Service of a writ, in Ohio, upon a party who came into the state
for the purpose of being present at the taking of a deposition,
which was taken according to the notice, if it would have been good
otherwise, is not made bad by the fact that the notice was given
for the sole purpose of inducing the party to come into the state.
Refusal by the court of the other state to treat the judgment based
on such service as binding is a failure to give it due faith and
credit as required by Article IV, § 1, of the Constitution of
the United States.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 198 U. S. 146
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action brought by the plaintiff in error in Nebraska
upon a judgment recovered by him against the defendant in error in
Ohio. To this the defendant pleads that the plaintiff had brought a
previous action in Nebraska for the same cause, and afterwards
served notice upon the defendant's attorney that the plaintiff's
deposition would be taken in Ohio at a certain place on September
5, 1899, for use in the cause; that defendant was advised by his
attorney to be present, and went to Ohio for that purpose only;
that the deposition was taken, and the defendant then went to his
father's house in the same county for the night of September 5, and
that, on September 8, in the early morning, being the earliest time
convenient for leaving his father's for Nebraska, he took the train
back. The writ in the Ohio suit was received and served on
September 7. It is alleged that the notice to take the deposition
was simply a ruse, and was given for the purpose of enticing the
defendant into Ohio, and for no other reason. There was a motion to
set aside the service in the Ohio court, which was overruled,
Page 198 U. S. 147
66 Ohio St. 661, but the defendant alleges that, at that time,
he had not discovered what he styles the fraud perpetrated upon
him. There was a general demurrer to this answer, which was
overruled, and judgment was given for the defendant. This judgment
was affirmed by the Supreme Court of Nebraska, 94 N.W. 995, and
thereupon the case was brought here on the ground that due faith
and credit had not been given to the Ohio record, as required by
Art IV, § 1, of the Constitution of the United States.
Huntington v. Attrill, 146 U. S. 657;
Jacobs v. Marks, 182 U. S. 583.
The Supreme Court of Nebraska affirmed the judgment on the
ground that, in that state, the distinction between actions at law
and suits in equity had been abolished, that the decision in
Christmas v.
Russell, 5 Wall. 290, was limited to legal
defenses,
72 U. S. 5
Wall. 304,
72 U. S. 306,
and that fraud would have been an equitable defense to the judgment
in Ohio, and therefore was in Nebraska. We take up the question on
this footing without stopping to discuss the premises, which we
find it unnecessary to do, and we will assume that, on general
demurrer, a plea that the judgment was obtained by fraud would be a
good equitable plea.
See 72 U. S. 5
Wall. 303.
It is assumed that the service of the writ in Ohio would have
been good but for the alleged fraud.
Smythe v. Banks, 4
Dall. 329 [omitted];
Chaffee v. Jones, 19 Pick. 260. That
point must have been decided by the Ohio courts. Moreover, the
facts constituting the fraud are set forth and gain no new force
from the vituperative epithet. If the inducement to enter the State
of Ohio furnished by the notice to take a deposition there was made
fraudulent by the motive with which the notice was given, then
there was fraud; otherwise there was not. On the face of the
answer, fraud is simply the pleader's conclusion from the specific
facts. The question is whether the motive alleged can have the
effect supposed.
It will be observed that there was no misrepresentation, express
or implied, with regard to anything, even the motives of the
plaintiff. The parties were at arm's length.
The plaintiff
Page 198 U. S. 148
did not say or imply that he had one motive, rather than
another. He simply did a lawful act by all the powers enabling him
to do it, and that was all. Therefore, the word "fraud" may be
discarded as inappropriate. The question is whether the service of
a writ, otherwise lawful, becomes unlawful because the hope for a
chance to make it was the sole motive for other acts tending to
create the chance, which other acts would themselves have been
lawful but for that hope. We assume that motives may make a
difference in liability. But the usual cases where they have been
held to do so have been cases where the immediate and expected
effect of the act done was to inflict damage, and where, therefore,
as a matter of substantive law, if not of pleading, the act was
thought to need a justification,
see Aikens v. Wisconsin,
195 U. S. 194,
195 U. S. 204,
or else where the intent was to do a further and unlawful act to
which the act done was the means.
Swift v. United States,
196 U. S. 375,
196 U. S.
396.
It is hard to exhaust the possibilities of a general
proposition. Therefore it may be dangerous to say that doing an act
lawful in itself as a means of doing another act lawful in itself
cannot make a wrong by the combination. It is enough to say that it
does not usually have that result, and that the case at bar is not
an exception to the general rule. We must take the allegations of
the answer to be true, although they are manifestly absurd. The
plaintiff could not have known that the defendant's lawyer would
advise him to go to Ohio, and that the defendant would go to his
father's house, instead of to Nebraska, when his business was over.
But we assume, as far as possible, that the anticipation of these
things was the sole inducement for giving the notice and taking the
deposition. Still the notice was true, and the taking of the
deposition needed no justification. It could be taken arbitrarily,
because the plaintiff chose. On the other hand, the defendant could
be served with process if he saw fit to linger in Ohio. That also
the plaintiff could do arbitrarily, because he chose, if he thought
he had a case. He arbitrarily could unite the
Page 198 U. S. 149
two acts, and do the first because he hoped it would give him a
chance to do the last.
Judgment reversed.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA and MR. JUSTICE DAY concur in the
result.