Under the Act of August 13, 1888, c. 566, the circuit court of
the United States has no jurisdiction, either original or by
removal from a state court, of a suit as one arising under the
Constitution, laws or treaties of the United States, unless that
appears by the plaintiff's statement of his own claim.
The
first case was a bill in equity filed January 26,
1893, in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Western
District of Tennessee by the State of Tennessee and the County of
Shelby, in that state, against the Union and Planters' Bank of
Memphis, a corporation organized under the laws of Tennessee and
having its place of business at Memphis, in Shelby County, and
against S. P. Read and W. A. Williamson, citizens of the State of
Tennessee, to recover taxes alleged to be due to
Page 152 U. S. 455
the state and county for the years 1887-1891, under the general
tax act of the State of 1887, c. 2.
The bill, after alleging that the original charter of the
defendant corporation, granted by the State of Tennessee in 1858,
provided
"that said company shall pay to the State of Tennessee an annual
tax of one-half of 1 percent on each share of stock subscribed,
which shall be in lieu of all other taxes,"
and stating the provisions of the tax act of 1887, relied on by
the plaintiffs, made the following allegations:
"The defendant bank claims that both its capital stock and the
shares of stock in the hands of its stockholders are exempt from
taxation by virtue of its charter. Complainants, however, are
advised and submit that the exemption contained in said charter
applies to the shares of stock only, and not to the capital stock
of said institution, and that the latter, in any event, is subject
to the taxing power of the state."
"It may be, however, that complainants are mistaken in the
foregoing construction of the charter, and that the shares of stock
are taxable, and the capital stock of said institution exempt. The
question is one of law, and is submitted to the court for
determination."
In view of the latter alternative, the bill alleged that the
corporation had each year refused, on demand of the assessing
officers of the state, to give them a list of its stockholders;
made Williamson, a stockholder, and Read, the cashier, of the bank,
defendants, and required the latter to disclose on oath the names
of the other stockholders and the number of their shares in order
that they might be made defendants and proper relief be had against
them.
The bill also set forth the amounts of taxes due from the
corporation in one alternative, or from the stockholders in the
other, amounting on either view to more than $5,000, and concluded
as follows:
"Complainants further state and show that the defendant claims
that under and by virtue of the terms of its charter, both its
shares of stock and its capital stock are exempt from taxation,
excepting only the one-half of one percent prescribed by the
charter, and that the revenue law of the state, undertaking
Page 152 U. S. 456
to tax the one or the other, is void because in violation of the
clause of the Constitution of the United States, which forbids the
state to pass any law impairing the obligation of a contract. It
claims immunity from taxation upon that ground, and upon none
other. The case is therefore one arising under the Constitution of
the United States, and within the jurisdiction of this Court, this
bill being brought to obtain an adjudication of the question of the
exemption of the shares of stock, or of the capital stock, or both,
of the defendant bank. Complainants aver that by the statute laws
of the State of Tennessee, they respectively have liens upon the
capital stock of said bank, and upon any property in which the same
may be invested, for the payment of any sums that may be adjudged
due from the defendant bank on account of taxes laid on said
capital stock, and liens upon the shares of stock in said bank for
the taxes upon said shares that may be adjudged due thereon."
"Premises considered, complainants pray that the parties named
as such in the caption be made defendants hereto; that subpoena and
copy issue, returnable to the next proper rule day, according to
the practice of the court, requiring them to appear and answer the
allegations of this bill, the defendant G. P. Read answering under
oath, and making discovery as asked in the body of the bill; that
the court will construe the charter of defendant company, and pass
upon the claim of immunity from taxation set up by defendant
company and its stockholders, adjudging the liability of the one or
the other, or both, to taxation, determining upon which the taxes
are laid for the several years mentioned in the bill, rendering
judgment accordingly, and enforcing the liens given by the statute
laws of the state, and that the court will grant such further
relief, general and special, as complainants in equity ought to
have."
The defendants filed an answer admitting most of the facts
alleged in the bill and that the defendant corporation
"claims that under and by virtue of the terms of its charter,
both its shares of stock and its capital stock are exempt from
taxation, excepting only the one-half of one percent prescribed by
the charter, and that the revenue law of a state, undertaking
to
Page 152 U. S. 457
tax the one or the other, is void because in violation of that
clause of the Constitution of the United States which forbids the
state to pass any law impairing the obligation of a contract,"
stating that "it does claim immunity from taxation upon that
ground, but not, as alleged in the bill, upon none other," and
setting up as additional grounds of defense that the exemption of
the corporation and its stockholders from taxation, except as
provided in its charter, had been adjudicated and established by
the decision of this Court in
Farrington v. Tennessee,
95 U. S. 679, and
by the decision of the Supreme Court of Tennessee in
Memphis v.
Union and Planters' Bank, 91 Tenn. 546, and also that they
were so exempt from taxation under the Constitution and laws of
Tennessee, and insisting that the case was not one arising under
the Constitution and laws of the United States, nor within the
jurisdiction of the circuit court of the United States.
The plaintiffs filed a general replication, and the court
entered this decree:
"This cause came on for final hearing on the pleadings and
proofs, and, having been argued by counsel and considered by the
court, the court is of the opinion as follows, to-wit: First. That
the objection to the jurisdiction of the court set up in the answer
of the defendants is not well taken; that the jurisdiction of the
court should be sustained, and the cause determined on its merits.
Second. That by the charter of the defendant bank, both the capital
stock of the said bank and the shares of stock therein are exempt
from taxation. Third. That the defense of
res judicata set
up in the answer need not, therefore, be passed upon. It is
therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the bill of complaint
herein be, and is hereby, dismissed at the cost of
complainants."
The plaintiffs appealed to this Court.
The
second case was a like bill in equity, filed at the
same time by the State of Tennessee and the County of Shelby
against the Bank of Commerce, a corporation of Tennessee, and
established at Memphis, and against its cashier, and one of its
stockholders, both citizens of Tennessee, and was dismissed on
demurrer, and the plaintiffs appealed to this Court.
Page 152 U. S. 458
The
third case was a bill in equity, filed October 22,
1891, in the Chancery Court of Shelby County, by the State of
Tennessee and the City of Memphis against the Bank of Commerce and
its cashier, and was substantially similar to the bills in the
other cases except in omitting the last paragraph but one, relating
to the Constitution of the United States, the jurisdiction of the
circuit court of the United States, and the lien of the plaintiffs.
The case was removed into the circuit court of the United States
upon the petition of the defendant corporation upon the ground that
by reason of the exemption in its charter, the tax act of Tennessee
on which the plaintiffs relied was repugnant to the provision of
the Constitution of the United States that no state shall pass any
law impairing the obligation of a contract. In the circuit court of
the United States, a demurrer to the bill on the same ground was
filed and sustained, and a final decree entered dismissing the
bill. 53 F. 735. The plaintiffs appealed to this Court.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY, after stating the cases, delivered the opinion
of the Court.
We find it unnecessary to consider other objections to the
maintenance of these three bills, or of any of them, because we are
clearly of opinion that each suit is not one arising under the
Constitution and laws of the United States, of which the circuit
court of the United States has jurisdiction, either original, or by
removal from a state court, under the Act of March 3, 1887, c. 373,
as corrected by the Act of August 13, 1888, c. 866. 25 Stat.
434.
Page 152 U. S. 459
The third article of the Constitution, said Chief Justice
Marshall,
"enables the judicial department to receive jurisdiction to the
full extent of the Constitution, laws, and treaties of the United
States when any question respecting them shall assume such a form
that the judicial power is capable of acting on it. That power is
capable of acting only when the subject is submitted to it by a
party who asserts his rights in the form prescribed by law. It then
becomes a case, and the Constitution declares that the judicial
power shall extend to all cases arising under the Constitution,
laws, and treaties of the United States."
And
"when a question to which the judicial power of the union is
extended by the Constitution forms an ingredient of the original
cause, it is in the power of Congress to give the circuit courts
jurisdiction of that cause, although other questions of fact or of
law may be involved in it."
But
"the right of the plaintiff to sue cannot depend on the defense
which the defendant may choose to set up. His right to sue is
anterior to that defense, and must depend on the state of things
when the action is brought. The questions which the case involves,
then, must determine its character, whether those questions be made
in the cause or not."
Osborn v. Bank of United
States, 9 Wheat. 738,
22 U. S. 819,
22 U. S.
823-824. In this last clause, as the context shows, the
word "then" (though printed between commas) means "at that time" --
that is to say, "when the action is brought."
The earliest act of Congress which conferred on the circuit
courts of the United States general jurisdiction of suits of a
civil nature at common law or in equity, "arising under the
Constitution or laws of the United States, or treaties made or
which shall be made under their authority," was the Act of March 3,
1875, c. 137, 18 Stat. 470. Under section 1 of that act, providing
that those courts should have original cognizance of such suits
when the matter in dispute exceeded the sum or value of $500, their
jurisdiction was exercised in cases in which the plaintiff's
statement of his cause of action showed that he relied on some
right under the Constitution or laws of the United States.
Feibelman v. Packard, 109 U. S. 421;
Kansas Pacific Railroad v.
Atchison &c. Railroad, 112 U.S.
Page 152 U. S. 460
414;
New Orleans v. Houston, 119 U.
S. 265;
Bachrack v. Norton, 132 U.
S. 337;
Cooke v. Avery, 147 U.
S. 375. And under section 2 of that act, which provided
that any suit of a civil nature at law or in equity, brought in any
state court, "and arising under the Constitution or laws of the
United States, or treaties made or which shall be made under their
authority," might be removed by either party into the circuit court
of the United States, it was held sufficient to justify a removal
by the defendant that the record at the time of the removal showed
that either party claimed a right under the Constitution or laws of
the United States.
Railroad Co. v. Mississippi,
102 U. S. 135;
Ames v. Kansas, 111 U. S. 449,
111 U. S. 462;
Brown v. Houston, 114 U. S. 622;
Provident Savings Society v. Ford, 114 U.
S. 635,
114 U. S. 642;
Pacific Railroad Removal Cases, 115 U. S.
1;
Tennessee v. Whitworth, 117 U.
S. 129,
117 U. S. 139;
Southern Pacific Railroad v. California, 118 U.
S. 109;
Bock v. Perkins, 139 U.
S. 628.
But, as has been decided under that act,
"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."
Carson v. Dunham, 121 U. S. 421,
121 U. S.
427.
"A cause cannot be removed from a state court simply because, in
the progress of the litigation, it may become necessary to give a
construction to the Constitution or laws of the United States."
Gold Washing Co. v. Keyes, 96 U. S.
199,
96 U. S. 203.
And
"the question whether a party claims a right under the
Constitution or laws of the United States is to be ascertained by
the legal construction of its own allegations, and not by the
effect attributed to those allegations by the adverse party."
Central Railroad v. Mills, 113 U.
S. 249,
113 U. S.
257.
Even under the act of 1875, the jurisdiction of the circuit
court of the United States could not be sustained over a suit
originally brought in that court upon the ground that the suit was
one arising under the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United
States unless that appeared in the plaintiff's statement of his own
claim. This was distinctly adjudged, and the reasons clearly
stated, in
Metcalf v. Watertown, 128 U.
S. 586,
Page 152 U. S. 461
128 U. S. 589,
in which MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, after pointing out that the cases in
which it had been held sufficient that the federal question upon
which the case depended was first presented by the answer or plea
of the defendant were cases of removal, in which therefore the
requisite of jurisdiction appeared on the record at the time when
the jurisdiction of the circuit court of the United States
attached, said:
"Where, however, the original jurisdiction of a circuit court of
the United States is invoked upon the sole ground that the
determination of the suit depends upon some question of a federal
nature, it must appear at the outset, from the declaration or the
bill of the party suing, that the suit is of that character; in
other words, it must appear in that class of cases that the suit
was one of which the circuit court at the time its jurisdiction is
invoked could properly take cognizance. If it does not so appear,
then the court, upon demurrer or motion or upon its own inspection
of the pleading, must dismiss the suit, just as it would remand to
the state court a suit which the record at the time of removal
failed to show was within the jurisdiction of the circuit court. It
cannot retain it in order to see whether the defendant may not
raise some question of a federal nature upon which the right of
recovery will finally depend, and, if so retained, the want of
jurisdiction at the commencement of the suit is not cured by an
answer or plea which may suggest a question of that kind."
That view has been affirmed and acted on at the present term in
Colorado Co. v. Turck, 150 U. S. 138,
150 U. S.
143.
The same rule applies more comprehensively to the acts of 1887
and 1888. In section 1, as thereby amended, the words giving
original cognizance to the circuit courts of the United States in
this class of cases are the same as in the act of 1875, except that
the jurisdictional amount is fixed at $2,000, and it is therefore
essential to their jurisdiction that the plaintiff's declaration or
bill should show that he asserts a right under the Constitution or
laws of the United States. But the corresponding clause in section
2 allows removals from a state court to be made only by defendants,
and of suits "of which the circuit courts of the United States are
given
Page 152 U. S. 462
original jurisdiction by the preceding section," thus limiting
the jurisdiction of a circuit court of the United States on removal
by the defendant, under this section, to such suits as might have
been brought in that court by the plaintiff under the first
section. 24 Stat. 553; 25 Stat. 434. The change is in accordance
with the general policy of these acts, manifest upon their face and
often recognized by this Court, to contract the jurisdiction of the
circuit courts of the United States.
Smith v. Lyon,
133 U. S. 315,
133 U. S. 320;
In re Pennsylvania Co., 137 U. S. 451,
137 U. S. 454;
Fisk v. Henarie, 142 U. S. 459,
142 U. S. 467;
Shaw v. Quincy Mining Co., 145 U.
S. 444,
145 U. S. 449;
Martin v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, 151 U.
S. 673,
151 U. S.
687.
Congress, in making this change, may well have had in mind the
reasons which so eminent a judge as Mr. Justice Miller invoked in
support of his dissent from the original decision that a defense
under the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States was
sufficient to justify a removal by the defendant under the act of
1875. "Looking," said he,
"to the reasons which may have influenced Congress, it may well
be supposed that while that body intended to allow the removal of a
suit where the very foundation and support thereof was a law of the
United States, it did not intend to authorize a removal where the
cause of action depended solely on the law of the state, and when
the act of Congress only came in question incidentally as part (it
might be a very small part) of the defendant's plea in avoidance.
In support of this view, it may be added that he, in such case, is
not without remedy in a federal court, for if he has pleaded and
relied on such defense in the state court, and that court has
decided against him in regard to it, he can remove the case into
this Court by writ of error, and have the question he has thus
raised decided here."
Railroad Co. v. Mississippi, 102 U.
S. 135,
102 U. S. 144.
The acts of 1887 and 1888 indeed contain special provisions as to
particular kinds of cases arising under the Constitution or laws of
the United States. By section 3, every receiver or manager of
property appointed by a court of the United States is permitted to
be sued without the previous leave of that court, but the suit is
subject to its general equity jurisdiction
Page 152 U. S. 463
so far as necessary to the ends of justice. By section 5,
nothing in this act is to repeal or affect any jurisdiction or
right mentioned in sections 641-643, 722, or title 24 of the
Revised Statutes, or the Act of March 1, 1875, c. 114, all of which
relate to suits concerning civil rights, and section 643 relates
also to the removal of suits against officers or other persons
acting or claiming under any revenue law of the United States; or
in the Act of March 3, 1875, c. 137, § 8, which relates to
notice to absent defendants in suits to enforce or to remove liens.
And section 6 expressly repeals section 640 of the Revised
Statutes, which authorized any suit commenced in a state court
against any corporation other than a banking corporation organized
under a law of the United States to be removed into the circuit
court of the United States upon the petition of the defendant
stating that it had a defense arising under or by virtue of the
Constitution or of any treaty or law of the United States. 24 Stat.
554, 555; 25 Stat. 436. But those provisions have no application to
the cases now before us, and contain, to say the least, nothing
tending to show that it was intended that such a case as any of
these might be removed into the circuit court of the United States
for trial.
The difference between the Act of March 3, 1875, and the later
acts is illustrated by the recent case of
Texas & Pacific
Railway v. Cox, in which receivers, appointed by a circuit
court of the United States, of a railroad corporation deriving its
corporate powers from acts of Congress were sued in the same court,
without previous leave of the court, after the act of 1887 took
effect. This Court, speaking by THE CHIEF JUSTICE, after observing
that the corporation would have been entitled, under the act of
1875, to remove a suit brought against it in a state court,
maintained the jurisdiction of the circuit court of the United
States of the action against the receivers, under the act of 1887,
upon the ground that the right to sue, without the leave of the
court which appointed them, receivers appointed by a court of the
United States, was conferred by section 6 of that act, and
therefore the suit was one arising under the Constitution and laws
of the United States.
145 U. S. 145 U.S.
593,
145 U. S.
601-603.
Page 152 U. S. 464
In each of the three cases now before this Court, the only right
claimed by the plaintiffs is under the law of Tennessee, and they
assert no right whatever under the Constitution and laws of the
United States. In the first and second bills, the only reference to
the Constitution or laws of the United States is the suggestion
that the defendants will contend that the law of the state under
which the plaintiffs claim is void, because in contravention of the
Constitution of the United States, and by the settled law of this
Court, as appears from the decisions above cited, a suggestion of
one party that the other will or may set up a claim under the
Constitution or laws of the United States does not make the suit
one arising under that Constitution or those laws. In the third
bill, no mention is made of the Constitution or laws of the United
States or of any right claimed under either, and no statement in
the petition for removal or in the demurrer of the defendant
corporation can supply that want under the existing act of
Congress.
The result is that in the first and second cases, the decrees
must be reversed at the cost of the plaintiffs, and the cases
remanded to the circuit court of the United States with directions
to dismiss the bills for want of jurisdiction, and that in the
third case, the decree must be reversed at the cost of the
defendants, and the case remanded to the circuit court of the
United States with directions to remand it to the state court from
which it was removed. The costs in each case are to be borne by the
party who brought into the circuit court of the United States a
case not within its jurisdiction.
Torrence v. Shedd,
144 U. S. 527;
Martin v. Snyder, 148 U. S. 663.
Decrees reversed accordingly.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, not having been a member of the Court when
these cases were argued, took no part in their decision.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, with whom concurred MR. JUSTICE FIELD,
dissenting.
I agree that the decrees in the first and second of the above
cases must be reversed, with directions to dismiss the bills for
want of jurisdiction in the circuit court.
But I cannot assent to the proposition that the third case,
which was originally brought in one of the courts of the state,
Page 152 U. S. 465
was not removable to the circuit court of the United States upon
the application of the defendant bank. In that case, as the opinion
of the Court shows, the state sought to enforce a lien for taxes
alleged to have been given by a general statute of Tennessee upon
the capital stock of the defendant. The bank defended upon the
ground that its stock was exempt by the terms of its charter from
such taxation, and that the statute under which the state brought
its suit was, if applied to the defendant, repugnant to the
provision of the Constitution of the United States forbidding the
states from passing laws impairing the obligation of contracts.
The opinion of the Court proceeds upon the general ground that
while a plaintiff, if his cause of action arises under the
Constitution and laws of the United States or under some treaty
with a foreign power, may invoke the original jurisdiction of a
circuit court of the United States, a defendant is not entitled,
under the existing statutes, to remove from the state court into
the circuit court of the United States any suit against him in
respect to which the original jurisdiction of the federal court
could not be invoked by the plaintiff, even where his defense goes
to the whole cause of action set forth in the bill, declaration, or
complaint and is grounded
entirely upon the Constitution of the
United States or upon an act of Congress or upon a treaty between
the United States and a foreign power. Of course, the cases
excepted by the fifth section of the Act of March 3, 1887, 25 Stat.
436, c. 866, to be presently referred to, cannot be brought under
this rule.
By the Judiciary Act of 1789, the original jurisdiction of the
circuit courts of the United States in suits of a civil nature at
common law or in equity, was restricted to those in which the value
of the matter in dispute exceeded, exclusive of costs, the sum or
value of five hundred dollars, and in which the United States were
plaintiffs or petitioners, or an alien was a party, or the suit was
between a citizen of the state in which it was brought and a
citizen of another state. And the right of removal was given only
to the defendant in a suit commenced in a state court against an
alien, or by a citizen of the state in which the suit was brought
against a
Page 152 U. S. 466
citizen of another state, and, under certain circumstances, to
the party in an action in which the title to land was concerned who
relied upon a grant from a state other than that in which the
action was pending. Act of September 24, 1789, c. 20, 1 Stat. 73,
78, 79, c. 20.
The act of 1875 enlarged the original jurisdiction of the
circuit courts of the United States so as to embrace all suits of a
civil nature at common law or in equity in which the matter in
dispute exceeded, exclusive of costs, the sum or value of five
hundred dollars, and
"arising under the Constitution or laws of the United States, or
treaties made, or which shall be made, under their authority, or in
which the United States are plaintiffs or petitioners, or in which
there shall be a controversy between citizens of different states
or a controversy between citizens of the same state claiming lands
under grants of different states, or a controversy between citizens
of a state and foreign states, citizens, or subjects."
In respect to each of these cases, that act provided that
"
either party may remove said suit into the circuit court
of the United States for the proper district." Act of March 3,
1875, c. 137, 18 Stat. 470.
The act of 1887, as amended in 1888, left the original
jurisdiction of the circuit courts of the United States precisely
as it was established by the act of 1875, except that it increased
the sum or value of the matter in dispute necessary to give
jurisdiction to two thousand dollars, exclusive of interest and
costs. Act of August 13, 1888, c. 866, 25 Stat. 434.
The act of 1887 further provided as follows:
"SEC. 2. That any suit of a civil nature at law or in equity
arising under the Constitution or laws of the United States, or
treaties made, or which shall be made, under their authority, of
which the circuit courts of the United States are given original
jurisdiction by the preceding section, which may now be pending, or
which may hereafter be brought, in any state court, may be removed
by the defendant or defendants therein to the Circuit Court of the
United States for the proper district. Any other suit of a civil
nature at law or in equity, of which the circuit courts of the
United States are given jurisdiction by the preceding section, and
which are now pending, or which
Page 152 U. S. 467
may hereafter be brought in any state court may be removed into
the circuit court of the United States for the proper district by
the defendant or defendants therein being nonresidents of that
state, and when in any suit mentioned in this section there shall
be a controversy which is wholly between citizens of different
states, and which can be fully determined as between them, then
either one or more of the defendants actually interested in such
controversy may remove said suit into the circuit court of the
United States for the proper district."
"SEC. 3. That whenever any party entitled to remove any suit
mentioned in the next preceding section, except in such cases as
are provided for in the last clause of said section, may desire to
remove such suit from a state court to the circuit court of the
United States, he may make and file a petition in such suit in such
state court at the time, or any time before the defendant is
required by the laws of the state or the rule of the state court in
which such suit is brought to answer or plead to the declaration or
complaint of the plaintiff for the removal of such suit into the
circuit court to be held in the district where such suit is
pending, and shall make and file therewith a bond, with good and
sufficient surety, for his or their entering in such circuit court,
on the first day of its then next session, a copy of the record in
such suit, and for paying all costs that may be awarded by the said
circuit court, if said court shall hold that such suit was
wrongfully or improperly removed thereto, and also for their
appearing and entering special bail in such suit if special bail
was originally requisite therein."
By the fifth section of that act, it was declared that nothing
in it should be
"held, decreed, or construed to repeal or affect any
jurisdiction or right mentioned either in section six hundred and
forty-one or in six hundred and forty-to or seven hundred and
twenty-two or in Title twenty-four of the Revised Statutes of the
United States, or mentioned in section eight of the act of Congress
of which this act is an amendment, or in the Act of Congress
approved March first, eighteen hundred and seventy-five, entitled
'An act to protect all citizens
Page 152 U. S. 468
in their civil and legal rights.�"
Section 641 of the Revised Statutes relates to civil suits and
criminal prosecutions commenced in state courts and involving the
equal civil rights of citizens of the United States. Section 642
prescribes what shall be done when the petitioner who seeks the
removal is in the actual custody of the state court. Section 643
gives the right of removal to the defendant in any civil suit or
criminal prosecution against an officer, or any person acting under
him, for any act done under the authority of a revenue law of the
United States. Section 722 relates to proceedings, civil and
criminal, in vindication of civil rights. Title 24 of the Revised
Statutes relates to civil rights. The eighth section of the Act of
March 3, 1875, prescribes the mode in which absent defendants, in
suits brought to enforce any legal or equitable lien upon or claim
to property within the district, may be brought before the court.
The Act of March 1, 1875, has reference to the full and equal
enjoyment of the accommodations, advantages, facilities of inns,
public conveyances, theaters, and other places of public
amusements.
There can be no question as to the import of the words, "arising
under the Constitution or laws of the United States," to be found
in the acts of 1875 and 1887. It has long been settled that a suit
was of that class if it necessarily involved a title, right,
privilege, or immunity asserted
by either party under the
Constitution or laws of the United States. If the defense was based
upon the Constitution or laws of the United States, the suit was
one arising under that Constitution or those laws, although the
plaintiff may not have asserted, in his pleading, any
claim whatever of a federal nature.
Railroad Co. v.
Mississippi, 102 U. S. 135,
102 U. S. 140;
Feibelman v. Packard, 109 U. S. 421;
Ames v. Kansas, 111 U. S. 449,
111 U. S. 462;
Pacific Railroad Removal Cases, 115 U. S.
1;
Starin v. New York, 115 U.
S. 248,
115 U. S. 257;
Bachrack v. Norton, 132 U. S. 337;
Bock v. Perkins, 139 U. S. 628,
139 U. S. 630.
But the Court now holds that the effect of the words in the first
clause of section 2 of the act of 1887, "of which the circuit
courts of the United States are given original jurisdiction by the
preceding section," is to make the right of the
defendant
in a suit
Page 152 U. S. 469
arising under the Constitution or laws of the United States, or
under a treaty, to remove it from the state court depend upon the
inquiry whether the suit was one in respect of which the original
jurisdiction of the circuit court could be invoked by the
plaintiff. In my judgment, this is an erroneous interpretation of
the statute. It is too narrow. No such interpretation was suggested
at the bar, nor do I think it has ever been before suggested in any
case.
The main purpose of the second section of the act of 1887 was to
restrict the right of removal to the defendant or defendants in
suits of the kind mentioned in the first clause of that section,
and to the defendant or defendants, "being nonresidents" of the
state, in all other suits mentioned in that section. It was not
intended to deny to a defendant the right of removal where the
suit, by reason of the nature of the defense, was one arising under
the Constitution or laws of the United States or treaties with
foreign powers, while allowing the plaintiff whose bill,
declaration, or complaint made a suit of that kind to invoke the
original jurisdiction of the circuit court. What possible reason
could there have been for denying to a defendant the right, by a
removal of the suit, to invoke the jurisdiction of a circuit court
of the United States for the protection of his rights under the
Constitution or laws of the United States, while giving to the
plaintiff the right to invoke the jurisdiction of the same court
for the protection of similar rights under the Constitution and
laws of the United States? One effect of the present decision is --
except in the cases mentioned in the sections of the Revised
Statutes and in the acts of Congress referred to in the fifth
section of the act of 1887 -- to prevent an officer of the United
States, when sued in a state court on account of some act done by
him, from removing the suit into the federal court, although what
he did is alleged to have been done in execution of some act of
Congress or pursuant to an order of a court of the United
States.
If it be said that this was the condition of things under the
original Judiciary Act, my answer is that Congress did not, by the
act of 1887, evince a purpose to return to the policy indicated by
the act of 1789 in respect to the concurrent jurisdiction
Page 152 U. S. 470
of the courts of the United States and the state courts. This is
shown by the fact that while, under the act of 1789, the circuit
courts of the United States had no original jurisdiction of suits
arising under the Constitution or laws of the United States, or
under treaties with foreign powers, or of suits between citizens of
the same state claiming lands under grants of different states, or
of controversies between citizens of a state and foreign states,
citizens, or subjects, original jurisdiction in all such cases, as
conferred by the act of 1875, is preserved to those courts by the
act of 1887. It seems to me contrary to the general purpose of the
latter act to hold that a suit which is made by the plaintiff's
pleading one arising under the Constitution or laws of the United
States or a treaty can be brought in the proper circuit court of
the United States, while a suit which is made by the defendant's
answer one arising under the Constitution or laws of the United
States or a treaty cannot be removed to the federal court for
hearing or trial. The words in the first clause of the second
section of the act of 1887, "of which the circuit courts of the
United States are given original jurisdiction by the preceding
section" have, I think, been construed by the Court with too much
strictness. They were inserted in the act, in part, for the purpose
of indicating that the suits mentioned in the second section as
suits "arising under the Constitution or laws of the United States,
or treaties made, or which shall be made, under their authority,"
and which could be removed, were of the same nature as the suits of
the same kind described in the same language in section 1, and not
for the purpose of limiting the right of removal to those suits
arising under the Constitution or laws of the United States, or
under treaties, which could be brought by an original action in a
circuit court of the United States. The Court, by its construction,
does what the act of Congress does not do, and what it should not
be supposed Congress intended to do -- namely, it divides suits
arising under the Constitution or laws of the United States and
suits under treaties with foreign powers into two classes, and
excludes one of those classes altogether from the original
cognizance of the circuit courts
Page 152 U. S. 471
of the United States. It thus -- except in the cases saved by
the fifth section of the act of 1887 -- makes a discrimination
against a defendant whose defense rests entirely upon the
Constitution or laws of the United States, or on a treaty, that is
not justified either by the policy or the words of the act of
1887.
The Judiciary Act of 1789 and 1875 restricted the original
jurisdiction of the circuit courts of the United States to suits at
law or in equity in which the matter in dispute exceeded the sum or
value of
five hundred dollars, exclusive of costs. The act
of 1887 fixed this amount at
two thousand dollars, exclusive of
interest and costs. It may well be held -- indeed, the natural
and reasonable construction of the act of 1887 is -- that the
words, "of which the circuit courts of the United States are given
original jurisdiction by the preceding section" were introduced for
the purpose of making it clear that no suit arising under the
Constitution or the laws of the United States or under any treaty
should be removed unless the matter in dispute exceeded in value
the sum of $2,000, exclusive of interest and costs. But for the
words in the second section of the act of 1887, "of which the
circuit courts of the United States are given original jurisdiction
by the preceding section,"
any suit arising under the
Constitution or laws of the United States, or under a treaty,
however small the amount in dispute, could have been removed from
the state court. Those words being in the second section, no suit
of that class could be removed into the federal court unless the
value of the matter in dispute was such as is prescribed in "the
preceding section" -- namely, $2,000, exclusive of interest and
costs.
Again, if, instead of suing to enforce the lien given by the
statute, the state had levied upon the property of the bank, the
officer making the levy could have been enjoined at the suit of the
bank upon the very ground now set forth in its answer -- namely
that the statute under which that officer proceeded was repugnant
to the contract clause of the Constitution of the United States.
Such a suit would have been one arising under the Constitution, and
therefore cognizable by
Page 152 U. S. 472
the circuit court.
Allen v. Baltimore & Ohio
Railroad, 114 U. S. 311;
White v. Greenhow, 114 U. S. 307;
Barry v. Edmunds, 116 U. S. 550.
Yet, under the decision just rendered, the bank cannot, by removing
the present suit, invoke the jurisdiction of the circuit court for
the determination of the same question.
Further, it was held in
Texas & Pacific Railway v.
Cox, 145 U. S. 593,
that without reference to the citizenship of the plaintiff, a suit
for damages can be brought in a circuit court of the United States
against receivers appointed by a circuit court of the United States
of a railroad corporation created by an act of Congress although
the case involves no question of a federal nature. This upon the
ground that the receivers, in executing their duties, were acting
under judicial authority derived from the Constitution of the
United States. Such a suit, if brought in a state court, could, I
take it, be removed under the present decision upon the ground
simply that the plaintiff's suit was within the original cognizance
of the circuit court. And yet, under the act of 1887 as now
interpreted, a suit against a citizen or against a corporation
created by a state cannot be removed, even if the defense rests
exclusively on the Constitution of the United States. I cannot
believe that Congress contemplated any such result.
I am of opinion that under the act of 1887, a suit, involving
the required amount and "arising under the Constitution or laws of
the United States, or treaties made, or which shall be made, under
their authority" -- whether the suit becomes one of that kind by
reason of the allegations in the bill, declaration, or complaint,
or by reason of the answer or defense -- may be removed not, as
under the act of 1875, by either party, but by the defendant or
defendants, of whatever state residents or citizens, in the mode
and at the time prescribed by the act of 1887.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD authorizes me to say that he concurs in this
dissenting opinion.