In order to maintain a direct appeal to this Court from the
Circuit Court of the United States under the Act of March 3, 1891,
c. 517, § 5, as to the jurisdiction of the court below, the
record must distinctly and unequivocally show that that court sends
up for consideration a single and definite question of its
jurisdiction; but this may appear either by the terms of the decree
appealed from and of the order allowing the appeal, or by a
separate certificate of that court.
A certificate of a question of jurisdiction of the Circuit Court
of the United States, under the Act of March 3, 1891, c. 517,
§ 5, may be made by the district judge, even if the decree was
rendered by the circuit judge.
The question whether proceedings concerning the legal or
equitable title to land, begun and concluded in the courts of a
state, before the commencement of a suit in the circuit court of
the United States to charge the land with a trust, afford a defense
to this suit, is not a question affecting the jurisdiction of that
court, but a question affecting the merits of the cause, and as
such to be tried and determined by that court in the exercise of
its jurisdiction, and if that court, of its own motion, and without
hearing the parties on the question of its jurisdiction, enters a
final decree dismissing the suit under the Act of March 3, 1875, c.
137, § 5, upon the ground that, by reason of the proceedings
in the courts of the state, the suit does not really and
substantially involve a dispute or controversy properly within its
jurisdiction, and an appeal is taken to this Court upon the
question of jurisdiction only, under the Act of March 3, 1891, c.
517, § 5, the decree must be reversed and the cause remanded
for further proceedings
The statement of the case will be found in the opinion of
the Court.
Page 176 U. S. 669
MR. JUSTICE GRAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a direct appeal to this Court, under the Act of March 3,
1891, c. 517, § 5, from a decree of the Circuit Court of the
United States for the District of West Virginia dismissing for want
of jurisdiction a bill in equity filed by Collis P. Huntington, a
citizen of New York, as special receiver of the Central Land
Company of West Virginia, a corporation of West Virginia, against
John B. Laidley, a citizen of West Virginia, and against citizens
of other states, to charge a tract of 240 acres of land in that
state with a trust.
The question of jurisdiction, and the aspect in which it was
presented to the court below, will be best understood by first
giving an outline of the undisputed facts and of the proceedings in
this case, as gathered from the voluminous record transmitted to
this Court.
On February 25, 1870, Sarah H. G. Pennybacker, a married woman,
owning a tract of land of 240 acres in West Virginia, executed with
her husband a deed thereof, with a separate acknowledgment by each,
to Huntington, who on October 16, 1871, conveyed his title therein
to the Central Land Company, and that company afterwards, and
before April, 1882, sold parts of the tract to one Remley and to
other persons. The sufficiency of Mrs. Pennybacker's acknowledgment
was doubted, and on January 26, 1882, she, having become a widow,
executed and acknowledged, in due form of law, a deed of the tract
to Laidley. All those deeds were duly recorded.
In April, 1882, Laidley brought, in the circuit court of Cabell
County, in the State of West Virginia, an action of ejectment
against the Central Land Company to recover the tract of land, and
a verdict and judgment obtained by the Central Land Company in that
action were, in November, 1887, set aside and reversed by the
Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia, and a new trial ordered,
upon the ground that Mrs. Pennybacker's acknowledgment to her first
deed was defective. 30 W.Va. 505.
Page 176 U. S. 670
The Central Land Company filed in the county court in June,
1887, a bill in equity, and in March, 1888, an amended bill,
against Laidley, Huntington, Mrs. Pennybacker, and the several
grantees of the Central Land Company, alleging that Laidley
obtained his deed from Mrs. Pennybacker by fraud, and held the land
in trust for the Central Land Company, and should be restrained
from proceeding with the action at law. The county court dismissed
that bill, and its decree was affirmed in February, 1889, by the
Supreme Court of Appeals. 32 W.Va. 134.
In September, 1890, the action of ejectment of Laidley against
the Central Land Company (proceedings in which had been stayed to
await the decision in the equity suit) was tried again in the
county court, and a verdict and judgment returned for Laidley. A
petition for a writ of error to review that judgment was afterwards
denied by the Supreme Court of Appeals, and on March 26, 1891, the
county court issued a writ of possession in favor of Laidley. A
writ of error from this Court to the Supreme Court of Appeals was
sued out by the Central Land Company on July 7, 1891, and was
dismissed by this Court for want of jurisdiction on June 3, 1895.
159 U. S. 159 U.S.
103.
In November, 1883, Laidley brought in the county court separate
actions of ejectment against Remley and the other persons who had
taken deeds from the Central Land Company of parts of the tract of
240 acres. In each of those actions, the defendant filed a claim
for improvements, and Laidley (pursuant to the provisions of the
Code of West Virginia of 1891, c. 91, §§ 10-13) elected
to allow the improvements, and on September 10, 1890, took judgment
for the value of the lot recovered, with an order for its sale,
instead of a judgment for the possession of the land, and for the
transfer of the title. On December 15, 1890, the court appointed
special commissioners to make the sales. On October 21, 1897, the
court substituted, instead of those commissioners, William R.
Thompson, and he advertised the lots for sale.
Meanwhile, on November 11, 1890, Huntington and others,
Page 176 U. S. 671
stockholders in the Central Land Company, had filed in the
circuit court of the United States a bill in equity against the
company to wind up its affairs, because its charter was about to
expire, and on the same day the court appointed Frank B. Enslow
temporary receiver to take possession of all its property. On
December 16, 1890, Enslow reported to the court that he had taken
possession of all the property of the company, including the tract
of 240 acres, and the court appointed Huntington special receiver,
and directed Enslow to turn over all its property to him, which was
accordingly done.
On February 28, 1891, Huntington, as such special receiver,
filed in the circuit court of the United States against Laidley,
and against sundry persons claiming under grants from him, the bill
in the present case, which set forth the conveyances from Mrs.
Pennybacker to Huntington, from him to the Central Land Company,
from that company to Remley and others, from Mrs. Pennybacker to
Laidley, and from him to the other defendants, and the appointment
of Huntington as receiver; alleged that the deed from Mrs.
Pennybacker to Huntington was duly acknowledged by her, and was
valid, and that Laidley's acts, in obtaining the later deed from
her to himself, and in conveying parts of the land to other
persons, were in fraud of the rights of the Central Land Company,
and created a cloud upon the title of that company and of those
claiming under it, and prayed for an injunction against the
defendants from interfering with the plaintiff's possession of the
tract of 240 acres, and from doing any act tending to affect his
title, or to cast a cloud upon it, and from proceeding to enforce
any claim to, or taking possession of, or making any sales of, any
of the lots sold by the Central Land Company, and further prayed
that the deed from Mrs. Pennybacker to Laidley, and his deeds to
the other defendants, be declared void. On the filing of the bill,
a temporary injunction was issued as prayed for.
On January 12, 1892, a demurrer by Laidley to this bill, and a
motion by him to dissolve the injunction, were both overruled.
Page 176 U. S. 672
On January 26, 1894, the plaintiff filed an amended bill in this
cause, repeating the allegations and prayers of the original bill,
and further alleging that, by reason of certain facts fully and
specifically set forth, and alleged to have been discovered by the
plaintiff since he filed the original bill, the acts of Laidley in
procuring the deed to himself from Mrs. Pennybacker were done while
he stood in a confidential relation to Huntington, and were
fraudulent as against Huntington and the Central Land Company, and
also alleging that, if the legal title passed to Laidley by his
deed from Mrs. Pennybacker, he and his grantees held the legal
title in trust for the plaintiff and the grantees of the Central
Land Company, and therefore praying that the defendants might be
decreed to convey the lands, so held by them respectively, to
Huntington as receiver of the Central Land Company, and to the
grantees of that company.
On February 26, 1896, Laidley and the other defendants filed a
plea and answer in which they denied the allegations of the bill;
set up by way of estoppel the judgments in the state courts in
favor of Laidley and against the Central Land Company, in the
action of ejectment, and in the suit in equity, between them, and
claimed to be allowed the amounts awarded to Laidley in his actions
of ejectment against Remley and others.
On December 26, 1896, the plaintiff was allowed to further amend
his bill in particulars which need not be stated, and the
defendants filed the same plea and answer to the bill as so
amended.
On July 12, 1897, the court, upon a hearing of the parties,
adjudged that "said plea of
res judicata" be overruled,
and gave the defendants leave to answer the bill, and denied
motions of the defendants to dissolve the injunction, and to remove
Huntington from the office of receiver.
On July 13, 1897, Laidley filed another plea and answer, setting
up, in different form, substantially the same defenses as in the
former plea and answer. On September 4, 1897, the other defendants
filed an answer to that bill, and the plaintiff obtained an order
on Laidley, returnable January 10, 1898, to show cause why his new
plea and answer should not be stricken
Page 176 U. S. 673
from the files as irregular. On October 4, 1897, the plaintiff
filed a general replication to the answer of the other
defendants.
On December 17, 1897, Huntington, as plaintiff in the case at
bar, filed a petition in the circuit court of the United States for
a rule against Laidley and against his attorneys, Z. T. Vinson and
William R. Thompson, to show cause why they should not be fined and
attached for contempt in violating the injunction granted by that
court in February, 1891, by undertaking to sell the lots described
in Laidley's actions of ejectment against Remley and others. On
December 20, 1897, Laidley and Thompson filed answers to this rule,
and annexed thereto as exhibits copies of the proceedings in those
actions of ejectment.
On December 20, 1897, on motion of the plaintiff, the court
extended the time for taking the testimony in the cause until
ninety days after the hearing on the motion to strike out Laidley's
plea and answer.
On March 3, 1898, the rule for an attachment for contempt was
argued. On June 25, 1898, the court entered an order discharging
that rule because, as the order stated, the court found that the
Circuit Court of Cabell County, West Virginia, had taken
jurisdiction of the parties and the subject matter, prior to the
institution of this suit, and the cause was still pending in that
court, and therefore the circuit court of the United States had no
jurisdiction to grant the injunction restraining the sale of the
property under decrees of the state court.
On the same day, and without any further hearing in the cause,
the court, of its own motion, entered a final decree, as
follows:
"This cause having come on this 25th day of June, 1898, to be
considered by this Court upon a petition filed by the complainant
herein on the 17th day of December, 1897, praying that a rule be
issued requiring that John B. Laidley, one of the defendants
herein, and his attorneys, Z. T. Vinson and W. R. Thompson, should
appear and show cause why they should not be fined and attached for
contempt for violating the injunction order heretofore entered in
the above-entitled cause, and upon the answer and exhibits attached
thereto of the said
Page 176 U. S. 674
defendant, John B. Laidley, to said petition, and upon the
answers and exhibits attached thereto of his attorneys, Z. T.
Vinson and W. R. Thompson, thereto, and upon the bill and the
answers to said bill, and the court having considered the matter,
and having duly examined the bill and amended bills herein, and the
answers of the defendant and the exhibits attached thereto, and the
records in the ejectment suits in the Circuit Court of Cabell
County, in which John B. Laidley was plaintiff and the Central Land
Company of West Virginia and others were defendants, and the record
in the chancery cause in the Circuit Court of Cabell County, in
which the Central Land Company of West Virginia was plaintiff and
John B. Laidley and others were defendants, which said records in
said state court actions were not disputed or denied by the
complainant, and it appearing from such examination to the
satisfaction of this court, upon consideration thereof, that this
suit does not really and substantially involve a dispute or
controversy properly within the jurisdiction of this court, because
of the pendency in the state court, prior to the commencement of
this suit, of the action of ejectment in which John B. Laidley was
plaintiff and the Central Land Company of West Virginia was
defendant, which was begun in the Circuit Court of Cabell County,
West Virginia, on the first Monday of April, 1882, and of the other
actions in ejectment brought in said state court by the said John
B. Laidley as plaintiff in relation to the property in question in
this suit, prior to the commencement of this cause, and of the
chancery cause in said state court in which the Central Land
Company of West Virginia was plaintiff and John B. Laidley and
others were defendants, which was brought in said state court prior
to the commencement of this cause, and this court being therefore,
for the aforesaid reason, of the opinion that it is required to
dismiss this suit by the fifth section of the Act of Congress,
approved March 3, 1875, and entitled 'An Act to Determine the
Jurisdiction of Circuit Courts of the United States, and to
Regulate the Removal of Causes from state Courts, and for Other
Purposes,' it is now therefore on this court's own motion, adjudged
and decreed that this suit and the bill and amended bills therein
be, and
Page 176 U. S. 675
they hereby are, dismissed and stricken from the docket of this
court, without costs."
On the same day, the following proceedings took place, and were
filed in the circuit court of the United States, namely, the
plaintiff presented a petition for an appeal from that decree to
this Court, under the Act of March 3, 1891, c. 517, § 5,
alleging that he was aggrieved by the final decree by which the
circuit court of the United States, notwithstanding that it had the
first actual physical possession of the land involved in this
cause, dismissed the suit on the ground that it had no jurisdiction
thereof, because of the pendency of the suits in the state court,
begun prior to the commencement of this cause. And the district
judge signed an order "that the appeal be allowed as prayed for,"
approved an appeal bond, and signed a citation to the appellees, as
well as a certificate in these terms:
"A final decree having been entered herein on the 25th day of
June, 1898, dismissing this suit and the bill and amended bills
therein, now, therefore, this court, in pursuance of the second
paragraph of the fifth section of the Act of Congress, approved
March 3, 1891, and entitled 'An Act to Establish circuit courts of
appeals, and to Define and regulate in Certain Cases the
Jurisdiction of the Courts of the United States, and for Other
Purposes,' hereby certifies to the Supreme Court of the United
States for decision the question of the jurisdiction alone of this
court over this cause as follows: is this court without
jurisdiction of this cause because of the pendency in the state
court, prior to the commencement of this suit, of the action of
ejectment in which John B. Laidley was plaintiff and the Central
Land Company of West Virginia was defendant, which was begun in the
Circuit Court of Cabell County, West Virginia, on the first Monday
in April, 1882, and of the other actions in ejectment brought prior
to this cause in said state court by the said John B. Laidley as
plaintiff in relation to the property in question in this suit, and
of the chancery cause in which the Central Land Company of West
Virginia was complainant and John B. Laidley and others were
defendants, which was brought in said state court prior to the
commencement of this cause? "
Page 176 U. S. 676
The appeal in this case is taken under that clause of the Act of
March 3, 1891, c. 517, § 5, which provides that appeals or
writs of error may be taken from the circuit court of the United
States directly to this Court
"in any case in which the jurisdiction of the court is in issue;
in such cases the question of jurisdiction alone shall be certified
to the Supreme Court from the court below for decision."
26 Stat. 827.
The appellees have moved to dismiss the appeal upon the ground
that the decree of dismissal involved the consideration and
determination of the legal effect and conclusiveness of the several
judgments and decrees of the state courts, and therefore the appeal
should have been to the circuit court of appeals, and not to this
Court, and upon the further ground that the district judge could
not certify a question decided by the circuit judge, or allow an
appeal from his decree.
In order to maintain the appellate jurisdiction of this Court
under this clause, the record must distinctly and unequivocally
show that the court below sends up for consideration a single and
definite question of jurisdiction. This may appear in either of two
ways: by the terms of the decree appealed from and of the order
allowing the appeal, or by a separate certificate of the court
below.
Maynard v. Hecht, 151 U. S. 324;
In re Lehigh Co., 156 U. S. 322;
Shields v. Coleman, 157 U. S. 168;
Interior Construction Co. v. Gibney, 160 U.
S. 217;
Van Wagenen v. Sewall, 160 U.
S. 369;
Chappell v. United States, 160 U.
S. 499;
Davis v. Geissler, 162 U.
S. 290. In the case at bar, it appears in both ways.
The final decree of the circuit court of the United States
recited that at the hearing upon the petition for a rule for an
attachment for contempt, the court examined the bill and amended
bills and the answers thereto, and the undisputed records of the
suits in the state court, and that from such examination it
appeared to the satisfaction of the court that this suit did not
really and substantially involve a dispute or controversy properly
within its jurisdiction, because of the pendency of those suits in
the state court, and for that reason the court was of opinion that
it was required by section 5 of the Act of March 3, 1875, c. 137,
to dismiss the suit,
Page 176 U. S. 677
and it was therefore, upon the court's own motion, adjudged and
decreed that the suit be dismissed. The Act of March 3, 1875, c.
137, § 5, referred to in that decree, provides that, if, in
any suit commenced in a circuit court of the United States, it
appear to the satisfaction of that court at any time after the suit
is brought, "that such suit does not really and substantially
involve a dispute or controversy properly within the jurisdiction
of said circuit court," that court shall dismiss the suit. 18 Stat.
472. And such dismissal for want of jurisdiction is reviewable by
this Court under the Act of March 3, 1891, c. 517, § 5.
Wetmore v. Rymer, 169 U. S. 115. The
final decree therefore clearly shows that the question decided
below was a specific question of jurisdiction only. This dismissal
of the suit for want of jurisdiction was the only ground assigned
for the appeal, and the appeal was allowed "as prayed for."
The same question is also distinctly stated in the certificate
made and filed by the district judge on the same day on which the
final decree was entered, and on which he allowed the appeal and
signed the citation. It does not appear from the record, and is
immaterial, whether the final decree was rendered by the circuit
judge or by the district judge. The district judge was a judge of
the circuit court of the United States, and as such had authority
to allow the appeal and to sign the citation, even if the decree
was rendered by the circuit judge. Rev.Stat. §§ 999,
1012;
Rodd v.
Heartt, 17 Wall. 354. We can have no doubt that the
district judge, who as a judge of the circuit court lawfully
allowed the appeal and signed the citation, was authorized also to
certify to this Court the question of jurisdiction determined by
that decree.
The question of jurisdiction then, appearing by the decree
itself and by the order allowing the appeal therefrom, as well as
by the distinct and contemporaneous certificate, to have been the
only question on which the decree below was based, is rightly
before this Court for determination.
The condition of the cause at the time when the circuit court of
the United States entered a final decree dismissing it for want of
jurisdiction, was as follows: an injunction
Page 176 U. S. 678
had been granted upon the filing of the bill. The court had
overruled a demurrer to the bill, as well as a plea of all the
defendants setting up the judgments in the state courts as
res
judicata, and had given leave to the defendants to answer the
bill. Thereupon the defendant Laidley filed a plea and answer
setting up substantially the same defenses as before, and the
plaintiff obtained an order to show cause why this plea and answer
should not be stricken out as irregular. The other defendants
answered the bill, and the plaintiff filed a general replication to
their answer. The court extended the time for taking testimony in
the cause until ninety days after hearing the motion to strike out
Laidley's plea and answer. That motion was never heard; the time
allowed for taking testimony had not expired, and the cause was not
heard, or ready to be heard, as between the plaintiff and any of
the defendants, except upon a rule (which had been obtained by the
plaintiff and argued by both parties) for an attachment against
Laidley and his attorneys for contempt in violating the injunction
previously granted. Yet the court not only discharged the rule for
an attachment for contempt, but at the same time, of its own
motion, and without any further hearing of the cause, or of any
matter therein, entered the final decree dismissing the suit for
want of jurisdiction. This action of the court was irregular. The
defendant, as the case stood, was not entitled to present any
objection to the jurisdiction of the court over the principal
cause, and the plaintiff was entitled to be heard upon any such
objection taken by the court of its own motion.
Hartog v.
Memory, 116 U. S. 588;
Morris v. Gilmer, 129 U. S. 315,
129 U. S. 327;
Wetmore v. Rymer, 169 U. S. 115,
169 U. S.
122-123.
Independently of that consideration, the decree dismissing this
suit for want of jurisdiction was erroneous. It may be that the
order discharging the rule for an attachment for a contempt in
violating the injunction by proceedings under orders of the state
court was correct. Rev.Stat. § 720;
Diggs v.
Wolcott, 4 Cranch 179;
Riggs v.
Johnson County, 6 Wall. 166,
73 U. S. 195;
Central Bank v. Stevens, 169 U. S. 432,
169 U. S. 460.
But it by no means follows that the circuit court of the United
Page 176 U. S. 679
states had no jurisdiction to entertain this suit for any
purpose.
Before the commencement of the present suit, all the proceedings
between Laidley and the Central Land Company in the state court,
which affected the whole tract of 240 acres, had been brought to an
end -- Laidley's action of ejectment against the Central Land
Company by a judgment and a writ of possession in Laidley's favor,
and the Central Land Company's bill to restrain Laidley from
proceeding with that action by a decree dismissing the bill. And
Laidley's proceedings in ejectment in the state court against
Remley and others concerned only the legal title in parts of the
tract of 240 acres.
The present suit seeks to charge the whole tract with a trust in
favor of the plaintiff as receiver of the Central Land Company.
Under the circumstances of this case, the question whether the
proceedings in any or all of the suits at law or in equity, in the
state court, afforded a defense -- either by way of
res
judicata or because of any control acquired by the state court
over the subject matter -- to this bill in the circuit court of the
United States was not a question affecting the jurisdiction of that
court, but was a question affecting the merits of the cause, and as
such to be tried and determined by that court in the exercise of
its jurisdiction. The circuit court of the United States cannot, by
treating a question of merits as a question of jurisdiction, enable
this Court, upon a direct appeal on the question of jurisdiction
only, to decide the question of merits, except insofar as it bears
upon the question whether the court below had or had not
jurisdiction of the case.
In any aspect of the case, the decree of the circuit court of
the United States dismissing the suit for want of jurisdiction must
be reversed, and the cause remanded to that court for further
proceedings therein.
The case of
Blythe v. Hinckley, 173 U.
S. 501, cited by the appellees, has no tendency to
support the opposite conclusion. In that case, this Court dismissed
the appeal because the decree below was not founded solely upon a
want of jurisdiction in the circuit court of the United States, but
also upon the
Page 176 U. S. 680
grounds that the plaintiff's remedy was at law, and not in
equity, and that certain judgments of the state courts could not be
reviewed on the reasons put forward. And of the last ground, this
Court, speaking by THE CHIEF JUSTICE, said that it
"was not, in itself, a decision of want of jurisdiction because
the circuit court was a federal court, but a decision that the
circuit court was unable to grant relief because of the judgments
rendered by those other courts."
173 U.S.
173 U. S.
507.
Decree reversed, and cause remanded for further
proceedings.
MR. JUSTICE BREWER dissents:
I dissent from the opinion and judgment in this case. In a
purely technical sense, it may not be open to criticism. But when,
as disclosed, it appears that in the state courts, by final
determinations, beyond any opportunity of review, the legal and
equitable title to the tract in controversy has been adjudged to be
in Laidley (even if there be question of the correctness of those
decisions), it seems to me that, under the Act of March 3, 1875,
referred to in the opinion of the majority, the federal court not
only may rightfully, but also should, hold that whatever may be the
state of the pleadings, the litigation in that court must stop. Of
course everybody knows that, when there has been in separate
actions in courts of law and equity final determination as to both
the legal and equitable title, there is no excuse for further
litigation, and I think that we sacrifice substance to form when we
hold that the federal court should not, when these facts are
disclosed, act promptly, but must wait until the issues presented
by pleadings have been attempted to be supported by testimony and
the case is ready for final hearing.
Interest reipublicae ut
sit finis litium.