Amendments are discretionary with the court below, and are not
reviewable by this Court; this rule applies to an amendment
substituting a new sole plaintiff for the sole original
plaintiff.
When there has been an appearance and no plea, or when, on
account of amendments and changes of pleading, the declaration
remains without an answer, it is error to call a jury and to enter
a verdict unless for assessment of damages merely.
It is error to proceed to trial and enter a verdict and render
judgment against a defendant on an amended declaration in which the
party plaintiff is changed when he has no notice of the order
giving leave to amend, or opportunity to plead to the amended
declaration, or day in court to answer to the suit.
An allegation that the plaintiff is a joint stock company
organized under the laws of a state is not an allegation that it is
a corporation, but, on the contrary, that it is not a corporation,
but a partnership.
An allegation that a joint stock company plaintiff is a citizen
of a state different from that of the defendant will not give this
Court jurisdiction on the ground of citizenship.
Page 129 U. S. 678
It is again decided that this Court will of its own motion take
notice of questions of jurisdiction presented by the record,
although not raised by the parties, and that when the jurisdiction
of a federal court is sought on the ground of diversity of
citizenship, the facts conferring the jurisdiction must either be
distinctly averred in the pleadings or must clearly appear in the
record.
When the judgment below is reversed in this Court for want of
jurisdiction in the Circuit Court, the plaintiff in error is
entitled to his costs in this Court.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE LAMAR delivered the opinion of the Court.
In its original form, this was an action of assumpsit, brought
in the court below by the United States Express Company, alleged to
have been organized under and by virtue of the laws of the State of
New York, and a citizen of that state, against Heman B. Chapman, a
citizen of Illinois, to recover the sum of $14,000 in money,
alleged to have been entrusted to him for delivery to a certain
company at La Salle, Illinois, and converted by him to his own use.
At the same term of the court in which the declaration was filed,
Chapman answered, setting up two defenses,
viz.: (1)
non assumpsit and (2)
nul tiel corporation. On
the 8th of August, 1879, upon statutory affidavit filed on behalf
of the company, a writ of attachment was issued, under which
writ
Page 129 U. S. 679
the marshal of the district levied upon certain personal
property and effects of the plaintiff in error.
At the succeeding term of the court, upon motions made by the
company for that purpose, leave was given it to file an amended
declaration and to change its action from assumpsit to trover, and
the plaintiff in error was ruled to plead to the amended
declaration within ten days after service of a copy thereof upon
his attorneys. In conformity with such order at the December term,
1879, of the court, the plaintiff amended the declaration so as to
make it, in lieu of the original, read as follows:
"Ashbel H. Barney, president of the United States Express
Company, a joint-stock company organized under and by virtue of a
law of the State of New York, and which said company is authorized
by the laws of the State of New York to maintain and bring suits in
the name of its president for or on account of any right of action
accruing to said company, and a citizen of the State of New York,
the plaintiff in this suit, by E. F. Bull and James W. Duncan, its
attorneys, complains of Heman B. Chapman, a citizen of the State of
Illinois,"
etc. After the leave to amend the declaration was given, but
before the amended declaration was filed, the plaintiff in error
was convicted of perjury in the Circuit Court of La Salle County,
Illinois, and sentenced to imprisonment in the Joliet Penitentiary
for the term of seven years, under which sentence he was, on
January 2, 1880, removed to said penitentiary, and there imprisoned
until October, 1884. Without any proof of service of a copy of the
amendment, of any order for the default of the plaintiff in error
for want of plea to the amended declaration, and without any plea
thereto having been filed by him, the case was called for trial and
the record shows the following proceedings to have been had:
"Said cause having been called for trial, plaintiff appeared,
and defendant and his attorney failing to appear, thereupon, upon
issue joined, comes a jury, [naming them], who were sworn well and
truly to try said issue, and who, after hearing the evidence,
returned the following verdict: 'We, the jury,
Page 129 U. S. 680
find the issue for the plaintiff, and assess his damages at
fourteen thousand dollars,'"
and then follows judgment, on March 27, 1880, in usual form, on
the verdict, for $14,000, and costs. On the 8th of October, 1885,
plaintiff in error filed in the court below his bond for the
prosecution of a writ of error to reverse said judgment, and the
same was duly approved by the circuit judge. The mittimus under the
sentence above referred to, the certificate of the warden of the
penitentiary, and the affidavit of plaintiff in error were all
filed in the case and made part of the record, and they show that
plaintiff in error was imprisoned in the Joliet Penitentiary from
January 2, 1880, to October 4, 1884, and another affidavit of the
plaintiff in error, also filed in the case and made part of the
record, shows that on his discharge from the penitentiary, October,
1884, he was at once arrested on a
capias ad
satisfaciendum issued upon the judgment above mentioned, and
from that time until the issue of the writ he had been imprisoned
in the county jail of Cook County, Illinois, upon such
capias. His case is thus brought within the provisions of
§ 1008 Rev.Stat., which provides that, in case a party
entitled to a writ of error is imprisoned, he may prosecute such
writ within two years after judgment, exclusive of the term of such
imprisonment.
The assignments of error relied upon are three in number, and
are substantially as follows:
(1) The court erred in permitting a new sole plaintiff to be
substituted for, and in the place of, the sole original
plaintiff.
(2) The court erred in submitting to the jury the cause as it
stood after the amendments aforesaid, as upon issue joined between
said parties, in entering the verdict of the jury in said cause, in
rendering judgment thereon in favor of the defendant in error, when
there was no issue joined between said parties.
(3) The court erred in proceeding to trial and entering a
verdict and rendering judgment against plaintiff in error when he
had no notice of the order giving leave to amend, or of such
amendment, and had had no time or opportunity to plead to the
amended declaration, nor any day in court to answer to or defend
against the suit of the new plaintiff.
Page 129 U. S. 681
We do not think the first assignment of error well taken.
Amendments are discretionary with the court below, and not
reviewable by this Court.
Mandeville v.
Wilson, 5 Cranch 15;
Sheehy v.
Mandeville, 6 Cranch 253;
Walden v.
Craig, 9 Wheat. 576;
Chirac v.
Reinicker, 11 Wheat. 280;
Wright v.
Hollingsworth, 1 Pet. 165;
United
States v. Buford, 3 Pet. 12;
Matheson
v. Grant, 2 How. 263;
Ex Parte
Bradstreet, 7 Pet. 634.
We think the second point for plaintiff in error is well taken.
Where there has been an appearance and no plea, or where, on
account of amendments and changes of pleadings, the declaration
remains without an answer, the plaintiff may move for a judgment
for the want of a plea, as upon
nil dicit. But no such
motion was made. Certainly a jury should not be called and verdict
entered where no issue is joined, unless for assessment of damages
merely. The court erred in rendering judgment thereon. In addition
to the authorities cited by counsel for plaintiff in error,
See Hogan v. Ross,
13 How. 173.
We also think the third point well taken. The plaintiff was not
entitled to judgment without conforming to the conditions imposed
by the court in the very order giving leave to amend the
declaration, and under such circumstances the court erred in
rendering judgment against defendant.
But aside from all this, we are confronted with the question of
jurisdiction, which, although not raised by either party in the
court below or in this Court, is presented by the record, and,
under repeated decisions of this Court, must be considered.
Sullivan v. Fulton Steamboat
Co., 6 Wheat. 450;
Jackson v.
Ashton, 8 Pet. 148;
Grace v. American Central
Ins. Co., 109 U. S. 278;
Continental Ins. Co. v. Rhoads, 119 U.
S. 237;
Cameron v. Hodges, 127 U.
S. 322, and authorities there cited. The ground upon
which the jurisdiction of the federal court is invoked is that of
diverse citizenship of the parties. In
Robertson v. Cease,
97 U. S. 646,
97 U. S. 649,
it was said that
"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,
Page 129 U. S. 682
in other parts of the record,"
citing
Railway Co. v.
Ramsey, 22 Wall. 322;
Briges v. Sperry,
95 U. S. 401, and
Brown v.
Keene, 8 Pet. 115.
See also Menard v.
Goggan, 121 U. S. 253;
Halsted v. Buster, 119 U. S. 341;
Everhart v. Huntsville College, 120 U.
S. 223.
On looking into the record, we find no satisfactory showing as
to the citizenship of the plaintiff. The allegation of the amended
petition is that the United States Express Company is a joint-stock
company organized under a law of the State of New York, and is a
citizen of that state. But the express company cannot be a citizen
of New York, within the meaning of the statutes regulating
jurisdiction, unless it be a corporation. The allegation that the
company was organized under the laws of New York is not an
allegation that it is a corporation. In fact, the allegation is
that the company is not a corporation, but a joint-stock company --
that is, a mere partnership. And although it may be authorized by
the laws of the State of New York to bring suit in the name of its
president, that fact cannot give the company power, by that name,
to sue in a federal court.
The company may have been organized under the laws of the State
of New York, and may be doing business in that state, and yet all
the members of it may not be citizens of that state. The record
does not show the citizenship of Barney or of any of the members of
the company. They are not shown to be citizens of some state other
than Illinois.
Grace v. Insurance Co., supra, and
authorities there cited.
For these reasons, we are of the opinion that the record does
not show a case of which the circuit court could take jurisdiction.
The judgment of that court must therefore be reversed at the costs,
in this Court, of the defendant in error.
Hancock v.
Holbrook, 112 U. S. 229;
Halsted v. Buster, supra; Menard v. Goggan, supra.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded, with
directions to set aside the judgment and for such further
proceedings as may not be inconsistent with this opinion.