When the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court of the United States
is invoked solely on the ground of diversity of citizenship, two
classes of cases can arise, one in which the questions expressed in
section 5 of the Judiciary Act of 1891 appear in the course of the
proceedings and one in which other federal questions appear. Cases
of the first class may be brought to this Court directly or may be
taken to the circuit court of appeals, but if they are taken to the
latter court, they cannot then be brought here. Cases of the second
class must be taken to the circuit court of appeals, and its
judgment will be final.
Loeb v. Columbia Township
Trustees, 179 U. S. 47,
followed, and
Northern Pacific Railway Co. v. Amato,
144 U. S. 471,
distinguished.
Ejectment and trespass brought in the circuit court of the
United States, Western Division of the Western District of
Tennessee, for the recovery of lands and damages. Part of the land
is an island in the Mississippi River. The declaration was in the
usual form, and the ground of jurisdiction in the circuit court was
diversity of citizenship, expressed as follows:
"The plaintiffs, who are citizens of the State of Indiana,
residing at Evansville therein, complain of the defendants, Joe
Page 187 U. S. 586
C. Marley, Thomas Price, E. J. Roy, T. A. Roy, L.R. Coleman and
E. M. Ayers, who are citizens of the State of Tennessee, residing
in the Western Division of the Western District thereof, in an
action of trespass and ejectment."
The declaration alleged ownership in fee of the plaintiffs
(defendants in error here) and their possession, and alleged the
entry of the defendants as follows:
"And, the plaintiffs being so entitled to the said property, and
so in possession thereof, the said defendants, to-wit, on the said
October 1st, 1898 at the said County of Lauderdale, unlawfully and
without right entered into and upon the said premises, and falsely
and unjustly set up title thereto, as in them respectively, and cut
timber therefrom and removed the same and exercised acts of
ownership thereof under such false and unjust claim of title, and
denied and refused to recognize the claim of these plaintiffs to
the title, or their possession thereunder, and wholly refused to
admit and repudiated the same, as they still do."
Judgment for the recovery of the land was prayed, and $3,000
damages.
Price pleaded not guilty. The plaintiff in error also pleaded
not guilty, and "that plaintiff's action accrued more than seven
years before suit brought." Against the other defendants, no
judgment was sought.
Upon the issues thus joined, the jury found for the plaintiffs
(defendants in error) as follows:
"That they find that the plaintiffs are the owners in fee and
entitled to and in possession of the following lands, situated in
Lauderdale County, Tennessee, to-wit: . . ."
They also further found --
"That the plaintiffs are the owners in fee, and entitled to all
the accretions and alluvion formed by the Mississippi River in
front of the said three (3) tracts of land above described, the
same being and constituting all the land added by accretion and
alluvion to the riverfront, as such front of the said three tracts
of land existed on the Mississippi River when the said tracts of
land respectively were granted, and extending from and including
all the accretions and alluvion in front thereof,
Page 187 U. S. 587
from the line on the river of the tract first mentioned above,
furthest upstream."
"
* * * *"
"As to the other land herein sued for not embraced in the above
descriptions, the jury finds the plaintiffs are not entitled to the
same."
Judgment was entered in accordance with the verdict. To this
judgment plaintiff in error sued out a writ of error from the
Circuit Court of Appeals of the Sixth Circuit, which was dismissed
upon the motion of defendant in error on the ground that there had
been no summons and severance of the defendant Thomas Price. 105 F.
737. A petition for rehearing was filed, but denied. This writ of
error was then sued out.
The assignments of error are as follows:
"1. The court erred in dismissing the writ of error of
petitioner upon the ground that the judgment was against two
jointly, and that they did not join in the appeal."
"2. The court erred in dismissing the petition for rehearing
made by this petitioner."
"In support of this assignment, he submits herewith counsel's
brief No. 2."
"3. The court erred in refusing to entertain jurisdiction of
this cause and not reversing it upon the merits. And in support of
this, he refers to the assignment of error, Record, pp. 266, 273,
and submits herewith his counsel's brief thereon No. 3."
"The ground of this application is that the record in this cause
shows that petitioner claimed under muniments of title from the
State of Arkansas and Polsdorfer and wife, and also Price claimed
under muniments of title from the State of Tennessee. In other
words, petitioner claims that he has a right to the writ of error
under the Constitution of the United States, Article III, Section
2. "
Page 187 U. S. 588
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
A motion is made to dismiss on the ground that the judgment of
the circuit court of appeals was final, and therefore it is not
reviewable by writ of error from this Court.
Interpreting the Judiciary Act of 1891, we said, in
McLish
v. Roff, 141 U. S. 661,
141 U. S. 666,
that its purpose was to provide
"for the distribution of the entire appellate jurisdiction of
our national judicial system between the Supreme Court of the
United States and the circuit courts of appeals therein
established, by designating the classes of cases in respect of
which each of those two courts shall respectively have final
jurisdiction."
But special questions arose. It was provided in section 6 that
the judgments and decrees of the circuit court of appeals should be
final in all cases in which jurisdiction was dependent entirely
upon diversity of citizenship. What jurisdiction was meant, and
what would be the effect if federal questions should appear in the
proceedings after the commencement of the case? The questions were
answered in
Colorado Mining Co. v. Turck, 150 U.
S. 138.
In that case, the jurisdiction of the circuit court was invoked
on the ground of diversity of citizenship, but the defendant
claimed to have set up in defense a federal question arising under
section 2322 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, and on
that ground insisted that the judgment of the circuit court of
appeals in the case was not final. Rejecting the contention and
dismissing the writ of error, this Court held that, before the
defense under section 2322 of the Revised Statutes, had been set
up, jurisdiction had "already attached, and could not be affected
by the subsequent developments." Jurisdiction, it was said,
"depended entirely upon diverse citizenship when the suit was
commenced, and to that point of time the inquiry must necessarily
be referred." The same idea was expressed in subsequent
Page 187 U. S. 589
cases, though in somewhat different language. But a distinction
was not precisely made between the questions embraced in section 5
and other federal questions. That distinction was presented in
Loeb v. Columbia Township Trustees, 179 U.
S. 472.
The case was an action upon bonds issued by the township for the
purpose of raising money to meet the cost of widening and extending
a certain avenue within its limits. There was a demurrer to the
petition, and it appeared from the opinion of the court that one of
the points raised on the demurrer was that the act of the general
assembly under and by virtue of which the bonds were issued
contravened the Constitution of the United States, and therefore
the bonds were void. The case came directly from the circuit court
to this Court. A motion was made to dismiss for want of
jurisdiction. The motion was denied, notwithstanding the petition
in the circuit court showed that the parties were citizens of
different states, and stated no other grounds of jurisdiction. If
nothing more appeared, it was said, bearing upon jurisdiction, "it
would be held that this Court was without authority to review the
judgment of the circuit court." But, as we have seen, the claim had
been made in the circuit court by the defendant that the statute of
Ohio by the authority of which the bonds were issued was in
contravention of the Constitution of the United States. It was
contended that such claim made by the defendant was not sufficient
to give this Court jurisdiction upon a writ of error to review the
final judgment of the circuit court sustaining such claim. It was
answered, "such an interpretation of the fifth section is not
justified by its words. Our right to review, by the express words
of the statute, extends to "any case" of the kind specified in the
fifth section." And this view was affirmed in
Huguley
Manufacturing Company v. Galeton Cotton Mills, 184 U.
S. 290.
In
Robinson v. Caldwell, 165 U.
S. 359, it had been decided that
"it was not the purpose of the Judiciary Act of 1891 to give a
party who was defeated in a circuit court of the United States the
right to have the case finally determined upon its merits, both in
this Court and in the circuit court of appeals.
Page 187 U. S. 590
This was affirmed in
Loeb v. Columbia Township
Trustees. It was there observed that the plaintiff in that
action could have carried the case to the circuit court of appeals,
but, had he done so, 'he could not thereafter have invoked the
jurisdiction of this Court upon another writ of error to review the
judgment of the circuit court.'"
Therefore, when the jurisdiction of the circuit court is invoked
solely on the ground of diversity of citizenship, two classes of
cases can arise, one in which the questions expressed in section 5
appear in the course of the proceedings, and one in which other
federal questions appear. Cases of the first class may be brought
to this Court directly, or may be taken to the circuit court of
appeals. But, if taken to the latter court, they cannot then be
brought here. Cases of the second class must be taken to the
circuit court of appeals, and its judgment will be final. The case
at bar falls under one or under the other of those classes.
The declaration was ejectment and trespass in the form used in
the local practice. The only ground of jurisdiction was that the
plaintiffs were citizens of the State of Indiana, and the
defendants were citizens of the State of Tennessee. The answers
were simply traverses in statutory form of the wrongs alleged in
the declaration. The plaintiffs in the case recovered, and the
plaintiffs in error here carried the case to the circuit court of
appeals. The federal question arose in the course of the
proceedings in the circuit court, and is claimed to have been and
to be based on grants of lands from different states, the conflict
arising between grants from the State of Tennessee to defendants in
error and to Price, under which they respectively claimed title,
and a tax deed introduced in evidence by plaintiff in error, which
was made by the officials of Mississippi county, Arkansas, and
under which deed he claimed title. Granting for argument sake there
was an opposition of grants within the meaning of the provision of
the Constitution defining the judicial power of the United States,
it would seem to bring the case within the doctrine of
Loeb v.
Columbia Township Trustees both as to the question raised and
the manner of its review, and the plaintiff in error, having sued
out a writ of error from
Page 187 U. S. 591
the circuit court of appeals, cannot now come to this Court upon
another. The plaintiff in error, however, denies that this
consequence results from
Loeb v. Columbia Township
Trustees, and insists that the principle of the case justifies
the present writ of error. The argument is that, when a federal
question not embraced in section 5 is disclosed by defendant's plea
or by subsequent proceedings, and there is judgment against the
defendant, if he be denied the right to carry the case from the
circuit court of appeals to this Court, that the "result would be
contrary to the principle laid down in
Loeb v. Columbia
Township Trustees." And, it is insisted,
"there are cases of federal jurisdiction which are not embraced
under section 5 of the act of 1891, in which the judgment or decree
of the circuit court of appeals is not final under section 6 of
said act,"
and
Northern Pacific Railway Co. v. Amato, 144
U. S. 471, and
Union Pacific Railway Co. v.
Harris, 158 U. S. 326, are
cited as examples. It is said that
"in these [those] cases, the declaration or complaints disclosed
that the original jurisdiction of the circuit court was invoked on
account of diverse citizenship, but they further disclosed that the
defendants were corporations organized under the laws of the United
States."
It is then asked:
"Suppose a ground of federal jurisdiction not embraced in
section 5 of the act of 1891, and in which the judgment or decree
of the circuit court of appeals is not conclusive, is first
disclosed by defendant's plea, or by subsequent proceedings, in a
case in which the original jurisdiction of the circuit court was
invoked solely on the ground of diverse citizenship, or on one of
the other grounds in which the decision of the circuit court of
appeals is final. If in such case there was a judgment against the
defendant, and he carried the case by writ of error or appeal to
the circuit court of appeals, and judgment was there rendered
against him, and he then sought to bring the case to this Court by
writ of error or appeal, how would it stand in this Court?"
Answering the question, counsel say if the doctrine of
Mining Co. v. Turck be enforced, and the writ of error
dismissed, the result would be that,
"wherever a case involved two grounds
Page 187 U. S. 592
of federal jurisdiction, neither of which is embraced in section
5 of the act of 1891, and as to one of which the judgment or decree
of the circuit court of appeals is final, and as to the other is
not final, then the plaintiff suing in the circuit court can, by
invoking its jurisdiction solely on the ground as to which the
judgment or decree of the circuit court of appeals will be final,
deprive the defendant of the right given him to carry the case from
the circuit court of appeals to this Court by writ of error or
appeal. Such a result would be contrary to the principle laid down
in
Loeb v. Columbia Township Trustees, supra, which case,
it will be seen, discountenances the idea that one party can, by
the method or way in which he brings his suit, deprive the other of
a right of review by this Court."
We have quoted at length from counsel to exhibit their
contention in full.
The contention has been answered by that which we have already
said. Besides, counsel are wrong in their premises.
Northern
Pacific Railway Co. v. Amato and
Union Pacific Railway Co.
v. Harris were not cases in which the jurisdiction was invoked
on the grounds of diversity of citizenship. The first was brought
in a state court and removed to the circuit court of the United
States on the ground that, being a case against a corporation
created by Congress, the suit arose under a law of the United
States. The other case was brought in the circuit court of the
United States, and the federal character of the corporation,
following previous authority, was held to have constituted a ground
of jurisdiction independent of the citizenship of the parties. We
questioned the consistency of the reasoning upon which the
conclusion was based, but recognized and yielded to authority, and
we assigned the case to that class of cases which was not dependent
solely upon diversity of citizenship.
Loeb v. Columbia Township Trustees does not hold
broadly that the plaintiff, "by the method or way in which he
brings his suit," can "deprive the other of a right to review by
this Court." It only denies the right of review of the merits in
this Court and in the circuit court of appeals, and the limitation
is
Page 187 U. S. 593
reasonable considering the purpose of the statute. Its purpose
was undoubtedly to hasten the results of litigation and to relieve
this Court of its burden of cases. This could only be accomplished
through the medium of another appellate tribunal. And of what cases
it should have jurisdiction and its relation to this Court was
naturally expressed in general language. Interpretation, as we have
said, was soon demanded and responded to, and the appellate power
of this Court and that of the circuit court of appeals definitely
assigned. If the assignment leaves some cases unreviewable by this
Court, it, by that very effect, fulfills the purpose of the act of
1891. Against the assignment reasons, of course, may be urged, and
counsel has seen and forcefully presented them.
Another argument is used by plaintiff in error to bring this
case within
Northern Pacific Railway Co. v. Amato, Union
Pacific Railway Co. v. Harris, and
Loeb v. Columbia
Township Trustees. It is that the federal question raised,
to-wit, the claim of grants under different states, does not
involve the construction or application of the Constitution of the
United States, and therefore is not within that clause of section 5
which provides for appeal or writ of error direct to this Court. To
so hold, it is claimed, would make all the other divisions of
section 5 but nominal, and make all the cases arising under them
involve the construction of the Constitution of the United States.
That, it is claimed, was not the purpose of the section, "upon the
familiar principle that the enumeration of six particular classes
is a limitation upon the scope and effect of each particular
class."
That clause, therefore, it is finally said, does not embrace the
cases included in the other clauses. And, extending the argument,
it is further said:
"It does not embrace cases of diverse citizenship, nor cases
between citizens of the United States and aliens, nor patent cases,
nor revenue cases, in which the United States is a party, nor
criminal cases involving a crime less than capital or infamous, nor
admiralty cases, for all these cases are provided for in section 6
of said act."
"The Constitution of the United States gives the courts of
Page 187 U. S. 594
the United States jurisdiction in cases between citizens of
different states, and between citizens of the same state, claiming
lands under grants from different states."
"If 'the construction or application of the Constitution of the
United States,' as used in section 5 of the act of 1891, does not
embrace cases between citizens of different states, upon what
ground can it be said to embrace cases between citizens of the same
state claiming under grants of different states?"
"
* * * *"
"Parties claiming under grants from different states are allowed
to come into the federal court in order to obtain an impartial
trial. The question as to the validity of the grants we may say
never depended upon any construction of the Constitution of the
United States. Hence, it is, we insist, that, not being enumerated
specifically in section 5 of the act of 1891, cases of parties
claiming under grants of different states are not embraced therein,
nor are they embraced in the classes of cases enumerated in section
6 of the act of 1891, in which the judgment and decree of the
circuit court of appeals is final. If we are right in this, the
result is that the writ of error should be maintained, it being
sufficient under the case of
Loeb v. Columbia Township
Trustees that the question appears definitely elsewhere in the
record."
The contention seems to be opposed to the assignments of error.
The third assignment of error is
"that the record in this cause shows that petitioner claimed
under muniments of title from the State of Arkansas and Polsdorfer
and wife, and also Price claimed under muniments of title from the
State of Tennessee. In other words, petitioner claims that he has a
right to the writ of error under the Constitution of the United
States, Article III, Section 2."
But we may pass that, as we are not called upon to concede or
deny that a case in which conflicting grants from different states
to citizens of different states appear is one arising under the
Constitution of the United States. If it be such a case, it should
be brought here directly from the circuit court, and
Loeb v.
Columbia Township Trustees applies. If it be not such a case,
the other cases which we have cited apply. There is
Page 187 U. S. 595
nothing to the contrary in
Northern Pacific Railway Co. v.
Amato or
Union Pacific Railway Co. v. Harris. In such
cases, it always appears at the outset that one of the parties is a
federal corporation.
The final contention of plaintiff in error is that the principle
of
Mining Co. v. Turck and kindred cases is based
"to a great extent on the doctrine that the act of 1891 was not
intended to give a party, defeated in the circuit court, the right
to have his case determined upon its merits both in this Court and
in the circuit court of appeals."
And that "plaintiff in error has had no trial on the merits in
the circuit court of appeals or in this Court." This is claimed
because the circuit court of appeals dismissed the case on the
ground that Price, who was a defendant in the circuit court, was
not made a party to the writ of error, nor as to him had there been
summons and severance.
That the ruling was error we are not called upon to say.
Granting it to have been error, we are powerless to review it. The
expression as to the determination of a case "upon its merits" was
used in distinction to the review of a question of jurisdiction,
strictly so called -- the right of the circuit court to entertain
the case at all. As to such questions, other rules apply than those
we have expressed in this opinion. It was not intended to decide
that the circuit court of appeals must hear the case on the merits
in the broad sense of that expression, disregarding every error
committed in seeking a review by that court. Nor was it intended to
deprive that court of the power to determine whether the conditions
of its right to review the case had been properly observed.
It follows that the writ of error must be dismissed.
Apparently apprehending this result, plaintiff in error applied
at the hearing on motion and petition filed October 9, 1902, for
the writ of certiorari as under section 6 of the Act of March 3,
1891.
Judgment was entered below December 7, 1900, and petition for
rehearing denied February 23, 1901. This writ of error was brought
April 15, 1901, and the record filed here and the cause docketed
April 29, 1901.
Page 187 U. S. 596
In these circumstances, we must decline to entertain the
application.
Motion for certiorari denied. Writ of error
dismissed.