, Italy. On the 9th of
October, 1886, which was the day service on her was completed, she
entered her appearance by counsel, and at the same time filed her
petition for the removal of the suit to the Circuit Court of the
United States for the District of South Carolina on the following
grounds:
"I. That all the matters therein had been already adjudged in
her favor by the Circuit Court of the United States for the
District of South Carolina."
"II. That the complainant is barred of his present action by a
judgment of the said court in her favor on the matter in
controversy."
"III. That this Court is without jurisdiction because a prior
suit on the like matter is pending in the aforesaid court of the
United States, which, by its receiver, has possession of the
subject matter of this suit."
"IV. That the bond and mortgage sued on are void under the laws
of the United States."
"V. That the defendant holds title to Dean Hall plantation, the
property involved in this suit, and mentioned in the complaint in
the above-entitled suit, under an authority exercised under the
United States, to-wit, under a conveyance from the United States
marshal for the District of South Carolina, made under decree of
the United States circuit court for the said district, all of which
will more fully appear by her answer."
"The controversy in said suit is also wholly between citizens of
different states,
viz., between the said C. T. Dunham,
who, as your petitioner is informed and avers, was at the
commencement of said suit and now is a citizen of the State of
South Carolina, and your petitioner, who was at the commencement of
said suit and now is a citizen of the State of Massachusetts, or
the controversy in said suit is wholly between
Page 121 U. S. 424
Mary A. Hyatt, who was at the commencement of said suit and now
is a citizen of the State of New York and who is the sole and only
real party in interest in said suit and in said controversy and
your petitioner, who was at the commencement of the said suit and
now is a citizen of the State of Massachusetts, and which
controversy is the only controversy in said suit; that the said
Mary A. Hyatt is the real party plaintiff in said suit, and the
said C. T. Dunham is but a nominal and colorable plaintiff, and
that his name has been used merely for the purpose of defeating the
jurisdiction of the Circuit Court of the United States for the
District of South Carolina, and that said suit is in fact a
controversy wholly between the said Mary A. Hyatt and your
petitioner, notwithstanding the assignment to the said C. T. Dunham
in the complaint in said suit mentioned."
This suit was entered in the circuit court on the 26th of
October, 1886, and the next day Mrs. Carson filed in that court an
answer to the bill in which she set up title in herself to the
mortgaged property by reason of a purchase at judicial sale under a
decree of the circuit court of the United States, affirmed by this
Court,
McBurney v. Carson, 99 U. S.
567, in a suit for the foreclosure of a mortgage
belonging to her superior in lien to that in favor of Hyatt. The
particulars of her title, as stated in the answer, will be found
reported in
Carson v. Hyatt, 118 U.
S. 279, decided by this Court at the last term. The
claim is that Dunham is estopped by this foreclosure from denying
the validity of the mortgage held by Mrs. Carson, and its priority
in lien to that on which his suit was brought.
The answer also sets up as a bar to this suit a decree in the
suit of
Carson v. Hyatt, supra, after it was removed to
the circuit court of the United States under the order of this
Court dismissing the bill on the discontinuance of the complainant
therein, from whom Dunham claims title by assignment since the
rendition of that decree.
The answer also contains these further defenses:
"XVII. The defendant avers that a suit is now pending in this
Court wherein all the issues involved in this action are
Page 121 U. S. 425
raised; that the said suit was begun before this present suit,
and that this Court obtained jurisdiction thereof before any court
obtained jurisdiction in this present suit, and she says that, by
reason of the said suit, the Court of Common Pleas of Berkeley
County then had and now has no jurisdiction of this action."
"XVIII. When the bond and mortgage which the complainant is
seeking to enforce were executed to the said Edmund Hyatt, the said
Edmund Hyatt was a citizen and a resident of the State of New York,
a loyal state, and the obligors of the said bond, and the makers of
the said mortgage, were citizens of the State of South Carolina,
which was then in rebellion against the United States, and this
defendant avers that the said bond and mortgage were void under the
laws of the United States."
On the 11th of November, Dunham filed in the circuit court an
answer to the petition of Mrs. Carson for removal, in which he
denied that he was a citizen of South Carolina and averred that he
was a citizen of the same state with her, namely, Massachusetts.
The issue made by this answer was set down for trial in the circuit
court, accompanied by an order "that on such trial the burden shall
be upon the defendant, Caroline Carson, to show that the plaintiff,
C. T. Dunham, is not a citizen of Massachusetts." Upon this trial,
it was substantially admitted that Dunham was at the commencement
of the suit a citizen of Massachusetts, and thereupon the suit was
remanded. From an order to that effect this appeal was taken.
The circuit court did not err in holding that the burden of
proof was on Mrs. Carson to show that Dunham was not a citizen of
Massachusetts. As she was the actor in the removal proceeding, it
rested on her to make out the jurisdiction of the circuit court.
Dunham having denied that he was a citizen of South Carolina, as
she had stated in her petition, and having claimed that he was in
fact a citizen of Massachusetts the same as herself, the
affirmative was on her to prove that his claim was not true, or, in
other words, that he was a citizen of another state than her own.
The fact
Page 121 U. S. 426
that the suit had actually been entered in the circuit court did
not shift the burden of proof. It was decided in
Stone v. South
Carolina, 117 U. S. 430,
that all issues of fact made on a petition for removal must be
tried in the circuit court. The matter stood for trial in the
circuit court therefore precisely the same as it would if the law
had required the petition for removal to be filed there instead of
in the state court, and Mrs. Carson had been called on to prove the
facts on which her right of removal rested. The evidence showed
conclusively that Dunham was a citizen of the same state with Mrs.
Carson, and consequently the suit was properly remanded, so far as
that ground of removal was concerned.
The fact, if it be a fact, that the assignment of the mortgage
to Dunham was colorable only, and made for the purpose of
preventing the removal gives the circuit court no right to take
jurisdiction. That was decided in
Provident Savings &c.
Society v. Ford, 114 U. S. 635,
followed and approved in
Oakley v. Goodnow, 118 U. S.
43.
The important question is therefore whether it sufficiently
appears that the suit is one "arising under the Constitution or
laws of the United States." In
Gold Washing & Water Co. v.
Keyes, 96 U. S. 203,
it was decided that
"before a circuit court can be required to retain a cause under
this jurisdiction, it must in some form appear upon the record, by
a statement of facts, 'in legal and logical form,' such as is
required in good pleading, that the suit is one which 'really and
substantially involves a dispute or controversy' as to a right
which depends upon the construction or effect of the Constitution,
or some law or treaty, of the United States."
When this suit came into the circuit court from the state court,
no such case had been made out. As was further said in the case
just cited,
"the office of pleading is to state facts, not conclusions of
law. It is the duty of the court to declare the conclusions, and of
the parties to state the premises."
All the statements of this petition, which, for the purpose of
removal, performs the office of pleading, are mere conclusions of
law, not facts from which the conclusions are to be drawn. If the
case had stood on the bill and petition for removal alone,
Page 121 U. S. 427
there could be no doubt of the propriety of the order to remand
on this ground as well as on that of citizenship.
But after the case got into the circuit court, an answer was
filed which did state the facts from which, it is claimed, the
conclusions of law set out in the petition necessarily followed.
The petition, on its face, made a case for removal by reason of the
citizenship of the parties, and the suit was properly taken from
the state court, and entered in the circuit court on that ground,
if not on the others. The statute made it the duty of the state
court to proceed no further until its jurisdiction had in some way
been restored. Had it proceeded, its judgment could have been
reversed, because, on the face of the record, its jurisdiction had
been taken away.
The suit was therefore rightfully in the circuit court when the
record was entered there, and when the answer was filed, which, for
the purposes of jurisdiction, may fairly be treated as an amendment
to the petition for removal, setting forth the facts from which the
conclusions there stated were drawn. As an amendment, the answer
was germane to the petition, and did no more than set forth in
proper form what had before been imperfectly stated. To that
extent, we think, it was proper to amend a petition which on its
face showed a right to the transfer. Whether this could have been
done if the petition, as presented to the state court, had not
shown on its face sufficient ground of removal, we do not now
decide.
Before considering further this branch of the case, it is proper
to notice the difference between the provisions of the act of 1875,
for the removal of suits presenting federal questions, and those in
§ 709 of the Revised Statutes, for the review by this Court of
the decisions of the highest courts of the states. Under the act of
1875, for the purposes of removal, the suit must be one "arising
under the Constitution or laws of the United States, or treaties
made or which shall be made under their authority;" that is to say,
the suit must be one in which some title, right, privilege, or
immunity on which the recovery depends will be defeated by one
construction of the Constitution, or a law or treaty of the United
States, or sustained by a contrary construction.
Starin v. New
York, 115
Page 121 U. S. 428
U.S. 257, and cases there cited. But under § 709 there may
be a review by this Court of the decisions of the highest courts of
the states in suits
"where any title, right, privilege, or immunity is claimed under
the Constitution, or any treaty or statute of, or commission held
or authority exercised under, the United States and the decision is
against the title, right, privilege, or immunity specially set up
or claimed, by either party, under such Constitution, treaty,
statute, commission, or authority."
For the purposes of a removal, the Constitution or some law or
treaty of the United States must be directly involved, while for
the purposes of review, it will be enough if the right in question
comes from a "commission held, or an authority exercised under, the
United States." Cases therefore relating to the jurisdiction of
this Court for review are not necessarily controlling in reference
to removals.
This distinction was pointed out and acted on in
Provident
Savings &c. Society v. Ford, 114 U.
S. 635, where the suit was brought in a state court of
New York on a judgment in the Circuit Court of the United States
for the Northern District of Ohio, and an attempt was made to
remove it under the act of 1875, on the ground, among others,
that
"a suit on a judgment recovered in a United States court is
necessarily a suit arising under the laws of the United States, as
much so as if the plaintiff or defendant were a corporation of the
United States,"
but it was decided otherwise, p,
114 U. S. 642,
because a suit on such a judgment is "simply the case of an
ordinary right of property sought to be enforced," unless some
question is raised "distinctly involving the laws of the United
States." "These considerations," it was further said,
"show a wide distinction between the case of a suit merely on a
judgment of a United States court and that of a suit by or against
a United States corporation."
The expressions in the opinions in
Dupasseur v.
Rochereau, 21 Wall. 134, and
Crescent City
Livestock Co. v. Butchers' Union, 120 U.
S. 141,
120 U. S. 146,
relied on by the counsel for the appellants, and which are thought
to be in conflict with this, must be read and construed with
reference to the facts of those cases, which came here from the
courts of states for review under § 709 of the Revised
Statutes.
Page 121 U. S. 429
What we have quoted above from
Providence Savings &c.
Society v. Ford is equally applicable to the case made on this
record. The answer sets up as a defense to the suit the decree in
Carson v. Hyatt and the title acquired by the purchase
under the authority of the sale in
McBurney v. Carson. It
is an attempt to enforce an ordinary property right, acquired under
the authority of judgments and decrees in the courts of the United
States, without presenting any question "distinctly involving the
laws of the United States." The suit, therefore, as now presented
is not one arising under the Constitution and laws of the United
States within the meaning of that term as used in the removal act
of 1875; but if, in deciding the case, the highest court of the
state shall fail to give full effect to the authority exercised
under the United States, as shown by the judgments and decrees of
their courts, relied on to support the title of Mrs. Carson, its
decision in that regard may be the subject of review by this Court
under § 709. The petition for the removal and the answer,
taken together, set up and claim in her behalf a right derived from
an authority exercised under the United States, but not necessarily
under the laws of the United States, within the meaning of that
term as used in the removal act.
What has been said in reference to the claims under the decrees
in the circuit court is equally applicable to the allegation in the
answer of the pendency of another suit on the same cause of action
in the same court.
The statement in the answer that when the mortgage to Hyatt was
made, he was a citizen and resident of New York, and the makers of
the mortgage citizens of South Carolina, a state whose people were
then in rebellion against the United States, is not enough to make
a suit arising under the Constitution or laws of the United States.
The fact that a mortgage was made in enemy territory to a loyal
citizen of the United States does not necessarily imply unlawful
intercourse between the parties, contrary to the proclamation of
the President of the date of August 16, 1861, 12 Stat. 1262, under
the authority of the Act of July 13, 1861, c. 3, § 5, 12 Stat.
257. That transactions within Confederate lines affecting loyal
citizens
Page 121 U. S. 430
outside were not all unlawful was decided in
United States
v. Quigley, 103 U. S. 595. To
make a case for removal, the answer should have set forth the facts
which rendered the mortgage void under the Nonintercourse Act and
the proclamation thereunder. There has been no attempt to do
this.
The order remanding the case is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BLATCHFORD took no part in the decision of this
case.