Gibson v. Shufeldt, 122 U. S. 27,
affirmed to the point that
"in a suit in equity brought in the circuit court by two or more
persons on several and distinct demands, the defendant can appeal
to this Court as to those plaintiffs only to each of whom more than
$5,000 is decreed."
Motion to dismiss an appeal in equity upon the ground that "the
decree appealed from was not a joint decree, and imposed no joint
debt, liability, or obligation," but that it was a series of
distinct decrees against distinct parties on distinct causes of
action. The case is stated in the opinion. The cause was argued on
its merits as well as on the motion to dismiss.
Page 134 U. S. 539
MR. JUSTICE LAMAR delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a motion to dismiss an appeal upon the ground that the
interests of each of the appellants in the case are separate and
distinct, and do not involve an amount sufficient to give this
Court jurisdiction.
The case grows out of
Kennicott v.
Supervisors, 16 Wall. 452, and
Supervisors v.
Kennicott, 94 U. S. 498, and
those cases are referred to for a more minute statement of all the
early facts of the controversy than is necessary to be made for the
purpose of considering the question now before us. A brief summary
of some of the leading facts of the controversy will be sufficient
for present purposes.
On the 20th of April, 1859, the County of Wayne, in the State of
Illinois, by virtue of an authority derived from an act of the
state legislature, executed a mortgage and a deed of trust upon
about 100,000 acres of its swamp and overflowed lands to Isaac
Seymour, of New York city, as trustee, to secure the payment of
$800,000 of its bonds, which had been issued for the purpose of
raising funds with which to construct a railroad. On the same day,
the Mount Vernon Railroad Company, the corporation that had been
organized to build the
Page 134 U. S. 540
road for the benefit of which the aforesaid aid had been
granted, as a part of the same general transaction of raising funds
with which to build its road, executed a mortgage to Seymour upon
its contemplated railroad, its appurtenances, franchises, and other
property and effects, both present and prospective, as an
additional security for the aforesaid bonds. The bonds were sold
and came into the hands of
bona fide purchasers for value,
and, default having been made in the payment of the interest on
them as it came due, a bill for foreclosure of the mortgages and
deed of trust was filed, on the 7th of March, 1865, by John W.
Kennicott and others, claimants of a number of the bonds which had
been sold, against the County of Wayne and the Mount Vernon
Railroad Company. The railroad company defaulted, and, upon a
hearing in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern
District of Illinois, the bill was dismissed as to the County of
Wayne on the ground that the mortgage was invalid because the
proofs failed to show that at the date it was made there was any
line of railroad constructed or authorized to be constructed
through that county with which the Mount Vernon Railroad was
connected in any manner. Upon appeal, this Court reversed that
decree and held that the mortgage in controversy was valid as to
bona fide holders of the bonds it was intended to secure,
and that the complainants were entitled to a decree in their favor.
Kennicott v. Supervisors, supra. A final decree in the
case was rendered by the circuit court in June, 1874, which was
affirmed by this Court on appeal.
Supervisors v. Kennicott,
supra. In pursuance of that decree, the lands covered by the
mortgage were sold at a master's sale on the 18th of September,
1877, for an amount insufficient to satisfy the claims of the
bondholders, and, the time for redemption having expired, the
master, on May 27, 1879, executed and delivered a deed for them to
one Broadwell, who had come into possession of the certificates of
purchase at the aforesaid sale. The appellees in this case, who
were complainants below, claim under Broadwell. Between the date of
the execution of the deed of trust and the mortgage before
mentioned and March 7, 1865, when the
Page 134 U. S. 541
foreclosure suit was commenced, the County of Wayne had sold a
large amount of the lands embraced in those encumbrances to
individuals who were not made parties to the foreclosure
proceedings. The appellants here claim under those purchases from
the county.
The case as it now stands is a consolidation of four others and
an intervening petition filed by leave of the court. The first of
those consolidated cases was a suit in equity brought on the 25th
of January, 1882, by the appellee, J. C. Cloyd, a citizen of New
York, against Clarissa Jordan and some twenty-four or more other
defendants, all but two of whom were citizens of Illinois, one of
those two being a citizen of Ohio, and the other a citizen of
Colorado. The bill set out somewhat in detail the various steps in
the proceedings above referred to, and further alleged that, by
reason thereof, and also by reason of the conveyances before
mentioned, the County of Wayne had no right, title, or interest in
and to the lands in dispute and was not in any other manner
interested in the present suit.
The prayer of the bill was that a subpoena issue commanding each
of the defendants to appear and answer, but not under oath, all and
singular the allegations of the bill; that an account be taken,
under the direction of the court, to ascertain how much was due on
the decree in the case of
Kennicott v. Supervisors, supra,
and also to ascertain the amount for which each tract of land
involved in the suit was sold at the master's sale, with interest.
It then continued as follows:
"That said defendants, within a short time to be fixed by this
Court, pay to complainant the amount so found to be due on said
decree, or, in the alternative, that each of said defendants pay to
your orator the amount for which the lands so claimed by each of
said defendants was sold at said master's sale, with the interest
thereon, and in default of making such payment that your honor, by
a decree of this Court, declare the equity of redemption of said
defendants to be forever barred and foreclosed; and if your honor
should deem it right and equitable that the equity of redemption of
said defendants in and to said premises should be sold, then that
your honor order the
Page 134 U. S. 542
same to be sold in such manner as may seem best to your
honor,"
and concluded with a prayer for other and further relief,
etc.
The second and third of the consolidated cases were brought on
the same day as the first one, in the court below, and were similar
in every respect to that one. The second one was brought by C. T.
Austin, a citizen of New York, against Michael Book and four other
defendants, all citizens of Illinois, and the third one was brought
by John B. Cornell, also a citizen of New York, against Thomas J.
Pettijohn and some fifty-five or more other defendants, all of whom
were citizens of Illinois, except C. M. Wakefield, who was a
citizen of Texas.
The fourth one was brought in the court below on the 26th of
January, 1882, by Elizabeth H. Taylor, J. Sargent Smith, and Arthur
F. Gould, citizens of Massachusetts, Henry M. Alexander,
administrator of the last will and testament of Peter McMartin,
deceased, Joseph Waxelbaum, and Charles A. Coe, citizens of New
York, and William L. Rolston, a citizen of Ohio, against J. B.
Bozarth and sixty-five other defendants, who were all citizens of
Illinois, and was similar to the three preceding cases in every
respect, except that the lands involved were described, and the
name of the owner of each particular tract was set forth in the
bill itself, instead of in an exhibit thereto, as was the case in
the others.
These cases were consolidated by an order of court entered
January 2, 1884, and were ordered to proceed as one case under the
title of the first one, and at the same time leave was given to
amend the bills in all of the causes in order to make them
harmonious.
By leave of the court, on the 4th day of April, 1884, Fernando
B. Hane, a citizen of Ohio, filed his intervening petition in the
case, as consolidated, against all of the defendants impleaded
therein, and also against John J. Backman and 174 other defendants,
all citizens of Illinois, alleging substantially the same facts as
did the preceding cases, with a like prayer, and with an additional
prayer for an injunction against a number of the defendants and
their attorney, H. Tompkins, to restrain and enjoin them from
Page 134 U. S. 543
prosecuting certain suits brought by them in the Circuit Court
of Wayne County against certain vendees of petitioner, based upon
the claim that the aforesaid mortgage and deed of trust were
invalid, and therefore not binding upon them, until the final
hearing of this cause.
To these pleadings various defendants interposed demurrers, some
filed separate answers, and the rest filed a joint answer. The main
ground of defense was that, upon a similar state of facts to those
alleged by complainants in this case, the Supreme Court of
Illinois, in
Scates v. King, 110 Ill. 456, had affirmed a
decree rendered by the Circuit Court of Wayne County in a case
regularly brought before it, which held that a conveyance of a part
of the lands sold at the mortgage sale aforesaid, made by a
claimant under Broadwell, was a cloud upon the title thereto of a
party claiming under a sale made by the county between the date of
the execution of the before-mentioned mortgage and deed of trust
and the commencement of the foreclosure proceedings, and should be
set aside.
Replications having been filed, and also intervening petitions
by W. S. Rolston, J. C. Cloyd, and Lucinda A. Walker, the case was
finally put at issue. Proofs were taken by the respective parties,
and upon a hearing on the pleadings and proofs, the court below, on
the 25th of January, 1886, rendered a decree finding the material
facts substantially as we have recited them. The decree then set
out and exhibited, in its seventh finding of facts, a list and
schedule of the lands involved in this consolidated suit, "together
with the names, respectively, of the several and respective persons
to whom the County of Wayne sold its equity of redemption or
residuary interest." That list and schedule further contained a
statement of the present owners, respectively, of the title
acquired by the master's sale aforesaid, which afterwards passed to
Broadwell, and from him by mesne conveyances, and also "a statement
of the amounts, respectively, which were bid at said decretal sale
for said tracts of land, respectively."
The court then found, as matter of law:
"1. That the opinions and decisions of the Supreme Court of the
United States upon the appeals heretofore prosecuted
Page 134 U. S. 544
from the decrees of this Court and reported in 16th Wallace's
Reports, page
83 U. S. 452, and in 94 U.S.
Reports, page
94 U. S. 498, are binding upon
this court, and there is nothing in record or evidence in this case
as consolidated to invalidate the said mortgage and trust deed, or
the respective amounts found due to the several parties to this
suit as consolidated. Both the findings as to the said several
amounts so found due should be sustained."
"2. The purchasers from Wayne County, after the recording of the
mortgage, took the lands purchased by them severally, subject to
the lien of the mortgage, and the proceedings to foreclose the said
trust deed and mortgage did not release or discharge this lien so
long as the mortgage debt remains unsatisfied."
"3. The purchasers from the county, both after the recording of
the mortgage and after the service of process on Wayne County on
March 11, 1865, cannot acquire tax titles as against the
mortgagees, or those acquiring title under the foreclosure
sale."
"4. That the master's deed under the decretal sale of September
18, 1877, transferred to the several purchasers thereat an
equitable right to so much of the mortgage debt as was bid upon
each tract severally."
"5. That the
lis pendens as to purchasers from the
county attaches from the 11th of March, A.D. 1865, the date of
service of process on Wayne County, and that upon the facts averred
in the several bills, and sustained by the proofs, the purchasers
of lands at the decretal sale which was sold by Wayne County
between April 20, 1859, and March 11, 1865, are entitled to file a
bill in the nature of a supplemental bill against the parties
holding title from the county subject to the mortgage to have the
lien of the mortgage enforced by a decree of foreclosure."
The decree then continued as follows:
"That each of said owners of the said equity of redemption or
residuary interest of the County of Wayne, of, in, and to said
several tracts of land which were purchased from the
Page 134 U. S. 545
county between April 20, 1859, and March 11, 1865, who have been
summoned in this case, or who may have entered their voluntary
appearance therein, or their assigns, respectively,
each acting
for himself or herself, and not for any other, may and shall redeem
the respective tracts of land of which they at date of service upon
them, respectively, of process or entry of appearance respectively
held and owned the equity of redemption or residuary interest of
the County of Wayne, within or at the expiration of one year
from this date, by paying into this court the amount for which each
of said tracts of land was bid and sold at said decretal sale, for
the use and benefit of the owners, respectively, under title
deraigned from said decretal sale of the tract or tracts so
redeemed, and that the judgment creditors, respectively, of any
such persons so owning the equity of redemption, may and shall
redeem any tracts thereof in default of such parties so redeeming
at any time within three months of and after the expiration of said
twelve months by paying the amount so decreed to be redeemed from
in accordance with the statutes of the State of Illinois concerning
redemption from judicial sales, and it is further ordered,
adjudged, and decreed that the decree of foreclosure of June 25,
1874, hereinbefore referred to shall be vacated and annulled as to
each and every tract (but as to none others) thus redeemed as
aforesaid, and that in default of redemption, as provided for
herein as aforesaid, then and from the date of the expiration of
such period of limitation all rights of such owners of the said
equity of redemption, or their respective assigns, so failing to
redeem, shall be forever barred and foreclosed of their equities of
redemption, respectively, and of all rights of, in, and to said
lands of any kind or nature adversely to the owners under title
deraigned from said decretal sale, and that each and all of such
defendants so being barred and foreclosed, and their agents,
attorneys, solicitors, and servants or assigns shall, from and
after the expiration of said fifteen months, cease to exercise any
acts of ownership over said lands, and shall at once thereafter
vacate, abandon, and leave the same, and not intermeddle any
further therewith under pain of being considered in contempt of
this court, and that
Page 134 U. S. 546
the respective titles of said several and respective tracts of
land not so redeemed shall be, and they are, confirmed in said
several parties so owning the same by title deraigned from said
decretal sale, as aforesaid, and their assigns, and that any tax
deed or certificate to any tract of land, and not thus redeemed,
which may belong to any such person thus entitled, but failing to
redeem such tract, is hereby declared to be vacated, annulled, and
for nothing taken hereafter."
The italics are the court's.
On the same day that the decree was entered, a motion for
rehearing was filed, the first ground of which recited as follows:
"That the result of the decree in said cause would be a great
hardship to the respondents, as there is not enough in amount in
any case to allow an appeal." This motion was denied on the 29th of
March, 1886, but on the 31st of May following it was ordered by the
court that said motion "stand continued until the next June term"
of the court. On the 10th of June following, the motion for
rehearing was again considered, and again denied, an order being
entered "that the order of March 29, 1886, denying the application
for a rehearing of the cause, stand affirmed."
On the 13th of July, 1886, a motion was made to correct the
decree by striking from it the names of thirty-seven of the
defendants, thirty-four of whom, it was alleged, had neither
entered their appearance nor been served with summons, and the
other three had disclaimed, and on the 5th of August, 1886, a
petition for summons and severance on appeal, and also an appeal
bond, were filed by fifty-six of the defendants jointly.
It is clear that the appeal must be dismissed. The decree from
which it is taken was not a joint decree, as is readily observed by
a mere inspection of it. The liability of each one of the
defendants under that decree can be neither increased nor
diminished by any action on the part of any of his codefendants.
The right of every one of the defendants to appeal from the decree
is separate and distinct from that of the other defendants. The
amount adjudged against anyone of them, in order that he might
redeem his respective tract or tracts of
Page 134 U. S. 547
land, does not in any case reach the amount necessary to give us
jurisdiction to entertain the appeal. In no case is it $5,000. In
Ex Parte Phoenix Insurance Co., 117 U.
S. 367,
117 U. S. 369,
Chief Justice Waite, delivering the opinion of the Court, said:
"The rule is well settled that distinct decrees against distinct
parties on distinct causes of action, or on a single cause of
action in which there are distinct liabilities, cannot be joined to
give this Court jurisdiction on appeal,"
citing a long list of authorities. The question was finally put
at rest in
Gibson v. Shufeldt, 122 U. S.
27, where, after a thorough examination of the subject
on principle and an exhaustive review of the authorities bearing
upon it, the Court sustained a motion to dismiss an appeal similar
in all its essential features to the motion in this case, and in
concluding its opinion said:
"This result, as we have seen, is in accordance with a long
series of decisions of this Court extending over more than half a
century. During that period, Congress has often legislated on the
subject of our appellate jurisdiction without changing the
phraseology which had received judicial construction. The Court
should not now unsettle a rule so long established and
recognized."
122 U.S.
122 U. S. 39-40.
See also McMurray v. Moran at this term,
ante,
134 U. S. 150.
It is not necessary to multiply authorities upon a point so well
settled. Neither do we think any of the points made by the
appellants in their brief in opposition to the motion to dismiss
are well taken.
The motion to dismiss the appeal is granted.