Where a number of claim are so tied together by combination or
conspiracy as to make the reliefs ought in regard thereto one
claim, the aggregate amount of such claim will be the test of
jurisdiction of the circuit court; but if the plaintiff fail to
prove such combination or conspiracy, each claim must be regarded
as separate, and, as to those which are less than $2,000, the
Circuit Court has not jurisdiction. An attorney must be the agent
of all to bind all, and a plaintiff charging a conspiracy between
certain claimants and an administrator
Page 212 U. S. 429
cannot satisfy the burden of proof which is on him to show that
all conspired by showing that the same person was attorney for
several of the defendants, as no presumption exists that he was
attorney for all from the fact that, as attorney for the
administrator, he advised the payment of all the claims.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 212 U. S. 430
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is the second appeal in this case. The first appeal was on
a question of jurisdiction, and is reported in
196 U. S. 196 U.S.
415. The object of the suit is to set aside and to declare invalid
the liens of certain judgments of the probate court of St. Francis
County, Arkansas, upon certain real estate, and that the defendants
be enjoined from enforcing such judgments. The judgments were
rendered upon claims against the estate of Hiram Evans,
deceased.
Page 212 U. S. 431
James Evans was appointed administrator of the estate. Among the
assets which came to his hands was a drug store, with its stock of
goods, fixtures, book accounts, and other things, which he sold to
John Evans on the first of May, 1891. The latter conducted the
business in his own name and incurred obligations to the defendants
aggregating $3,000, as well as debts and obligations to other
persons, but no single one of his debts exceeded $2,000. John Evans
became insolvent, and on May 27, 1892, transferred to the
administrator the drug store and all that remained of the goods,
fixtures, and book accounts. The bill alleged that the
defendants
"conspired, colluded, and confederated together with John Evans
and the administrator to secure the payment of their claims and
demands against John Evans out of the estate of Hiram Evans,
deceased,"
and, "so conspiring and confederating," they presented to the
probate court their several claims and demands, and that the
administrator, James Evans, fraudulently and illegally approved
them for allowance against the estate of Hiram Evans. And for like
purpose, it was alleged, they procured the judgment of the probate
court, establishing their claims, by concealing from the court that
they were debts and obligations of John Evans, and
"cloaking the same under the name of expenses of administration
of the said estate, all of which transactions were a part of the
same scheme and were participated in by each and all of the said
defendants and by said John Evans and James Evans,
administrator."
It was further alleged that the judgments were wholly the result
of the conspiracy and confederation set out and the fraud practiced
in pursuance thereof, and are, in equity and good conscience, void
and ineffectual for any purpose whatever, and ought not to be
enforced, but that, nevertheless, the same are at law "liens upon
the real estate" described in the bill, "and charges against the
respective interests of the plaintiffs." There were other
allegations showing that plaintiffs could only obtain relief in
equity.
The circuit court sustained a demurrer to the bill, being of
Page 212 U. S. 432
opinion that the value of the matter in dispute was not
sufficient to give jurisdiction. On appeal to this Court, we said,
defining the matter in dispute and its value:
"The matter in dispute is whether the lands in which the
plaintiffs have a joint undivided interest of one-half can be sold
to pay
all the claims,
in the aggregate, which
the defendants, by
combination and conspiracy, procured
the probate court to allow against the estate of Hiram Evans. The
essence of the suit is the alleged fraudulent combination and
conspiracy to fasten upon that estate a liability for debts of John
Evans, which were held by the defendants and which they, acting in
combination, procured, in cooperation with James Evans, to be
allowed as claims against the estate of Hiram Evans. By reason of
that combination, resulting in the allowance of all those claims in
the probate court, as expenses of administering the estate of Hiram
Evans, the defendants have so tied their respective claims together
as to make them, so far as the plaintiffs and the relief sought by
them are concerned,
one claim."
And we further said:
"That it was competent for the circuit court upon the case made
by the bill to deprive the defendants, acting in combination and
claiming the benefit of the orders made in the probate court,
allowing their respective claims. That the value of the matter in
dispute in the circuit court was the aggregate amount of all the
claims so allowed against the estate of Hiram Evans."
The decree of the circuit court was reversed with directions to
set aside the order dismissing the bill and to overrule the
demurrer.
Upon the return of the case to the circuit court, defendants
answered, and the court, after hearing evidence, found that there
was a
"total failure to establish the fact alleged in the bill, that
the said defendants or any two or more of them, whose claims in the
aggregate exceeded the sum of $2,000, exclusive of interest,
conspired and confederated together in procuring
Page 212 U. S. 433
the allowance of said claims, and therefore the court is without
jurisdiction."
On this ruling, errors are assigned, and it is contended (1)
that an actual conspiracy was not necessary where the action and
conduct of the defendants, acting by and through their attorneys
with the attorney of the administrator, were such as to procure the
fraudulent allowance of the claims; (2) that the true test of
jurisdiction in a proceeding of this kind is the value of the
property upon which the inequitable liens rest, and not the amount
of such liens.
The first proposition was decided adversely to appellants'
contention on the former appeal. As we have already seen, it was
the fraudulent combination and conspiracy which united the claims
and made the aggregate of the claims the matter in dispute. By
reason of that combination, we decided the claims were "so tied"
together as to make them, "so far as the plaintiffs and the relief
sought by them are concerned, one claim." We further decided,
"the validity of all the claims depends upon the same facts. The
lien on the lands which is asserted by each defendant has its
origin as well in the combination to which all were parties as in
the orders of the probate court, which, in furtherance of that
combination, were procured by their joint action. Those orders were
conclusive against the plaintiffs, as to all the claims, if the
claims could be allowed at all against the estate of Hiram Evans. A
comprehensive decree by which the plaintiff can be protected
against those orders will avoid a multiplicity of suits, save great
expense, and do justice. If the plaintiffs do not prove such a
combination and conspiracy, in respect, at least, of so many of the
specified claims as, in the aggregate, will be of the required
amount, then their suit must fail for want of jurisdiction in the
circuit court, for, in the absence of the alleged combination, the
claim of each defendant must, according to our decisions, be
regarded, for purposes of jurisdiction, as separate from all the
others."
With this ruling the decision of the circuit court was
accurately in accord.
Page 212 U. S. 434
But the finding of the court that there was no combination
between defendants having claims to the jurisdictional amount, is
contested. "The specific and material charge is," counsel say,
"that there was an agreement or understanding between the
defendants on the one hand and the administrator on the other." And
it is contended further that parties may "conspire through their
attorneys as well as in person." This may be conceded, but the
attorney must be the agent of all to bind all, and the testimony
does not establish such agency. It shows only that the attorney for
one of the claimants was also the attorney for the administrator,
and advised him to allow all the claims. It is not shown that he
was the attorney of any other claimant. It is, however, contended
that it must be presumed that he was attorney for all from the fact
of his having advised the payment of all, and from the fact that he
is the attorney for several of the claimants in this case. The
presumption cannot be made. It was easy for appellants to have
shown that he was the attorney for the other claimants. He and they
were available witnesses, and, as the burden was upon appellants to
establish the charge of the conspiracy, which was the foundation of
the suit, the presumptions are against appellants' contention,
rather than for it.
Decree affirmed.