In either case, the filing by the defendant of a petition for
removal, the filing by the plaintiff after removal of an amended
complaint, or the giving of a stipulation for continuance amounts
to the acceptance of the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court.
A next friend may select one of several tribunals in which the
infant's case shall be tried, and may elect to accept the
jurisdiction of the federal court to which the case may be
removed.
While consent cannot confer on a federal court jurisdiction of a
case of which no federal court would have jurisdiction, either
party may waive
Page 209 U. S. 491
the objections that the case was not brought in, or removed to,
the particular federal court provided by the statute,
Nothing in
Ex parte Wisner, 203 U.
S. 449, changes the rule that a party may waive the
objection to the jurisdiction in respect to a particular court
where diversity of citizenship actually exists.
This is an application by petitioner for a writ of mandamus to
compel the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern
Division of the Eastern Judicial District of Missouri to remand the
case of this petitioner v. The Louisville & Nashville Railroad
Company to the state court from whence it came.
The facts are these: on November 16, 1906, Albert Newton Moore,
an infant over the age of fourteen years, presented his petition to
the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, Missouri, stating that
he desired to institute a suit in that court against the Louisville
& Nashville Railroad Company, and praying for the appointment
of a next friend; whereupon George Safford, of St. Louis, was duly
appointed such next friend. Thereupon a petition was filed in said
state court in the name of Moore, by his next friend, against the
Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company to recover damages for
personal injuries. After service of summons, but before answer was
due, the railroad company filed its application for removal to the
Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern Division of the
Eastern Judicial District of Missouri. This application for removal
was based on the ground of diverse citizenship, and alleged that
the plaintiff Moore was a citizen and resident of the State of
Illinois; that Safford, the next friend, was a resident and citizen
of the State of Missouri, and the defendant, a corporation created
and existing under the laws of the State of Kentucky, and a citizen
and resident of that state. The petition and bond were in due form,
and the case was transferred to the United States circuit court.
Thereafter, and on March 22, 1907, the plaintiff filed in that
court an amended petition. On March 25, by stipulation of the
parties, the defendant was given time to plead to the plaintiff's
amended petition. Three or four times thereafter, stipulations
Page 209 U. S. 492
for continuances were entered into by the counsel for both
sides. At the September term, 1907, a motion to remand, made by the
plaintiff, was overruled, and a subsequent application to
reconsider this ruling was also overruled. Thereupon this
application for mandamus was presented.
Page 209 U. S. 495
MR. JUSTICE Brewer delivered the opinion of the Court.
It was held in
Ex Parte Wisner, 203 U.
S. 449, that --
"Under sections 1, 2, 3, of the Act of March 3, 1875, 18 Stat.
470, as amended by the Act of March 3, 1887, 24 Stat. 552,
corrected by the Act of August 13, 1888, 25 Stat. 433, an action
commenced in a state court, by a citizen of another state against a
nonresident defendant who is a citizen of a state other than that
of the plaintiff cannot be removed by the defendant into the
circuit court of the United States."
On the authority of this case, it is contended by petitioner
that, as in this action none of the parties were citizens of the
State of Missouri, it could not be removed by the defendant
Page 209 U. S. 496
into the circuit court of the United States, and that, upon the
failure of the United States circuit court to remand the case to
the state court in which it was originally brought, mandamus from
this Court is an appropriate remedy. But, in that case, the
plaintiff never consented to accept the jurisdiction of the United
States court, while in this case, it is contended that both parties
did so consent, and that therefore the decision in that case is not
controlling.
This brings up two questions: first, whether both parties did
consent to accept the jurisdiction of the United States court, and
second, if they did, what effect such consent had upon the
jurisdiction of the United States court.
That the defendant consented to accept the jurisdiction of the
United States court is obvious. It filed a petition for removal
from the state to the United States court. No clearer expression of
its acceptance of the jurisdiction of the latter court could be
had. After the removal, the plaintiff, instead of challenging the
jurisdiction of the United States court by a motion to remand,
filed an amended petition in that court, signed a stipulation
giving time to the defendant to answer, and then both parties
entered into successive stipulations for a continuance of the trial
in that court. Thereby the plaintiff consented to accept the
jurisdiction of the United States court, and was willing that his
controversy with the defendant should be settled by a trial in that
court. The mere filing of an amended petition was an appeal to that
court for a trial upon the facts averred by him as they might be
controverted by the defendant. And this, as we have seen, was
followed by repeated recognitions of the jurisdiction of that
court.
That a next friend may select the tribunal in which the suit
shall be brought is clear. While he may do nothing prejudicial to
the substantial rights of the minor, yet the mere selection of one
out of many tribunals having jurisdiction cannot be considered as
an act to the latter's prejudice. Certainly the election to accept
the jurisdiction of a court of the United States is not an act
prejudicial to substantial rights. In
Kingsbury
Page 209 U. S. 497
v. Buckner, 134 U. S. 650,
where the next friend consented that a case on a writ of error
might be heard in some other grand division of the Supreme Court of
Illinois than the one in which it was decided, and at a term of
that court earlier than such writ of error could ordinarily be
heard, and also waived the execution of an appeal bond by the
opposite party, it was held that the infant was bound by such
action, the Court saying (p.
134 U. S.
680):
"Now it is contended that the supreme court of the state,
sitting in the central grand division, could not, except by
consent, entertain jurisdiction of those appeals, and that the next
friend and guardian
ad litem was incapable, in law, of
giving such consent. It is undoubtedly the rule in Illinois, as
elsewhere, that a next friend or guardian
ad litem cannot,
by admissions or stipulations, surrender the rights of the infant.
The court, whose duty it is to protect the interests of the infant,
should see to it that they are not bargained away by those assuming
or appointed to represent him. But this rule does not prevent a
guardian
ad litem or
prochein amy from assenting
to such arrangements as will facilitate the determination of the
case in which the rights of the infant are involved."
Again, in
Thompson v. Maxwell Land Grant Company,
168 U. S. 451,
where the question was whether the infant was bound by a consent
decree, it was said (
168 U. S.
462):
"That infants are bound by a consent decree is affirmed by the
authorities, and this notwithstanding that it does not appear that
a prior inquiry was made by the court as to whether it was for
their benefit. In 1 Dan.Ch.Pl. & Pr. 163, it is said:"
"Although the court usually will not, where infants are
concerned, make a decree by consent, without an inquiry whether it
is for their benefit, yet when once a decree has been pronounced
without that previous step, it is considered as of the same
authority as if such an inquiry had been directed, and a
certificate thereupon made that it would be for their benefit."
"
* * * *"
"In
Walsh v. Walsh, 116 Mass. 377, a decree had
Page 209 U. S. 498
been entered as follows:"
"And the plaintiff and the defendants, . . . Thomas Keyes, . . .
and also in his capacity of guardian
ad litem of Bridget
Walsh and William Walsh, consenting to the following decree; and
this court being satisfied upon the representations of counsel that
the decree is fit and proper to be made as against the said Bridget
and William, it is thereupon ordered and adjudged and decreed,"
"etc."
"On a bill of review filed by the minors, this decree was
challenged, among other reasons, on the ground that it appeared to
have been made by consent of their guardian
ad litem and
upon the representations of counsel without proof. The court
decided against the contention, and speaking in reference thereto,
through Mr. Chief Justice Gray, said:"
" An infant is ordinarily bound by acts done in good faith by
his solicitor or counsel in the course of the suit, to the same
extent as a person of full age.
Tillotson v. Hargrave, 3
Madd. 494;
Levy v. Levy, 3 Madd. 245. And a compromise,
appearing to the court to be for the benefit of an infant, will be
confirmed without a reference to a master, and, if sanctioned by
the court, cannot be afterwards set aside except for fraud.
Lippiat v. Holley, 1 Beav. 423;
Brooke v. Mostyn,
33 Beav. 457, and 2 De G.J. & S. 373."
" If the court does pronounce a decree against an infant by
consent, and without inquiry whether it will be for his benefit, he
is as much bound by the decree as if there had been a reference to
a master and a report by him that it was for the benefit of the
infant.
Wall v. Bushby, 1 Bro.Ch. 484; 1 Dan.Ch.Pr. 164.
The case falls within the general rule that a decree made by
consent of counsel, without fraud or collusion, cannot be set aside
by rehearing, appeal, or review.
Webb v. Webb, 3 Swanst.
658;
Harrision v. Rumsey, 2 Ves.Sen. 488;
Bradish v.
Gee, Ambl. 229,
s.c., 1 Keny. 73;
Downing v.
Cage, 1 Eq.Cas.Ab. 165;
Toder v. Sansam, 1
Bro.P.C.(2d ed.) 468;
French v. Shotwell, 5 Johns.Ch.
555."
This also seems to be the settled law of Missouri.
Raming
v.
Page 209 U. S. 499
Metropolitan Street Railway, 157 Mo. 477. In that case,
it was held that the next friend was the party to make application
and affidavit for a change of venue from one state court to
another, and the court said (p. 514):
"Section 2261, Revised Statutes 1889, requires the application
and affidavit to be made by the party, and it has been held that
this means the party in his own person, and not by agent or
attorney.
Squires v. Chillicothe, 89 Mo. 226. . . . But it
has never been decided in case of an infant suing by his next
friend that the application cannot be made by the next friend."
"A next friend is neither the agent nor attorney for his ward.
An agent or attorney derives his authority as such from his
principal, but an infant cannot appoint an agent and empower him to
do an act which, in contemplation of law, he is himself incapable
of doing. The next friend does not derive his authority from the
infant, and his office does not rest on such authority, either
express or implied."
"
* * * *"
"It is because the law regards an infant incapable of conducting
a law suit in his own behalf that it has made provisions for the
appointment of a next friend to act for him. The next friend
derives his authority from the court which appoints him, and, as he
is appointed to institute and conduct the suit, it follows that he
has authority to do every act which the interest of the infant
demands and the law authorizes. If this statute is to be considered
so strictly as to deny the next friend the authority to make an
application for a change of venue, then we necessarily deny to
infants, who are unable to act for themselves, the equal protection
with other litigants that the statute was designed to afford. Not
only would this be rank injustice to a class for whose interests
the law has always been watchful, but it would raise a serious
question as to the validity of the statute itself. . . . It is
intended here to say that, in the suit of an infant by his next
friend, the next friend is the proper person to make the
application for a change of venue. "
Page 209 U. S. 500
Turning now to the other question, the Constitution, Art. III,
§ 2, provides that the judicial power of the United States
shall extend to controversies "between citizens of different
states." Section 11 of the Judiciary Act of 1789 (1 Stat. 78)
granted to the circuit courts original cognizance
"of all suits of a civil nature at common law or in equity,
where . . . the suit is between a citizen of the state where the
suit is brought and a citizen of another state,"
and added:
"And no civil suit shall be brought before wither of said courts
(circuit or district) against an inhabitant of the United States by
any original process in any other district than that whereof he is
an inhabitant, or in which he shall be found at the time of serving
the writ."
Section 12 (p. 79) provided "that, if a suit be commenced in any
state court . . . by a citizen of the state in which the suit is
brought, against a citizen of another state," a removal might be
had of the case to the next circuit court to be held in the
district where the suit is pending. The first section of the Act of
August 13, 1888, c. 866, 25 Stat. 433, like the Judiciary Act,
invested the circuit courts of the United States with original
cognizance of suits in which there is a controversy between
citizens of different states, provided that no civil suit should be
brought before either of said courts (circuit or district) against
any person by any original process or proceeding in any other
district than that, whereof he is an inhabitant, and closed with
these words:
"But, where the jurisdiction is founded only on the fact that
the action is between citizens of different states, suit shall be
brought only in the district of the residence of either the
plaintiff or the defendant."
The second sentence of § 2 prescribed, in respect to
removals, that
"any other suit of a civil nature at law or in equity, of which
the circuit courts of the United States are given jurisdiction by
the preceding section, and which are now pending, or which may
hereafter be brought, in any state court, may be removed into the
circuit court of the United States for the proper district by the
defendant or defendants therein, being nonresidents of that
state."
It will thus be
Page 209 U. S. 501
seen that, by both the act of 1789 and that of 1888 there is a
general grant to circuit courts of jurisdiction over controversies
between citizens of different states, and in each of them there is
a limitation as to the district in which the action must be
brought. In the light of this similarity between these two acts
must the second question be considered.
The contention is that, as this action could not have been
originally brought in the Circuit Court of the Eastern District of
Missouri by reason of the last provision quoted from § 1, it
cannot, under § 2, be removed to that court, as the authorized
removal is only of those cases of which, by the prior section,
original jurisdiction is given to the United States circuit courts.
But this ignores the distinction between the general description of
the jurisdiction of the United States courts and the clause naming
the particular district in which an action must be brought.
It may be well to examine the authorities touching this matter.
In
Gracie v.
Palmer, 8 Wheat. 699, the Court, by Mr. Chief
Justice Marshall, held that:
"The exemption from arrest in a district in which the defendant
was not an inhabitant, or in which he was not found at the time of
serving the process, was the privilege of the defendant which he
might waive by a voluntary appearance."
In
Toland v.
Sprague, 12 Pet. 300,
37 U. S. 330,
Mr. Justice Barbour thus stated the rule:
"Now, if the case were one of a want of jurisdiction in the
court, it would not, according to well established principles, be
competent for the parties, by any act of theirs, to give it. But
that is not the case. The court had jurisdiction over the parties
and the matter in dispute; the objection was that the party
defendant, not being an inhabitant of Pennsylvania nor found
therein, personal process could not reach him, and that the process
of attachment could only be properly issued against a party under
circumstances which subjected him to process
in personam.
Now this was a personal privilege or exemption, which it was
competent for the party to waive.
Page 209 U. S. 502
Pollard v. Dwight, 4 Cranch
421, and
Barry v. Foyles, 1 Pet.
311."
In
Ex Parte Schollenberger, 96 U. S.
369,
96 U. S. 378,
Mr. Chief Justice Waite said:
"The act of Congress prescribing the place where a person may be
sued is not one affecting the general jurisdiction of the courts.
It is rather in the nature of a personal exemption in favor of a
defendant, and it is one which he may waive. If the citizenship of
the parties is sufficient, a defendant may consent to be sued
anywhere he pleases, and certainly jurisdiction will not be ousted
because he has consented."
In
First National Bank of Charlotte v. Morgan,
132 U. S. 141,
132 U. S. 145,
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN thus referred to a kindred question:
"This exemption of national banking associations from suits in
state courts established elsewhere than in the county or city in
which such associations were located was, we do not doubt,
prescribed for the convenience of those institutions, and to
prevent interruption in their business that might result from their
books being sent to distant counties in obedience to process. . . .
If it [the exemption] had been claimed by the defendant when
appearing in the Superior Court of Cleveland County, it must have
been recognized. The defendant did not, however, choose to claim
immunity from suit in that court. It made defense upon the merits,
and, having been unsuccessful, prosecuted a writ of error to the
supreme court of the state, and in the latter tribunal, for the
first time, claimed the immunity granted to it by Congress. This
was too late. . . . We are of opinion that its exemption from suits
in other courts of the same state was a personal privilege that it
could waive, and which, in this case, the defendant did waive, by
appearing and making defense without claiming the immunity granted
by Congress."
In
McCormick Harvesting Machine Company v. Walthers,
134 U. S. 41,
134 U. S. 43,
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER, quoting the provisions of § 1 of the
act of 1888, said:
"The jurisdiction common to all the circuit courts of the United
states
Page 209 U. S. 503
in respect to the subject matter of the suit and the character
of the parties who might sustain suits in those courts is described
in the section, while the foregoing clause [the last clause in the
section] relates to the district in which a suit may be originally
brought."
In
St. Louis &c. Railway Company v. McBride,
141 U. S. 127,
141 U. S. 131,
it was said:
"Assume that it is true, as defendant alleges, that this is not
a case in which jurisdiction is founded only on the fact that the
controversy is between citizens of different states, but that it
comes within the scope of that other clause, which provides
that"
"no civil suit shall be brought before either of said courts,
against any person, by any original process or proceeding, in any
other district than that, whereof he is an inhabitant,"
"still the right to insist upon suit only in the one district is
a personal privilege which he may waive, and he does waive it by
pleading to the merits."
"
* * * *"
"Without multiplying authorities on this question, it is obvious
that the party who, in the first instance, appears and pleads to
the merits, waives any right to challenge thereafter the
jurisdiction of the court on the ground that the suit had been
brought in the wrong district.
Charlotte Nat. Bank v.
Morgan, 132 U. S. 141;
Fitzgerald
Construction Company v. Fitzgerald, 137 U. S.
98."
In
Shaw v. Quincy Mining Company, 145 U.
S. 444,
145 U. S. 453,
a case arising after the act of 1888, and in which the defendant
promptly raised the question of jurisdiction, Mr. Justice Gray
referred to this matter in these words:
"The Quincy Mining Company, a corporation of Michigan, having
appeared specially for the purpose of taking the objection that it
could not be sued in the Southern District of New York by a citizen
of another state, there can be no question of waiver, such as has
been recognized where a defendant has appeared generally in a suit
between citizens of different states, brought in the wrong
district.
Gracie v. Palmer, 8
Page 209 U. S. 504
Wheat. 699;
St. Louis &c. Ry. v. McBride,
141 U. S.
127,
141 U. S. 131, and cases
cited."
See also Southern Pacific Company v. Denton,
146 U. S. 202.
In
Central Trust Co. v. McGeorge, 151 U.
S. 129,
151 U. S. 132,
an action after the act of 1888 was in force, and in which neither
party was a citizen of the state or resided in the district in
which the action was brought, Mr. Justice Shiras used this
language:
"Undoubtedly, if the defendant company, which was sued in
another district than that in which it had its domicil, had, by a
proper plea or motion, sought to avail itself of the statutory
exemption, the action of the court [in dismissing the complaint]
would have been right. But the defendant company did not choose to
plead that provision of the statute, but entered a general
appearance and joined with the complainant in its prayer for the
appointment of a receiver, and thus was brought within the ruling
of this Court, so frequently made, that the exemption from being
sued out of the district of its domicil is a personal privilege
which may be waived, and which is waived by pleading to the
merits."
In
Martin's Administrator v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad
Company, 151 U. S. 673,
where objection was made to a removal on the ground that the
removal petition was filed too late, Mr. Justice Gray, on page
151 U. S. 688,
observed:
"The time of filing a petition for the removal of a case from a
state court into the circuit court of the United States for trial
is not a fact in its nature essential to the jurisdiction of the
national court under the Constitution of the United States, like
the fundamental condition of a controversy between citizens of
different states. But the direction as to the time of filing the
petition is more analogous to the direction that a civil suit
within the original jurisdiction of the circuit court of the United
States shall be brought in a certain district, a noncompliance with
which is waived by a defendant who does not seasonably object that
the suit is brought in the
Page 209 U. S. 505
wrong district.
Gracie v. Palmer, 8 Wheat.
699;
Taylor v. Longworth, 14 Pet.
172,
39 U. S. 174;
St. Louis
& San Francisco Railway v. McBride, 141 U. S.
127;
Texas & Pacific Railway v. Cox,
145 U. S.
593;
Central Trust Co. v. McGeorge,
151 U. S.
129."
In
Mexican National Railroad Company v. Davidson,
157 U. S. 201,
157 U. S. 208,
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER, after stating that the action could not
have been originally brought in the circuit court of the United
States because both parties were, in the eyes of the law, citizens
of the same state, added:
"It is true that, by the first section, where the jurisdiction
is founded on diversity of citizenship, suit is to be brought 'only
in the district of the residence of the plaintiff or the
defendant,' and this restriction is a personal privilege of the
defendant and may be waived by him.
St. Louis & San
Francisco Ry. v. McBride, 141 U. S. 127. Section 2,
however, refers to the first part of section 1, by which
jurisdiction is conferred, and not to the clause relating to the
district in which suit may be brought.
McCormick Machine Co. v.
Walthers, 134 U. S. 41."
In
Interior Construction & Improvement Company v.
Gibney, 160 U. S. 217,
160 U. S. 219,
Mr. Justice Gray thus stated the law:
"Diversity of citizenship is a condition of jurisdiction, and,
when that does not appear upon the record, the court, of its own
motion, will order the action to be dismissed. But the provision as
to the particular district in which the action shall be brought
does not touch the general jurisdiction of the court over such a
cause between such parties, but affects only the proceedings taken
to bring the defendant within such jurisdiction, and is a matter of
personal privilege which the defendant may insist upon or may
waive, at his election, and the defendant's right to object that an
action within the general jurisdiction of the court is brought in
the wrong district is waived by entering a general appearance
without taking the objection."
In
Ex Parte Wisner, supra, MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER,
referring
Page 209 U. S. 506
to
Wt. Louis &c. Railway Company v. McBride,
141 U. S. 127,
said:
"As the defendant appeared and pleaded to the merits, he thereby
waived his right to challenge thereafter the jurisdiction of the
court over him on the ground that the suit had been brought in the
wrong district. And there are many other cases to the same
effect."
Several other cases in this Court, as well as many in the
circuit courts and circuit courts of appeal, might be noticed in
which a similar ruling as to the effect of a waiver was announced.
It is true that, in most of the cases, the waiver was by the
defendant, but the reasoning by which a defendant is precluded by a
waiver from insisting upon any objection to the particular United
States court in which the action was brought compels the same
conclusion as to the effect of a waiver by the plaintiff of his
right to challenge that jurisdiction in case of a removal. As held
in
Kinney v. Columbia Saving & Loan Association,
191 U. S. 78, a
petition and bond for removal are in the nature of process. They
constitute the process by which the case is transferred from the
state to the federal court, and if, when the defendant is brought
into a federal court by the service of original process, he can
waive the objection to the particular court in which the suit is
brought, clearly the plaintiff, when brought into the federal court
by the process of removal, may in like manner waive his objection
to that court. So long as diverse citizenship exists, the circuit
courts of the United States have a general jurisdiction. That
jurisdiction may be invoked in an action originally brought in a
circuit court or one subsequently removed from a state court, and
if any objection arises to the particular court which does not run
to the circuit courts as a class, that objection may be waived by
the party entitled to make it. As we have seen in this case, the
defendant applied for a removal of the case to the federal court.
Thereby he is foreclosed from objecting to its jurisdiction. In
like manner, after the removal had been ordered, the plaintiff
elected to remain in
Page 209 U. S. 507
that court, and he is, equally with the defendant, precluded
from making objection to its jurisdiction.
Special reliance is placed by petitioner upon this statement in
the
Wisner case (p.
203 U. S.
460):
"But it is contended that Beardsley was entitled to remove the
case to the circuit court, and as, by his petition for removal, he
waived the objection so far as he was personally concerned, that he
was not sued in his district, hence, that the circuit court
obtained jurisdiction over the suit. This does not follow, inasmuch
as, in view of the intention of Congress by the act of 1887 to
contract the jurisdiction of the circuit courts, and of the
limitations imposed thereby, jurisdiction of the suit could not
have obtained, even with the consent of both parties."
It is said that here is a distinct declaration that
"jurisdiction of the suit could not have obtained, even with the
consent of both parties." There was no pretense of any consent on
the part of the plaintiff in that case, and therefore this
statement was unnecessary. In order, however, to prevent future
misconception, we add that nothing in the opinion in the
Wisner case is to be regarded as changing the rule as to
the effect of a waiver in respect to a particular court.
It may not be amiss to note that, in several of the circuit
courts and courts of appeal, the
Wisner case has been
considered, and in all held that no change was intended by it.
Corwin Mfg. Co. v. Henrici Washer Co., opinion by Lowell,
Circuit Judge, 151 F. 938;
Louisville & Nashville Railroad
Company v. Fisher, 155 F. 68, Circuit Court of Appeals (Sixth
Circuit), opinion by Lurton, Circuit Judge;
Shanberg v. F.
& C. Co., Circuit Court of Appeals (Eighth Circuit),
opinion by Riner, District Judge;
McPhee & McGinnity
Company v. Union Pacific R. Co., Circuit Court of Appeals
(Eighth Circuit), opinion by Sanborn, Circuit Judge.
We might also refer to the several textbooks in which is
affirmed the general doctrine of the effect of the waiver of an
Page 209 U. S. 508
objection to a particular court in which the suit has been
brought or to which it has been removed. We have made these many
quotations and references not simply to establish the doctrine
itself, but to emphasize the widespread injurious results which may
be expected to follow from now enforcing a different rule; for if,
in a case between citizens of different states, of which the
circuit courts of the United States are given general jurisdiction,
an objection to the jurisdiction of a particular one of those
courts cannot be waived and no consent can give jurisdiction, it is
clear that many judgments have been rendered by those courts in
reliance upon such a waiver, which will necessarily be held to be
absolutely void, and the litigation must be had over again in some
other courts, resulting possibly in different decisions through the
disappearance of witnesses, the loss of testimony, or the running
of the statute of limitations.
The jurisdiction of the Circuit Court of the United States for
the Eastern Division of the Eastern District of Missouri was
settled by the proceedings had by the two parties, and the
application for a writ of mandamus is
Denied.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE, dissenting.
The right of action was not vested in the next friend, and the
citizenship of the infant controls. The case is one, therefore, in
which the plaintiff was a citizen and resident of the State of
Illinois, and the defendant a corporation created and existing
under the laws of the State of Kentucky and a citizen and resident
of that state. The action was brought in the Circuit Court of the
City of St. Louis, Missouri, of which state neither of the parties
was a citizen. The fact that the next friend, who also acted as
attorney at law for the minor, was a citizen of Missouri is
immaterial.
The question is whether, where neither of the parties is a
citizen of the state in which the action is brought, the
jurisdiction
Page 209 U. S. 509
of the circuit court can be maintained if both parties consent
to it. Jurisdiction of the circuit courts depends upon some act of
Congress,
Stevenson v. Fain, 195 U.
S. 165,
195 U. S. 167;
Turner v. Bank of North
America, 4 Dall. 8,
4
U. S. 10;
M'Intire v.
Wood, 7 Cranch 504,
11 U. S. 506, and I
quote at length from the opinion of Mr. Justice Gray in
Shaw v.
Quincy Mining Co., 145 U. S. 444,
because he therein examines the statutory provisions bearing on the
question before us, saying (p.
145 U. S.
446):
"In carrying out the provision of the Constitution which
declares that the judicial power of the United States shall extend
to controversies 'between citizens of different states,' Congress,
by the Judiciary Act of September 24, 1789, c. 20, § 11,
conferred jurisdiction on the circuit court of suits of a civil
nature at common law or in equity, 'between a citizen of the state
where the suit is brought and a citizen of another state,' and
provided that 'no civil suit shall be brought' 'against an
inhabitant of the United States,' 'in any other district than that
whereof he is an inhabitant, or in which he shall be found at the
time of serving the writ.' 1 Stat. 78, 79."
"The word 'inhabitant' in that act was apparently used not in
any larger meaning than 'citizen,' but to avoid the incongruity of
speaking of a citizen of anything less than a state when the
intention was to cover not only a district which included a whole
state, but also two districts in one state, like the districts of
Maine and Massachusetts in the State of Massachusetts, and the
districts of Virginia and Kentucky in the State of Virginia,
established by § 2 of the same act. 1 Stat. 73, c. 20. It was
held by this Court from the beginning that an averment that a party
resided within the state or the district in which the suit was
brought was not sufficient to support the jurisdiction because, in
the common use of words, a resident might not be a citizen, and
therefore it was not stated expressly and beyond ambiguity that he
was a citizen of the state, which was the fact on which the
jurisdiction depended under the provisions of the Constitution and
of the Judiciary Act. . . ."
"By the Act of May 4, 1858, c. 27, § 1, it was enacted
that,
Page 209 U. S. 510
in a state containing more than one district, actions not local
should 'be brought in the district in which the defendant resides,'
or, 'if there be two or more defendants residing in different
districts in the same state,' then in either district. 11 Stat.
272. The whole purport and effect of that act was not to enlarge,
but to restrict and distribute, jurisdiction. It applied only to a
state containing two or more districts, and directed suits against
citizens of such a state to be brought in that district thereof in
which they or either of them resided. It did not subject defendants
to any new liability to be sued out of the State of which they were
citizens, but simply prescribed in which district of that state
they might be sued."
"These provisions of the acts of 1789 and 1858 were
substantially reenacted in §§ 739 and 740 of the Revised
Statutes."
"The Act of March 3, 1875, c. 137, § 1, after giving the
circuit courts jurisdiction of suits 'in which there shall be a
controversy between citizens of different states' and enlarging
their jurisdiction in other respects, substantially reenacted the
corresponding provision of the act of 1789 by providing that no
civil suit should be brought 'against any person,' in any other
district than that 'whereof he is an inhabitant or in which he
shall be found' at the time of service, with certain exceptions not
affecting the matter now under consideration. 18 Stat. 470."
"The act of 1887, both in its original form and as corrected in
1888, reenacts the rule that no civil suit shall be brought against
any person in any other district than that whereof he is an
inhabitant, but omits the clause allowing a defendant to be sued in
the district where he is found, and adds this clause:"
"But where the jurisdiction is founded only on the fact that the
action is between citizens of different states, suit shall be
brought only in the district of the residence of either the
plaintiff or the defendant."
"24 Stat. 552; 25 Stat. 434. As has been adjudged by this Court,
the last clause is by way of proviso to the next preceding clause,
which forbids any suit
Page 209 U. S. 511
to be brought in any other district than that whereof the
defendant is an inhabitant, and the effect is that,"
"where the jurisdiction is founded upon any of the causes
mentioned in this section, except the citizenship of the parties,
it must be brought in the district of which the defendant is an
inhabitant, but where the jurisdiction is founded solely upon the
fact that the parties are citizens of different states, the suit
may be brought in the district in which either the plaintiff or the
defendant resides."
"
McCormick Co. v. Walthers, 134 U. S.
41,
134 U. S. 43. And the general
object of this act, as appears upon its face and has been often
declared by this Court, is to contract, not to enlarge, the
jurisdiction of the circuit courts of the United States.
Smith
v. Lyon, 133 U. S. 315,
133 U. S.
320;
In re Pennsylvania Co., 137 U. S.
451,
137 U. S. 454;
Fisk v.
Henarie, 142 U. S. 459,
142 U. S.
467."
"As to natural persons, therefore, it cannot be doubted that the
effect of this act, read in the light of earlier acts upon the same
subject and of the judicial construction thereof, is that the
phrase 'district of the residence of' a person is equivalent to
'district whereof he is an inhabitant,' and cannot be construed as
giving jurisdiction by reason of citizenship to a circuit court
held in a state of which neither party is a citizen, but, on the
contrary, restricts the jurisdiction to the district in which one
of the parties resides within the state of which he is a citizen,
and that this act, therefore, having taken away the alternative,
permitted in the earlier acts, of suing a person in the district
'in which he shall be found,' requires any suit the jurisdiction of
which is founded only on its being between citizens of different
states to be brought in the state of which one is a citizen, and in
the district therein of which he is an inhabitant and
resident."
Treating the clause that
"where the jurisdiction is founded only on the fact that the
action is between citizens of different states, suit shall be
brought only in the district of the residence of either the
plaintiff or the defendant"
as by way of proviso, that proviso must be regarded as excluding
from the enacting clause "some possible ground of misinterpretation
of it, as
Page 209 U. S. 512
extending to cases not intended by the legislature to be brought
within its purview."
Minas v. United
States, 15 Pet. 445;
Austin v. United
States, 155 U. S.
431.
Jurisdiction of the subject matter is given only by law, and
cannot be conferred by consent, and therefore the objection that a
court is not given such jurisdiction by law, if well founded,
cannot, of course, be waived by the parties.
In my judgment, § 1, in cases where litigants are citizens
of different states, confers jurisdiction only on the circuit court
of the district of the plaintiff's residence and the circuit court
of the district of the defendant's residence. And it is not
conferred on the circuit court of the district of neither of them,
and cannot be even by consent. If this were not so, as MR. JUSTICE
HARLAN said in
Bors v. Preston, 111
U. S. 255: "It would be in the power of the parties, by
negligence or design, to invest those courts with a jurisdiction
expressly denied to them," or where, it may also be said, such
jurisdiction was not expressly conferred . This view was expressed
in
Ex Parte Wisner, 203 U. S. 449, and
although it is true that the proposition need not have been there
announced, because in that case it was correctly decided that there
was not a consent to the jurisdiction by both parties, yet the rule
was so laid down, and the result of the opinion in this case is to
disapprove of and overrule
Ex Parte Wisner, so far as that
proposition is concerned. And, as I adhere to that view, I
dissent.
But it should be added that this case was brought in a state
court, and removed by the defendant into the federal court under
the second section of the Act of August 13, 1888, which
provided
"any other suit of a civil nature at law or in equity, of which
the circuit courts of the United States are given jurisdiction by
the preceding section, and which are now pending, or which may
hereafter be brought in any state court, may be removed into the
circuit court of the United States for the proper district by the
defendant or defendants therein, being nonresidents of that
state."
And it is settled that, in order to make a suit removable under
this part of the act, it must be one
Page 209 U. S. 513
which the plaintiff could have brought originally in the United
States circuit court. The right of removal given to the nonresident
defendant or defendants by the second clause of § 2, removing
the cause from the state court to the United States circuit court,
is subject to the limitations of that clause that it must be a suit
within the jurisdiction of such circuit court, and that it must be
removed to the proper district, and therefore the act does not
authorize him or them to remove it to the United States circuit
court held in a district wherein that court was not given
jurisdiction of the suit removed, or to any other judicial district
in which the suit is not pending, as provided in § 3.
Plaintiff brought his suit in a district wherein the defendant
could not be sued in the federal court within the meaning of the
act.
Hill v. Woodland Amusement Co., 158 F. 530.
The proper district within the meaning of the second clause of
the second section means either of the districts made "proper
districts" by the first section of the act, and when the third
section requires the petition to be "for the removal of such suit
into a circuit court to be held in the district where such suit is
pending," it must have been contemplated that the suit would be
pending in a "proper district." It is plain that the entire act is
not to be construed as giving jurisdiction by reason of citizenship
to a circuit court held in a state of which neither party is a
citizen, but, on the contrary, that it restricts the jurisdiction
to the district in which one of the parties resides within the
state of which he is a citizen.