Under the Act of February 22, 1889, c. 180, for the division of
the Territory of Dakota into two states and for the admission of
those and other states into the union, and providing that the
circuit and district courts of the United States shall be the
successors of the Supreme and District Courts of each territory as
to all cases pending at the admission of the state into the
union,
"whereof the circuit or district courts by this act established
might have had jurisdiction under the laws of the United States had
such courts existed at the time of the commencement of such
cases,"
the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of South
Dakota has jurisdiction, at the written request of either party, of
an action brought in a district court of that part of the Territory
of Dakota which afterwards became the State of South Dakota, by a
citizen of that part of the territory, since a citizen of the
state, against a citizen of another state, and pending on appeal in
the supreme court of the territory at the time of the admission of
the state into the union.
In an action against a corporation for the breach of a contract
to transfer a certain number of its shares to the plaintiff, he
testified to their value; and the defendant's president, being a
witness in its behalf, testified that they were worth half as much;
the jury returned a verdict for the larger sum; exceptions taken by
the defendant to the competency of the plaintiff's testimony on the
question of damages were sustained, and the court ordered that a
new trial be had unless the plaintiff would file a remittitur of
half the damages, and, upon his filing a remittitur accordingly,
and upon his motion, rendered judgment for him for the remaining
half.
Held, no error of which either party could
complain.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 158 U. S. 42
MR. JUSTICE GRAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an action at law, commenced October 17, 1883, in the
District Court of the First Judicial District of the Territory of
Dakota, in and for Lawrence County, by Victor Dorne against the
Richmond Silver Mining Company. The complaint alleged that the
plaintiff, on December 11, 1882, sold and conveyed to the defendant
a certain interest in mining claims in that county; that the
defendant, in consideration thereof, agreed to transfer and deliver
to the plaintiff, within three weeks, 14,285 5/7 shares of its
corporate stock, and that the defendant transferred and delivered
to the plaintiff 3,500 shares of its stock, and neglected and
refused to deliver him any more, to the damage of the plaintiff in
the sum of $15,000. The answer was a general denial.
Upon a trial by jury in that court in April, 1889, the plaintiff
introduced evidence tending substantially to prove the contract and
breach alleged, and no objection of variance was interposed. The
plaintiff testified that the shares which the defendant had not
transferred to him were worth, at the time of the breach, from one
to two dollars a share. The defendant's president, being called and
examined as a witness in its behalf, testified that he was one of
the original incorporators, and owned 19,000 or 20,000 shares; that
he bought them at fifty cents a share, and that the stock had been
sold in the market at that price. Part of the plaintiff's testimony
as to the value of the shares was to matters of opinion, and to a
contract of sale between himself and a third person, which the
plaintiff had not carried out, and was admitted by the court
against the objection and exception of the defendant. Other
exceptions taken by the defendant to the rulings and instructions
of the court were immaterial or groundless, and require no
particular notice. The court, in accordance with a request of the
defendant, instructed the jury that, if they were satisfied that
the plaintiff was entitled to recover, the measure of his damages
would be the value of the 10,785 5/7 shares of the defendant's
stock which he had not received, being the price at which he might,
with reasonable diligence, have purchased an
Page 158 U. S. 43
equivalent amount of the stock in the nearest market, together
with interest thereon at the rate of seven percent per annum.
The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of
$15,315.70. The defendant filed a motion for a new trial, for newly
discovered evidence, as shown by affidavits, tending to impeach the
plaintiff's testimony as to the value of the shares, as well as for
excessive damages, and for insufficiency of the evidence to sustain
the verdict, and for errors in law occurring at the trial, and
excepted to by the defendant. The court overruled the motion, and
rendered judgment on the verdict for the sum found due by the jury,
and interest, and on September 28, 1889, allowed a bill of
exceptions tendered by the defendant.
On October 8, 1889, the defendant appealed to the Supreme Court
of the Territory of Dakota, and gave bond to prosecute the appeal,
and on the same day entered the appeal in that court, and it was
there pending on November 2, 1889, when the southern part of the
Territory of Dakota, including Lawrence County, was admitted into
the union as the state of South Dakota under the Act of Congress of
February 22, 1889, c. 180, for the division of Dakota into two
states and for the admission of the states of North Dakota, South
Dakota, Montana, and Washington into the union, the material
provisions of which are copied in the margin.
*
Page 158 U. S. 44
The case was thereupon entered in the Supreme Court of the State
of South Dakota. On February 4, 1890, the defendant
Page 158 U. S. 45
filed in that court a petition, verified by oath, to transfer
the case to the Circuit Court of the United States for the District
of South Dakota, because the defendant was at the time of bringing
the action, and still was, a corporation and citizen of the State
of New York, and the plaintiff was then a citizen of that portion
of the Territory of Dakota which was now the State of South Dakota,
and still was a citizen of South Dakota. On March 1, 1890, after
notice and hearing, that petition was granted, and the case was
transferred accordingly. 1 S.D. 20.
The Circuit Court of the United States for the District of South
Dakota afterwards, upon notice and hearing, denied a motion of the
plaintiff to remand the case to the Supreme Court of the State of
South Dakota, 43 F. 690, and then heard the case upon the record
from that court,
"except that the court declined to consider the affidavits used
in support of the motion for new trial and limited its
consideration of the appeal from the judgment and from the order
overruling the motion for a new trial to the assignments of errors
of law occurring during the trial, to which action of the court in
declining to consider such affidavits, and limiting its
consideration aforesaid, counsel for defendant and appellant at the
time duly excepted, and, after taking this cause under advisement
and upon due consideration, this Court, being of the opinion that
reversible error had been committed in the trial court upon the
question of damages, but that the judgment of the trial court could
be affirmed for one-half the amount
Page 158 U. S. 46
thereof, provided the plaintiff would consent to remit the
balance,"
ordered that the judgment be reversed, and a new trial granted,
unless the plaintiff should file, within ten days, a consent in
writing to remit one-half of that judgment, in which event a
judgment of affirmance might be entered for one-half of such
original judgment, with interest thereon from the date of its
entry, and without costs to either party.
In accordance with that order, the plaintiff filed a remittitur
of one-half of the judgment, and on his motion, the court ordered
the judgment to be affirmed to the extent of one-half thereof,
amounting, with interest, to the sum of $8,823.96. Each party
tendered and was allowed a bill of exceptions, and sued out a writ
of error, and the original plaintiff, Dorne, having died since the
entry of the case in this Court, his writ of error was prosecuted
by Sebastian Koenigsberger as his administrator.
The most important question in this case is whether the Circuit
Court of the United States for the District of South Dakota had
jurisdiction of it. This question has been fully argued at the bar,
but would be noticed by this Court had it not been suggested by
either party.
The facts upon which the decision of this question depends are
not in dispute. The action was brought in a district court of that
part of the Territory of Dakota which afterwards became the State
of South Dakota. The plaintiff, at the time of bringing the action,
was a citizen of that part of the territory, and, upon the
admission of the State of South Dakota into the union, became a
citizen of that state. The defendant, at the time of the bringing
of the action and ever since, was a corporation of the State of New
York. The merits of the case did not involve any question under the
Constitution and laws of the United States. The case, after trial
and judgment in the district court of the territory, was pending on
appeal in the supreme court of the territory at the time of the
admission of the state into the union, and upon such admission was
entered in the supreme court of the state, and was thence
transferred, on petition of the defendant, to the circuit court of
the United States, which afterwards
Page 158 U. S. 47
denied a motion of the plaintiff to remand it to the supreme
court of the state.
The defendant's petition to transfer the case to the circuit
court of the United States having been filed in the supreme court
of the state before it had taken any action in the case, there has
been no waiver of any right which the defendant had to have the
case heard and determined in the circuit court of the United
States.
Carr v. Fife, 156 U. S. 494;
Ames v. Colorado Railroad, 4 Dill. 251.
The plaintiff relies on the provisions of section 23 of the Act
of Congress of February 22, 1889, c. 180, for the admission of
South Dakota and other states into the union, by which, in respect
to all cases pending in the supreme or in a district court of
either of the territories therein mentioned at the time of the
admission of either of the states named into the union, and arising
within the limits of the state,
"whereof the circuit or district courts by this act established
might have had jurisdiction under the laws of the United States,
has such courts existed at the time of the commencement of such
cases,"
those circuit and district courts shall be the successors of the
supreme and district courts of the territory, and, in respect to
all other cases so pending and arising the courts established by
the state, shall be the successors of such territorial courts. 25
Stat. 683.
The plaintiff's contention is that as the circuit and district
courts of the United States are declared to be the successors of
the territorial courts in respect of those cases only of which such
circuit and district courts "might have had jurisdiction under the
laws of the United States had such courts existed at the time of
the commencement of such cases," the circuit court could not
acquire jurisdiction of this case by reason of the diversity of
citizenship between the parties, because at the time of the
commencement of the case, although the defendant was a citizen of a
state, yet the plaintiff was a citizen of a territory, and the
circuit courts of the United States have no jurisdiction, by reason
of diversity of citizenship, of a suit between a citizen of a
territory and a citizen of a state.
New Orleans
v. Winter, 1 Wheat. 91;
Barney v.
Baltimore, 6 Wall. 280,
73 U. S.
287.
Page 158 U. S. 48
But this contention appears to us to rest upon too strict and
literal a construction of a single clause of the act in question,
inconsistent with the other provisions and the general purposes of
the act as well as with the course of previous legislation and
judicial decision upon the subject.
So long as a territory of the United States remains in the
territorial condition, and the United States have entire dominion
and sovereignty over it, national and municipal, there is
ordinarily no occasion to distinguish how far the subjects
committed by Congress to the decision of the courts of the
territory are or are not of a federal character.
Ins. Co.
v. Canter, 1 Pet. 511,
26 U. S. 546;
Benner v.
Porter, 9 How. 235,
50 U. S.
242-243. But when a territory is admitted into the union
as a state upon the same footing as all the other states, the
territorial government and courts cease to exist, and matters of
national cognizance remain within the power and jurisdiction of the
nation, but other matters come under the power and jurisdiction of
the state, and then it becomes important to distinguish, as to
pending suits, whether they are of a federal or of a municipal
character, and to provide by law that those of the first class
should proceed in the courts of the United States, and those of the
second class in the courts of the new state. The courts of the
United States inferior to this Court having no jurisdiction except
as conferred by Congress, congressional legislation is necessary to
enable those courts, after the admission of the state into the
union, to take jurisdiction of cases previously commenced in the
courts of the territory and not yet finally adjudged. And such
legislation has been so construed and expounded by this Court as to
give effect, as far as possible, consistently with its terms and
with the Constitution of the United States, to the apparent
intention of Congress to vest in the courts of the United States
the jurisdiction of such cases so far as they are of a federal
character, either because of their arising under the Constitution
and laws of the United States or because of their being between
citizens of different states.
Freeborn v.
Smith, 2 Wall. 160;
Express
Co. v. Kountze, 8 Wall. 342,
75 U. S.
350-351;
Baker v.
Morton, 12 Wall. 150,
79 U. S.
153.
Page 158 U. S. 49
The Circuit Court and the District Court of the United States
for the District of South Dakota, described in the clause in
section 23 of the Act of February 22, 1889, on which the plaintiff
relies, as "the circuit or district courts by this act
established," are parts of the general judicial system of the
United States, and by the express terms of section 21 of the act
are, respectively, to have the same powers and jurisdiction, and to
be governed by the same laws and regulations, as the other circuit
and district courts of the United States.
By section 22, in all cases pending in this Court on appeal or
writ of error from the supreme court of the territory at the time
of the admission of the state into the union and afterwards
decided, and a mandate therein sent down by this Court, the circuit
or district court of the United States, or the supreme court of the
state, "as the nature of the case may require," is declared to be
the successor of the supreme court of the territory. This phrase
"as the nature of the case may require" would seem to treat the
circuit or district court of the United States as the successor of
the supreme court of the territory in all cases of federal
jurisdiction, whether by reason of the subject matter or of the
parties.
Then comes section 23, enacting that the circuit and district
courts of the United States established by this act shall be the
successors both of the supreme and of the district courts of the
territory, as to all cases pending at the time of the admission of
the state into the union of which such circuit or district court
might have had jurisdiction under the laws of the United States had
it existed at the time of the commencement of the action, provided,
however, that all civil actions to which the United States are not
a party shall be proceeded with in the proper court of the state
unless transferred to the circuit court or district court of the
United States upon the written request of one of the parties.
It is to be remembered that generally speaking, the jurisdiction
of the circuit court of the United States neither fails nor
attaches by reason of a change in the citizenship of a party
pending the suit, and that when that court takes jurisdiction of a
suit already pending, the requisite citizenship must have
Page 158 U. S. 50
existed at the time of its commencement.
Morgan v.
Morgan, 2 Wheat. 290;
Clarke v.
Mattewson, 12 Pet. 164;
Gibson v. Bruce,
108 U. S. 561,
108 U. S. 2
Sup.Ct. 873; Kellam v. Keith,
144 U. S. 568. The
reference in the clause in controversy to the time of the
commencement of the action may well have been inserted to prevent a
case in which there was at that time no diversity of citizenship
from being transferred to the circuit court of the United States by
reason of the parties afterwards becoming citizens of different
states.
Upon the whole matter, the reasonable conclusion appears to us
to be that Congress, by the description
"whereof the circuit or district courts by this act established
might have had jurisdiction under the laws of the United States,
had such courts existed at the time of the commencement of such
cases,"
intended to designate cases of which those courts might have had
jurisdiction under the laws of the United States had those courts,
like the other circuit and district courts of the United States
generally, existed at the time in question in a state of the union
whose inhabitants consequently were citizens of that state.
According to that hypothesis, the plaintiff would have been a
citizen of the State of South Dakota, and the defendant a citizen
of the State of New York at the time of the commencement of the
action, and the circuit court of the United States would have had
jurisdiction by reason of such diversity of citizenship. The case
was therefore rightly transferred at the written request of the
defendant, upon the admission of the State of South Dakota into the
union, to the circuit court of the United States.
This construction of the act is in accord with all the reported
decisions in the courts, federal or state, held within the Eighth
Circuit.
Dorne v. Richmond Co., 1 S.D. 20 and 43 F. 690;
Herman v. McKinney, 43 F. 689;
Miller v. Sunde, 1
N.D. 1. It is supported by the judgment of the Circuit Court of
Appeals of the Ninth Circuit in
Blackburn v. Wooding, 56
F. 545, overruling the decisions of single judges in that circuit,
cited in behalf of the plaintiff.
Strasburger v. Beecher,
44 F. 209;
Dunton v. Muth, 45 F. 390;
Nickerson v.
Crook, 45 F.
Page 158 U. S. 51
658;
Carson v. Donaldson, 45 F. 821;
Johnson v.
Bunker Co., 46 F. 417. And the like construction appears to
have been assumed by Mr. Justice Miller and Judge Dillon to be the
true one of the similar clause in the Act of June 26, 1876, c. 147,
§ 8, relating to Colorado. 19 Stat. 62.
Ames v. Colorado
Railroad, 4 Dillon 250, 258-260.
The suggestion made in behalf of the plaintiff that the circuit
court of the United States could not take jurisdiction because, at
the time of the admission of the state into the union, the case was
pending not in a court of original jurisdiction, but on appeal in
the supreme court of the territory is inconsistent with the terms
and the intent of the act of Congress. Section 23 of that act
provides that as to all cases, coming within the definition already
considered, pending at that time either "in the supreme or district
courts of the territory," the circuit and district courts of the
United States "shall be the successors of said supreme and district
courts of said territory;" that all the files and records relating
to such cases shall be transferred to those courts, and that "the
same shall be proceeded with therein in due course of law." At the
time of the admission of the state into the union, this case, after
trial and verdict in the district court of the territory, and
motion for a new trial made and overruled, and exceptions allowed
by that court, was pending on appeal in the supreme court of the
territory, which, by the laws of the territory, was empowered, upon
an appeal from a judgment, to "review any verdict, decision, or
intermediate order, involving the merits and necessarily affecting
the judgment," and "to reverse, affirm of modify the judgment."
Dakota Code of Civil Procedure, §§ 411, 412. After the
admission of the state into the union and the transfer of the case
by the supreme court of the state to the circuit court of the
United States, the circuit court, as said by Mr. Justice Miller in
a like case in Colorado, might do all that was left undone in the
supreme court of the territory. The case was pending in that court
for review, and the circuit court might proceed as that court would
have proceeded if it had retained the case, and, whether the
judgment should be affirmed or reversed, could
Page 158 U. S. 52
enter the proper judgment, and, if necessary, could itself try
the case again.
Bates v. Payson, 4 Dillon 265.
The remaining question in the case concerns the proceeding by
which the circuit court, being of opinion "that reversible error
had been committed in the trial court upon the question of
damages," ordered the judgment to be reversed, and a new trial
granted unless the plaintiff should file a remittitur of one-half
of the judgment, and, upon his filing such a remittitur, affirmed
the judgment as to the other half thereof.
Both parties excepted to this proceeding. But there was no error
therein of which either party has a right to complain.
The plaintiff, by not insisting on the alternative allowed him
by the court of having a new trial of the whole case, but electing
the other alternative allowed of filing a remittitur of half the
amount of the original judgment and thereupon moving for and
obtaining an affirmance of that judgment as to the other half,
waived all right to object to the order of the court, of the
benefit of which he had availed himself.
Kennon v. Gilmer,
131 U. S. 22,
131 U. S. 30;
New York Elevated Railroad v. Fifth National Bank,
135 U. S. 432.
As to the defendant, the matter stands upon different grounds.
The plaintiff at the trial had testified that the shares of the
defendant's stock which the defendant had not transferred to him as
agreed were worth from one to two dollars a share. The defendant's
president, called and examined as a witness in its behalf,
testified that their market value was half a dollar a share. The
amount of the verdict, and the original judgment thereon, as may
readily be seen by computation, were for no more than a dollar a
share, with interest from the time of the breach to the time of the
trial. The final judgment of the circuit court was for half that
amount, or no more than the testimony of the defendant's president
showed that the shares were worth, with interest. As the only error
found by the circuit court appearing on the record was in the
measure of damages, no injustice was done to the defendant by
accepting the testimony which it had introduced as to the value of
the shares. The bill of exceptions affording the
Page 158 U. S. 53
means of distinguishing so much of the plaintiff's claim as was
in dispute from that part which was practically not disputed, the
court, without invading the province of the jury, might permit the
plaintiff, in lieu of a new trial, to take judgment for the latter
part only.
Bank v.
Ashley, 2 Pet. 327;
Northern Pacific Railroad
v. Herbert, 116 U. S. 642;
Hopkins v. Orr, 124 U. S. 510;
Arkansas Co. v. Mann, 130 U. S. 69;
Kennon v. Gilmer, 131 U. S. 22,
131 U. S. 29;
Washington & Georgetown Railroad v. Harmon,
147 U. S. 571,
147 U. S.
590.
This being so, the question whether the circuit court erred in
excluding from its consideration the affidavits filed in support of
the defendant's motion for a new trial becomes unimportant, for
their whole effect, if admitted, could only be to impeach the
plaintiff's testimony as to the amount of his damages, whereas the
court gave no effect to that testimony, and proceeded wholly upon
the testimony introduced by the defendant.
Judgment affirmed.
*
"SEC. 21. That each of said states, when admitted as aforesaid,
shall constitute one judicial district, the names thereof to be the
same as the names of the states, respectively, and the circuit and
district courts therefor shall be held at the capital of such state
for the time being, and each of said districts shall, for judicial
purposes, until otherwise provided, be attached to the Eighth
judicial circuit, except Washington and Montana, which shall be
attached to the Ninth Judicial Circuit. . . . The circuit and
district courts for each of said districts, and the judges thereof,
respectively, shall possess the same powers and jurisdiction and
perform the same duties required to be performed by the other
circuit and district courts and judges of the United States, and
shall be governed by the same laws and regulations."
"SEC. 22. That all cases of appeal or writ of error heretofore
prosecuted and now pending in the Supreme Court of the United
States upon any record from the supreme court of either of the
territories mentioned in this act, or that may hereafter lawfully
be prosecuted upon any records from either of said courts, may be
heard and determined by said Supreme Court of the United States.
And the mandate of execution or of further proceedings shall be
directed by the Supreme Court of the United States to the circuit
or district court hereby established within the state succeeding
the territory from which such record is or may be pending, or to
the supreme court of such state, as the nature of the case may
require,
provided that the mandate of execution or of
further proceedings shall, in cases arising in the Territory of
Dakota, be directed by the Supreme Court of the United States to
the circuit or district court of the District of South Dakota, or
to the Supreme Court of the State of South Dakota, or to the
circuit or district court of the District of North Dakota, or to
the Supreme Court of the State of North Dakota, or to the Supreme
Court of the Territory of North Dakota, as the nature of the case
may require. And each of the circuit, district and state courts
herein named shall, respectively, be the successor of the supreme
court of the territory, as to all such cases arising within the
limits embraced within the jurisdiction of such courts,
respectively, with full power to proceed with the same, and award
mesne or final process therein, and that from all judgments and
decrees of the supreme court of either of the territories mentioned
in this act, in any case arising within the limits of any of the
proposed states prior to admission, the parties to such judgment
shall have the same right to prosecute appeals and writs of error
to the Supreme Court of the United States, as they shall have had
by law prior to the admission of said state into the union."
"SEC. 23. That in respect to all cases, proceedings, and matters
now pending in the supreme or district courts of either of the
territories mentioned in this act at the time of the admission into
the union of either of the states mentioned in this act, and
arising within the limits of any such state, whereof the circuit or
district courts by this act established might have had jurisdiction
under the laws of the United States, had such courts existed at the
time of the commencement of such cases, the said circuit and
district courts, respectively, shall be the successors of said
supreme and district courts of said territory, and in respect to
all other cases, proceedings, and matters pending in the supreme or
district courts of any of the territories mentioned in this act at
the time of the admission of such territory into the union, arising
within the limits of said proposed state, the courts established by
such state shall, respectively, be the successors of said supreme
and district territorial courts, and all the files, records,
indictments and proceedings relating to any such cases shall be
transferred to such circuit, district, and state courts,
respectively, and the same shall be proceeded with therein in due
course of law; but no writ, action, indictment, cause or proceeding
now pending or that prior to the admission of any of the states
mentioned in this act shall be pending in any territorial court in
any of the territories mentioned in this act shall abate by the
admission of any such state into the union, but the same shall be
transferred and proceeded with in the proper United States circuit,
district, or state court, as the case may be: provided, however,
that in all civil actions, causes and proceedings, in which the
United States is not a party, transfers shall not be made to the
circuit and district courts of the United States except upon
written request of one of the parties to such action or proceeding,
filed in the proper court, and in the absence of such request, such
cases shall be proceeded with in the proper state courts."
"SEC. 25. That all acts or parts of acts in conflict with the
provisions of this act, whether passed by the legislatures of said
territories or by Congress, are hereby repealed."
25 Stat. 682-684.