Where it is plainly apparent on the record that the only matters
tried and decided in the circuit court were demurrers to pleas to
the jurisdiction, and the petition upon which the writ of error was
allowed asked only for the review of the judgment which decided
that the court had no jurisdiction, no bill of exceptions or formal
certificate in respect to the matter decided is required and the
writ of error will not be dismissed because authenticated
Page 199 U. S. 488
by a judge other than the trial judge and not made at the term
in which the judgment was entered.
The rule that repeals by implication are not favored and a
repeal will not be implied unless there be an irreconcilable
conflict between the two statutes applies especially where the
prior law is a special act relating to a particular case or subject
and the subsequent law is general in its operation.
The special provisions of the Act of March 2, 1887, 24 Stat.
442, relating to judicial districts of Illinois, were not repealed
by the general terms of the Judiciary Act of March 3, 1887, 24
Stat.
Plaintiffs in error, suing as aliens and residents of Antwerp,
Belgium, commenced this action in the Circuit Court of the United
States for the Northern Division of the Northern District of
Illinois, to recover damages for an alleged libel. Two Illinois
corporations and a number of persons were made defendants. The bill
as to the corporations alleged citizenship in Illinois, and, as to
all the defendants, except the Creelman Lumber Company and F. E.
Creelman, one of the individual defendants, the bill alleged that
the defendants resided in the district and division where the suit
was brought. The Creelman Lumber Company and F. E. Creelman filed
pleas to the jurisdiction of the court, based upon the fact that
each of them, before and at the time of the commencement of the
suit, although citizens of the State of Illinois, were residents of
a different district from the one in which the suit was brought --
that is, the Southern District of Illinois. To these pleas the
plaintiffs demurred, and, on a hearing, a district judge, holding
the circuit court, overruled the demurrers and held the pleas to
the jurisdiction good. The plaintiffs electing to stand upon their
demurrers to the pleas, the action as to the defendants in question
was dismissed for want of jurisdiction. Some time afterwards, a
bill of exceptions was signed by a circuit judge in which was
recited the action taken by the trial court upon the demurrer to
the jurisdictional pleas aforesaid, and the cause was taken to the
circuit court of appeals. That court, however, dismissed the writ
of error, and on the receipt of its mandate, about a year after the
entry of the judgment of dismissal above referred to, there was
filed in the trial court
Page 199 U. S. 489
a certificate of the circuit judge, in which was set out the
proceedings had in the cause, and it was certified, for the purpose
of a writ of error from this Court, that the only question involved
in such writ of error was one of jurisdiction. It was also
certified that the judge who had heard the cause resided in the
Southern District of Illinois, and was not within the territorial
limits of the Northern District of Illinois. Contemporaneous with
the filing of the certificate, a writ of error was allowed, and in
the petition and assignments of errors it clearly appeared that the
writ of error was prosecuted solely upon the question of
jurisdiction arising from overruling of the demurrers to the pleas
to the jurisdiction.
Page 199 U. S. 492
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, after making the foregoing statement,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
A motion to dismiss the writ of error first requires our
attention. It is urged that the writ should be dismissed because
the bill of exceptions filed below and the certificate made as to
the question of jurisdiction on this writ of error were
authenticated by a judge other than the trial judge, and further
because the certificate was not made at the term in which the
judgment complained of was entered. We are relieved, however, from
the necessity of considering these objections for the reason that
the judgment of dismissal and the prior proceedings clearly exhibit
the ground upon which the judgment was based, and plainly make
apparent on the record the fact that the only matter tried and
decided in the circuit court were demurrers to pleas to the
jurisdiction, and that the petition upon which the writ of error
was allowed asked only for the review of the judgment, which
decided that the court had no jurisdiction of the action. This
being the state of the record, no bill of exceptions or formal
certificate in respect to the matter decided was required, and the
question of jurisdiction alone was sufficiently certified to this
Court, as required by the Act of March 3, 1891. 26 Stat. 827, c.
517, SEC. 5;
(tm)Interior Construction and Improvement Company
v. Gibney, 160 U. S. 217, and
cases cited;
(tm)Chappell v. United States, 160
U. S. 507.
We pass, then, to a consideration of the merits. The plaintiffs
in error insist that the Circuit Court for the Northern Division of
the Northern District of Illinois had jurisdiction over the
defendants, who, being citizens of Illinois, were residents of the
Southern District of that state, because such jurisdiction was
expressly conferred by section 740, Rev.Stat., and by the terms of
a special act relating to the judicial districts
Page 199 U. S. 493
in Illinois, approved March 2, 1887. 24 Stat. 442. On the
contrary, in effect, the defendants in error maintain that the
court below rightly held that it had no jurisdiction over the
defendants who resided in the Southern District of Illinois,
because § 740 of the Revised Statutes had been repealed by the
Judiciary Acts of March 3, 1875, 18 Stat. 470, and March 3, 1887,
24 Stat. 552, as corrected by the Act of August 13, 1888, 25 Stat.
433, and because no such jurisdiction was given by the special Act
of March 2, 1887, and, if it was conferred by that act, the act was
repealed by the Judiciary Act of March 3, 1887.
In order, as far as may be, to narrow the question for decision
to the case before us, we shall come first to consider the
contentions concerning jurisdiction, based on the Special Act of
March 2, 1887, which deals alone with the State of Illinois, since,
if we conclude that that act gave the jurisdiction and has not been
repealed, we will be relieved of the necessity of determining
whether the general provision (Rev.Stat. § 740), applicable to
all states having more than one judicial district, is yet in
force.
In approaching the consideration of the special act relating to
the Illinois districts, we shall assume for the purposes of such
consideration that the provisions of § 740, Rev.Stat., were
repealed by any or all of the Judiciary Acts of March 3, 1875, and
the Act of March 3, 1887, as corrected by the Act of August 13,
1888.
In coming to consider the special act, two questions arise: 1.
Did the terms of that act give jurisdiction to the circuit courts
of the United States in Illinois as to all the defendants in a
civil action where there were two or more such defendants residing
in different districts of the state? 2. If the act conferred such
jurisdiction, was it repealed at the time of the bringing of the
action?
First. The Special Act of March 2, 1887, was entitled
"An Act to Amend Section 536 of the Revised Statutes of the
United States Relating to the Division of the Illinois into
Page 199 U. S. 494
Judicial Districts. . . ."
At the time of the passage of this special act, there were two
judicial districts in the State of Illinois -- the northern and the
southern. The first section of the act took certain counties from
the Southern District, and added them to the Northern District. The
second section divided the Northern District, as enlarged, into two
divisions. The third section fixed the place and times of holding
courts in said divisions of the Northern District. The fourth
section, relating to jurisdiction, was as follows:
"SEC. 4. That all civil suits not of a local nature, and
criminal prosecutions, must be brought in the division of the said
Northern District of Illinois where the defendant or defendants
reside or the offense is committed; but, if there are two or more
defendants in civil suits, residing in the different divisions or
districts, the action may be brought in either in which either of
the defendants may reside. When the defendant is a nonresident of
the district, action may be brought in either division of said
district wherein the defendant may be found."
The remaining sections contain provisions rendered necessary by
the change in both districts and the subdivision of the Northern
District.
The first part of the opening sentence of section 4 clearly lays
down the general rule controlling suits against residents of the
Northern District, and directs in what division of that district
suit may be brought. This general rule being thus laid down, the
sentence proceeds to carve out an exception in the following
language:
". . . but if there are two or more defendants in civil suits,
residing in different divisions or districts, the action may be
brought in either in which either of the defendants may
reside."
In other words, the exception plainly confers jurisdiction, in
the cases for which it provides, upon the courts of either
district, and as to such exception gives the right to bring the
suit in either district, and, if brought in the Northern District,
requires it to be brought in the division of that district in which
one of the defendants resided. The
Page 199 U. S. 495
text making this provision is free from ambiguity, and, if its
plain import be followed, is decisive. But the argument is that the
words "or district" contained in the sentence were manifestly a
mistake, and should be read "of the district," so as to cause the
sentence to read as follows: but if there are two or more
defendants in civil suits, residing in the different divisions of
the district, the action may be brought in either in which either
of the defendants may reside. To adopt this view, however, would
compel us to strike out the word "or" and insert in its stead the
words "of the," and to strike out the word "districts" and insert
in its stead the word "district." To do this would be not
interpretation, but legislation. It is insisted, however, that this
would not be the case, because to thus restrict the section in
question is compelled by a consideration of the subject with which
it dealt and the purpose which Congress had in mind in enacting the
statute -- that is to say, the argument is that, as by the act, the
purpose of Congress was only to divide the Northern District of
Illinois into two divisions, and to deal exclusively with the
district thus subdivided, therefore the words used must be
construed so as to cause them to relate exclusively to such subject
matter. This argument, however, misconceives the avowed purpose of
the act as shown by its title and context. The title, as we have
seen, expressly purported to deal with and amend the section of the
Revised Statutes creating two judicial districts in Illinois, and
the very first section of the act dealt with the Southern as well
as with the Northern District. And that the mind of Congress was
addressed to the existence of two districts in the state, and that
the wisdom of legislating on that basis was present to its mind is
shown not only by the provisions is question, but by the subsequent
sections of the act, wherein frequent mention is made of both
districts.
And the error of the assumption that, because the act of
Congress primarily provided for the division of the Northern
District, therefore that body could not have contemplated a
provision concerning the right of election to bring a suit in
Page 199 U. S. 496
either of the districts of the state where two or more
defendants resided in the different districts is refuted by
legislation enacted at the same session of Congress in which the
Illinois act was passed -- that is, by an act approved February 28,
1887, two days before the approval of the Illinois act -- dividing
the Eastern and Western Districts of Missouri into divisions, in
which act it was provided in the fourth section as follows, 24
Stat. 424-425, c. 271:
"SEC. 4. That hereafter all suits to be brought in the courts of
the United States in Missouri, not of a local nature, shall be
brought in the division having jurisdiction over the county where
the defendants, or either of them, reside; but, if there be more
than one defendant, and a part of them reside in different
divisions or districts of said state, the plaintiff may sue in
either division of either district where one of such defendants
resides, and send duplicate writs to the other division or
district, directed to the marshal of said district, on which said
writs shall be indorsed, by the plaintiff or his attorney, that the
same is a duplicate of the original writ sued out of the court of
the proper division and district. . . ."
Now it will be observed that Congress in this provision uses the
very words found in the Illinois act, accompanied with such
directions as to service of process as leaves no possible room for
contention that the words "division or district" were used by
Congress as synonymous and without a comprehension of the plain
distinction which existed between them. And, as we shall proceed
hereafter to demonstrate, the prior and subsequent legislation of
Congress relating to the division of states into judicial districts
or of a judicial district into divisions all demonstrate that, in
enacting such legislation, Congress usually deemed it wise to
provide for joining in a single action in either district a number
of defendants residing in the particular state, but in different
districts thereof.
Holding as we do that the special act of 1887, as to Illinois,
conferred jurisdiction upon a court of either district in a civil
cause wherein two or more defendants resided in different
Page 199 U. S. 497
districts in the state, we are brought to consider the second
question, which is was the act in question repealed by the Act of
March 3, 1887, as corrected by the Act of August 13, 1888?
As previously said, we assume for the purposes of the argument
that the effect of the Judiciary Act of March 3, 1875, was to
repeal section 740, Rev.Stat., conferring in general terms
throughout the United States the character of jurisdiction referred
to, and we also concede for the sake of the argument that if the
act of 1875 had not caused a repeal of section 740, the Act of
March 3, 1887, as corrected by the Act of August 13, 1888, did so.
Does it follow from these concessions, however, that the Judiciary
Act of March 3, 1887, as corrected, repealed the special act, which
was approved only one day before the approval of the Judiciary Act
of 1887?
Undoubtedly the act of 1887, in the first section thereof,
declared the general rule to be that no civil suit should be
thereafter brought in a circuit or district court by any original
"process of [or] proceeding" in any other district than that
whereof the defendant was an inhabitant, and that, where the
jurisdiction was founded only on the fact that the action was
between citizens of different states, suit should be brought only
in the district of the residence of either the plaintiff or
defendant. So also, the act contained a general clause repealing
all laws and parts of laws in conflict with the provisions of the
act.
It is elementary that repeals by implication are not favored,
and that a repeal will not be implied unless there be an
irreconcilable conflict between the two statutes. And especially
does this rule apply where the prior law is a special act relating
to a particular case or subject, and the subsequent law is general
in its operation. To hold, then, that the general terms of the act
of 1887 repealed the special and particular provisions of the act
of 1887 relating to the districts in Illinois, we must conclude
that there was such conflict between the two that it cannot
reasonably be inferred that Congress intended that the two should
coexist.
Page 199 U. S. 498
The conclusion, in effect, therefore, would have to be that it
cannot be supposed that Congress intended, when it legislated
generally concerning the jurisdiction of the courts of the United
States, to leave in force a special act as to the districts in
Illinois, which would take those districts out of the general rule
otherwise governing elsewhere. But to adopt this proposition would
compel us to ignore the entire course of legislation by Congress
concerning the courts of the United States from the beginning, both
prior to and after the adoption of the general act of 1887. By the
original Judiciary Act (1 Stat. 73, 79), suits were permitted to be
brought either in a circuit or district court in the district
whereof the defendant was an inhabitant or wherein he was found at
the time of serving the writ. Each state, then, practically
constituted a single judicial district. Whilst this general
provision was in force, many special acts were passed by Congress
creating more than one district in a state and providing that,
where a suit was brought against two or more defendants residing in
different districts in a state, the plaintiff might sue in either
district.
See Act of June 18, 1838, sec. 4, as to
Mississippi districts, 5 Stat. 248; Act of January 18, 1839, sec.
7, as to Tennessee, 5 Stat. 314; Act of February 6, 1839, sec. 5,
as to Alabama, 5 Stat. 315; Act of August 11, 1848, sec., as to
Georgia, 9 Stat. 281; Act of March 3, 1849, sec. 3, as to Iowa
(state made into divisions), 9 Stat. 411, and Act of February 10,
1855, sec. 9, as to Ohio, 10 Stat. 606.
If the theory of irreconcilability between such statutes and the
existence of a general provision to the contrary, necessarily
involved in the argument to establish that the special Illinois
statute was repealed by the act of 1887, be sound, it must follow
that either these special acts, passed long after the Judiciary Act
of 1789, never took effect, or that the consequence of their
passage was to destroy the provision of the Judiciary Act,
prescribing the place where civil suits might be brought, which, of
course, is an impossible hypothesis.
Now, it was not until May 4, 1858 (11 Stat. 272), that a
Page 199 U. S. 499
general law was passed, making a provision like unto that
contained in the special acts to which we have referred, of general
application throughout the United States, and it was this general
provision which was subsequently incorporated into section 740,
Rev.Stat. And even after the passage of the act of 1858, in at
least one special act, Congress incorporated a like provision to
that we have been considering. Act Feb. 24, 1863, sec. 9, as to
Michigan, 12 Stat. 662.
And the refutation of the argument of inherent incompatibility
between a general rule regulating jurisdiction and a special act
departing from that rule as to a particular state, which results
from a consideration of the legislation of Congress from the
beginning to the time of the adoption of the act of 1875, likewise
results from a consideration of the legislation since that act.
Thus, under the contention, which we have assumed to be sound, the
effect of the passage of the act of 1875 was to repeal the
provision of section 740, Rev.Stat. This being the case, it
resulted that the act of 1875 announced the general rule as to
jurisdiction, which was in conflict with the rule theretofore
generally prevailing under the terms of section 740, Rev.Stat. But
that Congress did not deem that a special provision as to a
particular state or states was irreconcilable with the existence of
the general rule is conclusively shown by the fact that, after the
adoption of the act of 1875, various special acts were passed,
dividing particular states into two or more districts, or dividing
a district or districts into divisions, and expressly declaring
that, in civil suits, not of a local nature, two or more citizens
of the state might be joined as defendants, although residing in
different districts of the state, and that suit might be brought in
either district.
See act as to Louisiana, 1881, 21 Stat.
507, sec. 2, as to Mississippi, 1882. 22 Stat. 102, sec. 3; as to
Missouri, Feb. 28, 1887, sec. 4, 24 Stat. 425. To which may be
added the statute relating to Illinois, which we are
considering.
Indeed, the legislation of Congress since the passage of the act
of 1887, under the hypothesis of the repeal of section 740,
Page 199 U. S. 500
Rev.Stat., by that act also demonstrates that it was considered
that the passage of a special statute as to a particular state,
vesting jurisdiction in the courts of either district within the
state, where two or more defendants resided in different districts
therein, was not irreconcilable with the existence of a general
rule to the contrary in a statute having a general operation. This
is shown by the fact that a special law of the character stated has
been enacted as recently as 1894. Act as to Mississippi, 28 Stat.
115, sec. 4. The subject matter dealt with by that act --
viz., the division of a judicial district of Mississippi
into minor subdivisions -- is like unto the Illinois act which we
are considering, and the identical language used in the Illinois
act, "division or district," is also found in the Mississippi act,
accompanied, however, with a provision leaving no possible room to
contend that it was not the intention of Congress to allow the
joinder in one action of defendants residing in different districts
within the state. Section 4 of the act reads as follows:
"SEC. 4. That if there be more than one defendant in a cause,
and the defendants reside in different divisions of the said
Southern District, or any of the defendants reside in the Northern
District, the plaintiff may sue in either division or district
where any defendant resides, and send duplicate writs for the other
defendant or defendants to the other division or district where
such defendant or defendants reside, and said writs, when executed
and returned into the court from which they issued, shall
constitute one suit, and be proceeded in accordingly."
Concluding, as we do, that the special Act of March 2, 1887,
relating to the judicial districts of Illinois, was in force at the
time of the bringing of this action, and still remains in force,
and that, by the terms of section 4 of the act and under the
pleadings in the action, jurisdiction was conferred upon the
circuit court of the northern division of the Northern District of
Illinois over all the defendants named in the declaration, as well
those residing in the Southern District as those residing
Page 199 U. S. 501
in the Northern District of Illinois, it follows that the court
below erred in overruling the demurrers to the pleas to the
jurisdiction and rendering judgment of dismissal, and such judgment
must therefore be reversed, and the cause remanded for further
proceedings.
Reversed.