No cause can be removed from the state court to the circuit
court of the United States unless it could have originally been
brought in the latter court.
Boston Mining Co. v. Montana Ore
Co., 188 U. S. 632, and
Ex Parte Wisner, 203 U. S. 449.
A suit only arises under the Constitution and laws of the United
States within the meaning of § 1 of the Act of August 13,
1888, c. 866, 25 Stat. 433, conferring jurisdiction on the Circuit
Court when the plaintiff's statement of his own cause of action
shows that it is based on those laws or that Constitution, and it
is not enough that defendant may base his defense thereon.
Louisville & Nashville Railroad v. Mottley,
211 U. S. 149.
Although a defendant in the state court may set up a defense
based on federal rights which will, if denied, entitle him
ultimately to have the decision reviewed by this Court, if the
federal question does not appear in the plaintiff's statement, the
case is not removable to the circuit court of the United
States.
A writ of mandamus, when issued under § 688, Rev.Stat., is
for the purpose of revising and correcting proceedings in a case
already instituted in the courts, and is part of the appellate
jurisdiction of this Court, which is subject to such regulations as
Congress shall make.
Mandamus will lie from this Court to compel a circuit court to
remand a case to the state court where it is apparent from the
record that the circuit court has no jurisdiction whatever, and the
writ will lie even though the party aggrieved may also be entitled
to appeal or writ of error.
While mandamus never lies where the party praying therefor has
another adequate remedy, an appeal or writ of error at the end of a
litigation, which must go for naught, is not an adequate remedy for
a plaintiff
Page 213 U. S. 459
whose case has been wrongfully removed from the state court to
the circuit court, and held there against his protest.
The rule that mandamus will not lie to control the judicial
discretion of an inferior court does not apply to an attempt of
that court to exercise its discretion on subject matter not within
its jurisdiction.
In re Pollitz, 206 U.
S. 323, and
Ex Parte Nebraska, 209 U.
S. 436, distinguished.
While a general appearance in the Circuit Court after removal
may amount to a waiver of objection to the jurisdiction if some
circuit court has jurisdiction of the cause,
In re Moore,
209 U. S. 490,
neither appearance nor consent can confer jurisdiction where no
circuit court has jurisdiction of the controversy.
Ex parte
Wisner, 203 U. S. 449.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 213 U. S. 462
MR. JUSTICE MOODY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an application for a writ of mandamus to the District
Judge of the United States, acting as Circuit Judge for the
Southern District of Iowa, Central Division. The prayer of the
petition was for a rule to show cause why a writ of mandamus should
not issue commanding the judge to remand the case to the state
court in which it was originally brought. The rule was issued and
cause was shown by a return. From the petition and the return, the
following state of facts appears: the petitioner, as assignee of
the right of action of a shipper, brought, in a state court of
Iowa, an action at law against the American Express Company for the
negligent transportation of a boar whereby the animal was killed,
to the damage, it was alleged, to the owner of $8,000. The
transportation was under a written contract between the owner and
the defendant, which was annexed to the declaration as an exhibit.
The shipment was from a point in Iowa to a point in Nebraska. The
citizenship of the plaintiff or his assignor was not alleged, but
the defendant was alleged to be a citizen of New York. The
defendant seasonably filed in the state court a petition for
removal to the circuit court of the United States, with
accompanying bond in proper form. The petition having been denied
in the state court, the defendant duly filed a copy of the record
in the circuit court of the United States, and it was there
docketed, whereupon plaintiff moved to remand the case, and the
motion was denied by the circuit judge. The plaintiff thereupon,
without further action in the circuit court, began this
proceeding.
Page 213 U. S. 463
The petition for removal alleged that the plaintiff was a
citizen of Missouri and the defendant "a joint stock association
organized under the laws of the State of New York," but contained
no allegation of the citizenship of the members of the association.
It was agreed at the argument that the defendant was not a
corporation, but a joint stock association. Therefore the diversity
of citizenship required to warrant a removal on that ground does
not appear. The petition for removal, which is printed in the
margin,
* was not based
upon diversity
Page 213 U. S. 464
of citizenship, but upon the ground that the suit was one
arising under the laws of the United States.
It is well settled that no cause can be removed from the state
court to the circuit court of the United States unless it could
originally have been brought in the latter court.
Boston
&c. Mining Co. v. Montana Ore Co., 188 U.
S. 632,
188 U. S. 640;
Ex Parte Wisner, 203 U. S. 449.
The only ground of jurisdiction which is or can be suggested
Page 213 U. S. 465
is that the suit was one arising under the Constitution and the
laws of the United States. 25 Stat. 433, 434. It is the settled
interpretation of these words, as used in this statute conferring
jurisdiction, that a suit arises under the Constitution and laws of
the United States only when the plaintiff's statement of his own
cause of action shows that it is based upon those laws or that
Constitution. It is not enough, as the law now exists, that it
appears that the defendant may find in the Constitution or laws of
the United States some ground of defense.
Louisville &
Nashville Railroad v. Mottley, 211 U.
S. 149, and cases cited. If the defendant has any such
defense to the plaintiff's claim, it may be set up in the state
courts, and, if properly set up, and denied by the highest court of
the state, may ultimately be brought to this Court for
decision.
Tested by these principles, the record, including the petition
for removal, shows affirmatively that the case was not one arising
under the laws of the United States. In substance, the allegations
of the petition for removal are that the defendant was subject to
the federal laws to regulate commerce and that, under those laws,
the defendant had a defense in whole or in part to the cause of
action stated in the declaration. But the cause of action itself is
not based upon the interstate commerce law or upon any other law of
the United States. The case could not have been brought originally
in the circuit court of the United States, and was therefore not
removable thereto. In holding otherwise, we think the learned judge
of the circuit court erred.
It is, however, argued that mandamus is not the remedy for the
correction of such an error as we have pointed out, and that the
aggrieved party should be left to his writ of error -- a remedy
which he undoubtedly has.
Authority to issue writs of mandamus to any courts appointed
under the authority of the United States was given to this Court by
a provision in the original Judiciary Act, which now appears in
§ 688 of the Revised Statutes. A writ of mandamus issued under
this provision is for the purpose of revising
Page 213 U. S. 466
and correcting proceedings in a case already instituted in the
courts, and is deemed a part of the appellate jurisdiction of this
Court, which is subject to such regulations as the Congress shall
make.
Marbury v.
Madison, 1 Cranch 137;
Ex Parte
Yerger, 8 Wall. 85,
75 U. S. 97;
In re Green, 141 U. S. 325,
141 U. S.
326.
In
Ex Parte
Crane, 5 Pet. 190, the Court, of its own motion,
considered and sustained its authority to issue mandamus to
inferior courts, and in that case directed by mandamus a judge of
an inferior court to sign a bill of exceptions duly presented.
Since that time, writs of mandamus to inferior courts have been
issued in all proper cases.
In
Ex Parte
Bradley, 7 Wall. 364, it was held that a mandamus
from this Court would lie to an inferior court of the United States
directing it to restore an attorney to the rolls who had been
disbarred where the court was without jurisdiction in that regard.
And it was said, page
74 U. S.
377:
"The ground of our decision . . . is that the court below had no
jurisdiction to disbar the relator. . . . No amount of judicial
discretion of a court can supply a defect or want of jurisdiction
in the case. The subject matter is not before it; the proceeding is
coram non judice, and void."
A specific application of the general principle announced in
Ex Parte Bradley has been made to cases where circuit
courts of the United States have, without authority, assumed
jurisdiction of a case originally brought in a state court, and it
has frequently been held that mandamus from this Court would lie to
compel a circuit court to remand a case to the state court where it
is apparent from the record that the circuit court has no
jurisdiction whatever of the case.
Virginia v. Rives,
100 U. S. 313;
Virginia v. Paul, 148 U. S. 107;
Kentucky v. Powers, 201 U. S. 1;
Ex
Parte Wisner, 203 U. S. 449.
And see In re Dunn, 212 U. S. 374. In
such a situation, the remedy by mandamus is available although the
aggrieved party may also be entitled to a writ of error or an
appeal. Mandamus, it is true, never lies where the party praying
for it has another adequate remedy. The writ of mandamus
Page 213 U. S. 467
was introduced to supplement the existing jurisdiction of the
courts and to afford relief in extraordinary cases where the law
presents no adequate remedy. High, Extraordinary Legal Remedies, 3d
ed., § 15. But where, without any right, a court of the United
States has wrested from a state court the control of a suit pending
in it, an appeal or writ of error at the end of long proceedings
which must go for naught is not an adequate remedy.
In
Virginia v. Rives, supra, the state, after the cause
had been removed to the circuit court, filed its petition in this
Court for mandamus, without having made a motion to remand in the
circuit court; but, in the opinion, nothing turned on the absence
of a motion to remand, and the remedy by mandamus was held to
exist
"when the case is outside of the exercise of . . . [judicial]
discretion, and outside the jurisdiction of the court . . . to
which . . . the writ is addressed. One of its peculiar and more
common uses is to restrain inferior courts and to keep them within
their lawful bounds."
P.
100 U. S. 323.
Ex Parte Bradley is then referred to, and its discussion
approved. Then followed
Ex Parte Hoard, 105 U.
S. 578, where it is held that, if the circuit court had
denied a motion to remand to the state court, the party aggrieved
must resort to his writ of error, and that mandamus would be
denied, without determining whether the case was properly removed
or not. In the three following cases, however (
Virginia v.
Paul, Kentucky v. Powers, and
Ex Parte Wisner,
supra), the circuit court had denied motions to remand (the
denial of the motion in
Kentucky v. Powers appearing in
the judgment of the court below, 139 F. 452) before the petition
for mandamus was filed. Nevertheless, the writ of mandamus was
issued upon the ground that it was plain as matter of law from the
record itself that the circuit court was without jurisdiction. This
must now be regarded as the settled law.
The respondent, however, insists that mandamus will not lie to
control the judgment or judicial discretion of the court to which
the writ is proposed to be directed. This is true
Page 213 U. S. 468
where the judgment or judicial discretion is within the limits
of jurisdiction, but not otherwise. Wherever the record, including
the petition for removal, shows that there are questions of fact
upon whose determination the right of removal depends, and upon
which it is the duty of the circuit court to pass judicially, then
there is jurisdiction to decide those questions. Their decision is
the exercise of judicial discretion, and if that discretion is
erroneously exercised, it can be corrected only by a writ of error
or appeal. In these cases, writs of mandamus must not be permitted
to usurp the functions of writs of error or appeals or take their
place where they offer an adequate remedy to the aggrieved party.
It is only in cases where the record makes it clear as matter of
law that the circuit court was without jurisdiction to take any
action whatever that the writ of mandamus lies. This distinction
has been acted on many times by this Court, and it is enough to
refer to two very recent cases. Thus, where the removability of a
case turned upon the question whether there was a separable
controversy, to the trial of which certain of the defendants were
not indispensable or necessary parties, it was held that the
circuit court had jurisdiction to determine the question of
separability -- that its decision in that respect was the exercise
of judicial discretion, and could not be controlled by a writ of
mandamus.
In re Pollitz, 206 U. S. 323. The
same point was decided in
Ex Parte Nebraska, 209 U.
S. 436. In each of these cases, a distinction was made
between it and a case where, on the face of the record, absolutely
no jurisdiction has attached, and the right to a writ of mandamus
in the latter case was affirmed.
As we have shown, the want of jurisdiction of the circuit court
appears clearly on the record in the case at bar, and does not, as
in
In re Pollitz and
Ex Parte Nebraska, depend
upon findings of fact which the circuit court had jurisdiction to
make. We think therefore it is clear that the writ of mandamus
ought to issue.
A subordinate question must receive some attention. It is said
that the petitioner in this case appeared generally in the
Page 213 U. S. 469
circuit court after the removal of the case, and thereby waived
his right to object to the jurisdiction, and
In re Moore,
209 U. S. 490, is
cited in support of the position. But that case simply held that,
where there was a diversity of citizenship, which gave jurisdiction
to some circuit court, the objection that there was no jurisdiction
in a particular district might be waived by appearing and pleading
to the merits, and anything to the contrary said in
Ex Parte
Wisner was overruled, though the
Wisner case was
otherwise left untouched.
See Western Loan Co. v. Boston Mining
Co., 210 U. S. 368,
210 U. S. 369.
Here, however, is a case where, upon its face, no circuit court of
the United States had jurisdiction of the controversy, originally
or by removal. In such a case, the consent of the parties cannot
confer jurisdiction.
Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v.
Mottley, 211 U. S. 149, and
cases cited.
The rule is made absolute, and the writ of mandamus
awarded.
*
"Your petitioner, the American Express Company, respectfully
shows that it is the defendant in the above-entitled suit, and that
the matter and amount in dispute in the said suit exceeds,
exclusive of interest and costs, the sum or value of two thousand
dollars ($2,000)."
"That your said petitioner was, at the time of the bringing of
this suit and still is, a joint stock association, organized under
the laws of the State of New York in such cases made and provided,
and that the plaintiff was then and still is a citizen of the State
of Missouri."
"Your petitioner further shows that the said suit is one of a
civil nature, in which the plaintiff seeks to recover from the
defendant the sum of eight thousand dollars ($8,000) as damages on
account of an alleged failure on the part of the defendant to
comply with its obligations as a common carrier in the shipment and
transportation of a hog, which the assignor of plaintiff offered to
the defendant and which the defendant received from the assignor of
plaintiff on or about the thirtieth day of August, A.D.1907, for
transportation from the State Fair Grounds at Des Moines, in the
State of Iowa, to the City of Lincoln, in the State of
Nebraska."
"That the defendant denies that it failed in any respect to
perform its obligations with reference to the transportation of the
said hog, and denies that it is liable upon the claim set up in the
said suit, in any amount, and denies that, in any event, its
liability could exceed the sum or value of fifty dollars
($50.00)."
"That the said suit is one arising under the laws of the United
States. That your petitioner is, and was at all the times mentioned
in the petition in this suit, a common carrier engaged in trade and
commerce between the several states of the United States, and
between the territories thereof, and between the territories and
the several states."
"That, at the date of the shipment in question, your petitioner
was, and ever since that time has been, subject to the provisions
of the act of Congress entitled 'An Act to Regulate Commerce,'
approved February 4, 1887, and of the acts of Congress amendatory
thereof and supplementary thereto, and that the alleged cause of
action set up in said suit is based upon, grows out of, and
necessarily involves the construction of said acts of Congress.
That, among the questions arising under said acts and necessarily
involved in said suit are --"
"(a) Whether the contract on which said suit is based is legal
and enforceable by the shipper or the plaintiff as his assignee, in
view of the fact that it appears on the face of this contract that,
if the claim made in the petition as to the value of the hog in
question is true, the shipper, by means of its undervaluation,
violated the penal provisions of the Act to Regulate Commerce, as
amended."
"(b) Whether, under the Act to Regulate Commerce, as amended,
the plaintiff may assert a claim for damages in an amount in excess
of the value declared by the shipper to be the true value, and,
upon this declaration, made the basis of the rate for the
interstate transportation in question."
"(c) Whether, under the Act to Regulate Commerce, as amended,
the provisions of the contract in suit, limiting the liability of
the defendant to the sum declared by the shipper in said contract
to be the actual value of the animal in question, are valid and
enforceable."
"(d) Whether, under the Act to Regulate Commerce, as amended,
the plaintiff, as assignee of the shipper, is estopped to set up in
this suit that the hog in question was a greater value than the
value declared to be its true value in the contract sued upon."
"(e) Whether the undervaluation of the hog in question by the
shipper, in order to obtain a rate for its interstate
transportation lower than the published established rate,
constituted a violation by the shipper of the penal provisions of
the Act to Regulate Commerce, as amended."
"(f) Whether, if said penal provisions were so violated, the
plaintiff's suit is founded upon what in law is his own wrong, so
as to preclude a recovery by him."
"(g) Other questions arising under said Act to Regulate
Commerce, as amended."