Plaintiffs, citizens of states other than that of the defendant,
brought suit against the defendants in the Circuit Court of the
United States for a district of which neither plaintiffs nor this
defendant were inhabitants to compel defendants to abate a nuisance
carried on in that district and which was causing damage to
plaintiffs' property in another state and in which neither they nor
the defendant resided; the circuit court dismissed as to this
defendant for want of jurisdiction, neither it nor the plaintiffs
being inhabitants of that district. In affirming judgment,
held that:
Diversity of citizenship -- nothing more appearing -- will not
give the circuit court jurisdiction to render judgment
in
personam where neither plaintiff nor defendant is an
inhabitant of the district in which the suit is brought and the
defendant appears specially and objects to the jurisdiction.
The jurisdiction given to the circuit court by § 8 of the
Act of March 3, 1875, c. 137, 18 Stat. 470, of suits to enforce
legal or equitable claims to real or personal property within the
district, even if the parties are not inhabitants of the district,
does not extend to suits
Page 218 U. S. 358
to compel the owner of real estate in the district to abate a
nuisance maintained thereon. Such a cause of action is not a claim
or lien upon the property.
The jurisdiction of the circuit court is determined by acts of
Congress enacted in pursuance of the Constitution, and even if the
jurisdiction already granted can be extended by Congress, the
courts cannot, until such legislation is enacted, exercise
jurisdiction not yet conferred upon them.
179 F. 245 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the jurisdiction of the circuit court,
are stated in the opinion.
Page 218 U. S. 361
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action in equity was brought by the present appellants,
citizens of New York and of West Virginia, against the appellees,
the Tennessee Copper Company, a corporation of New Jersey, and the
Ducktown Sulphur, Copper, & Iron Company, Limited, a British
corporation, each of those corporations having its chief office and
place of business in Polk County, Tennessee, within the territorial
jurisdiction of the circuit court.
The business of each defendant is the mining, manufacturing, and
producing of copper and sulphur ores and products. The plaintiffs
are the joint owners in fee and in possession of more than 6,000
acres of land in Fannin, Gilmer, and Pickens Counties, Georgia, and
have the timber rights in other lands, exceeding 18,000 acres, in
the same counties, just beyond the boundary line between Tennessee
and Georgia. All these lands are devoted to forestry, have been and
are of the greatest value, and contain various kinds of valuable
trees. The plaintiffs employ the forests in the production of
timber and bark. But for the acts of the defendants, as hereinafter
stated, the lands would be sufficient to afford a continuous supply
of lumber and bark in large quantities and for an indefinite period
in the future. The lands have upon them forests and trees of
different growth, which must receive attention and treatment in
order to meet the future needs of forestry and bark industry.
Before the commission by the defendants of the acts complained of,
the
Page 218 U. S. 362
forest and timber rights and holdings of plaintiffs approached
$100,000 in value, and the damage alleged to be committed by the
defendants will exceed $50,000.
The defendants conduct their business in Tennessee within a
short distance of plaintiffs' lands. Recently, before the bringing
of this action, the defendants erected, or caused to be
constructed, and still own, operate, and control, furnaces,
smelters, and ovens, all in close proximity to one another, upon
lands owned or leased by them in Polk County, Tennessee. In view of
those facts the plaintiffs allege that both in law and equity they
are possessed of
"a right and
claim in, to, and against the lands and
tenements of the defendants in the nature of an easement thereupon
that the same shall not be used in a manner to injure or destroy
the said lands and forests [in Georgia] of your orators, adjacent
thereto, as aforesaid. But the defendants, by means of said
furnaces, smelters, and ovens maintained by them upon their lands
as aforesaid, and in other ways, are, and for some time past have
been, generating and causing to be discharged into the atmosphere,
vast quantities of smoke, sulphur fumes, and noxious and poisonous
vapors and gases and other deleterious substances. Within a short
distance from the works and property of the defendants the said
smoke, fumes, vapors, and gases and other deleterious substances so
generated by each respectively inextricably mingle and are together
discharged upon the lands and forests and trees of your orators,
and as a result thereof great damage has been done and injury is
threatened, as hereinafter appears."
The plaintiffs further allege that said fumes, gases, and vapors
have already destroyed a considerable portion of their forests and
trees; that unless they receive the relief asked, their entire
holdings will be destroyed, and their property and interests
rendered valueless; that such fumes, gases, and vapors have
descended upon
Page 218 U. S. 363
plaintiffs' forests and trees, killing the trees and ruining the
timber; that the destruction so created and produced is constantly
increasing in extent, and includes forests and trees of every
variety and species, and in all stages of growth and development;
that the taller trees that serve to protect the smaller growth have
been the first to suffer damage and destruction; that the
enlargement of the zone of destruction is due to the fact that the
death of the trees already brought about permits the smoke, fumes,
gases, and vapors that are constantly increasing in quantity to
travel farther before being absorbed; that the forests and timber,
destroyed as stated, would have made good lumber, railroad ties,
and tan bark, and could have been utilized for purposes of trade
and commerce; and that the acts of the defendants, unless
restrained by the court, will destroy all the forests, old and
young, as well as the timber and bark rights of the plaintiffs.
The bill also alleges that the smoke, fumes, gases, and vapors
so generated and discharged on the property of the plaintiffs will
destroy all forms of plant and tree life, including vegetables,
crops, grasses, and orchards; that, by such destruction, the soil
loses all moisture and compactness, and, being washed away by the
rains, the remaining part of plaintiffs' lands will be rendered
bare and barren; that the smoke, fumes, gases, and vapors are
unwholesome and injurious to the life and health of all coming in
contact with them, and render the lands unfit for occupancy; and
that the plaintiffs, as well as the Bureau of Forestry of the
United States, have frequently demanded that defendants abate the
above nuisance, but the latter have refused to obey such demand,
leaving plaintiffs no other alternative except to seek an
injunction to prevent the above wrongs.
The specific relief asked is a decree that the defendants shall
not use their property in Tennessee so as to destroy
Page 218 U. S. 364
or injure the plaintiffs' lands and forests in Georgia; that the
alleged nuisance maintained by defendants be abated under the
direction of the court, through its own officers or otherwise, as
shall seem suitable and right; and that the defendants be
enjoined
"from maintaining, operating, directing, or permitting upon
their land or premises [in Tennessee] the operation or maintenance
of any oven, roast heap, pit, furnace, or appliance generating or
giving forth any of the smoke, gases, fumes, or vapors hereinbefore
complained of, or otherwise generating, producing, or causing any
foul or dense or copper or sulphurous smoke, or any noxious,
poisonous, unhealthy, or disagreeable, or in any manner injurious,
vapor, gas, fume, or odor upon the territory or lands of your
orators [in Georgia]."
Such was the case made by the plaintiffs' allegations in their
bill.
The summons was served in Polk County, Tennessee, on the general
manager of the Tennessee Copper Company, the highest officer of
that corporation; on the British corporation, by leaving a copy
with its acting general manager in the same county. Each defendant
corporation has, as already indicated, its main office, and is
conducting its business, in that county.
The copper company, the New Jersey corporation, appeared for the
special and sole purpose of objecting to the jurisdiction of the
circuit court. The British corporation appeared for the special
purpose only of entering a motion to dismiss the bill for want of
jurisdiction as to it, as well as for want of proper parties. The
court, speaking by Judge Sanford, who delivered a well considered
opinion in the case, sustained the motion of the Tennessee
corporation, and dismissed the bill as to it. The motion of the
British company was overruled, the court holding that it had
jurisdiction over the alien corporation.
Ladew v. Tennessee
Copper Co., 179 Fed. 245. There was no appeal by the latter
corporation.
Page 218 U. S. 365
The present appeal was taken only from that part of the decree
dismissing the bill as to the New Jersey corporation.
The plaintiffs, we have seen, are citizens of New York and West
Virginia, while the Tennessee Copper Company is a corporation of
New Jersey. But, under the statutes regulating the jurisdiction of
the circuit courts of the United States, diversity of citizenship
-- nothing more appearing -- will not give authority to circuit
courts of the United States to render a judgment in personam where,
as here, neither the plaintiffs nor the defendants are inhabitants
of the district in which the suit was brought, and where the
defendant appears specially and objects to jurisdiction being
exercised over it. The defendant corporation, not an inhabitant of
the district where suit is brought, cannot be compelled against its
will to submit to such jurisdiction for the purposes merely of a
personal judgment. 18 Stat. 470, § 1, c. 137, as amended and
corrected in 1887 and 1888; 24 Stat. 552, c. 373; 25 Stat. 433, c.
866;
Macon Grocery Co. v. Atlantic Coast Line,
215 U. S. 501,
215 U. S.
508-510,
and authorities there cited.
The plaintiffs insist, however, that jurisdiction can be
sustained by § 8 of the Act of March 3d, 1875, determining the
jurisdiction of the circuit courts of the United States. 18 Stat.
470, c. 137. The first section of that act, as amended by the above
act of 1888, 25 Stat. 433, c. 866, correcting the enrollment of the
Act of March 3d, 1887, 24 Stat. 552, c. 373, provides that a suit
founded only on the fact of the diversity of citizenship between
the parties shall be brought only in the district of the residence
of either the plaintiff or the defendant. But the plaintiffs
contend that that section is not to be interpreted apart from the
other sections of the same act. Section 8 has relation to the first
section, and contains provisions that refer to an exceptional class
of cases.
Page 218 U. S. 366
The two sections relate to the same general subject, and must be
regarded as embodying a scheme of jurisdiction. Considered
together, they mean that, if jurisdiction is founded only on
diversity of citizenship, the circuit court may, without its
process being personally served on the defendant, within its
jurisdiction, exert the jurisdiction given by the eighth section in
the particular cases and
for the special purposes therein
specified -- its power in such cases being, of course,
restricted as in that section prescribed. Such is the argument of
the plaintiffs.
The eighth section of the act of 1875 provides:
"That when in any suit commenced in any circuit court of the
United States, to enforce any legal or equitable lien upon, or
claim to, or to remove any encumbrance or lien or cloud
upon the title to, real or personal property
within the
district where such suit is brought, one or more of the
defendants therein shall not be an inhabitant of, or found within,
the said district, or shall not voluntarily appear thereto, it
shall be lawful for the court to make an order directing such
absent defendant or defendants to appear, plead, answer, or demur,
by a day certain to be designated, which order shall be served on
such absent defendant or defendants, if practicable, wherever
found, and also upon the person or persons in possession or charge
of said property, if any there be; or where such personal service
upon such absent defendant or defendants is not practicable, such
order shall be published in such manner as the court may direct,
not less than once a week for six consecutive weeks; and in case
such absent defendant shall not appear, plead, answer, or demur
within the time so limited, or within some further time to be
allowed by the court, in its discretion, and upon proof of the
service or publication of said order, and of the performance of the
directions contained in the same, it shall be lawful for the court
to entertain jurisdiction, and proceed to the hearing and
adjudication of such suit
Page 218 U. S. 367
in the same manner as if such absent defendant had been served
with process within the said district; but said adjudication shall,
as regards said absent defendant or defendants without appearance,
effect
only the property which shall have been the subject
of the suit,
and under the jurisdiction of the court therein,
within such district. . . ."
Substantially, the contentions of plaintiffs are that the mode
in which the defendant uses its real property in Tennessee, within
the jurisdiction of the circuit court, creates a nuisance
injuriously affecting their property near by in the state of
Georgia; that, according to the settled principles of law, they are
entitled to have the defendant corporation restrained from so using
its Tennessee property as to injure their property in Georgia; and
that the right to such protection against the effects of that
nuisance, as maintained by the defendant in Tennessee, should,
within the fair meaning of the act of 1875, be deemed a "
claim
to . . . real property . . . within the district where such
suit is brought" -- such property, it is alleged, being so used in
Tennessee as to create a nuisance, causing injury to the
plaintiff's property in Georgia.
Manifestly, unless the plaintiffs can sustain this proposition
and bring their case within the eighth section of act of 1875,
there is no ground whatever to maintain the jurisdiction of the
circuit court as to the defendant corporation -- certainly not, as
we have said, for the purposes of a personal judgment against the
defendant company, since neither the plaintiffs nor the defendant
are inhabitants of the district in which the suit was brought, and
the defendant corporation refuses to voluntarily appear and submit
to the jurisdiction of the court.
We are of opinion that under no reasonable interpretation of the
eighth section can the plaintiffs' case be held to belong to the
class of exceptional cases mentioned in
Page 218 U. S. 368
that section. In no just sense can their cause of action be said
to constitute "a claim to" real property in the district. They
cannot be regarded as having a "claim to" the leased land or
premises on which the alleged nuisance is maintained. It may be
that what the defendant is charged with doing creates a nuisance.
It may also be that the defendant company wrongfully uses and has
used its property in Tennessee in such way as to seriously injure
the property of plaintiffs, near by in Georgia, and that plaintiffs
are legally entitled by some mode of proceeding in some court to
have the alleged nuisance abated, and their property in Georgia
protected in the manner asked by them. But it does not follow that
they can invoke the authority of the circuit court of the United
States for the protection of their property against the defendant's
acts. The jurisdiction of the circuit courts is determined by acts
of Congress enacted in pursuance of the Constitution. Apart from
the powers that are inherent in a judicial tribunal after such
tribunal has been lawfully created, the circuit courts can exercise
no jurisdiction not conferred upon them by legislative enactment.
It is quite sufficient now to say, without discussion, that it
would be a most violent construction of the eighth section of the
act of 1875 to hold that the right to have abated the nuisance in
question arising from the use in Tennessee of defendant's property,
because of the injurious effects upon plaintiffs' real property in
Georgia, creates, in the meaning of the statute, a "claim to" real
property within the district where the suit is brought. There is
absolutely no foundation for such a position. We do not mean to say
that Congress, in cases of controversies between citizens of
different states, might not so enlarge the scope of the statute
regulating the jurisdiction of the federal courts as to enable the
circuit court, sitting in Tennessee, to suppress the nuisance in
question. Upon that question
Page 218 U. S. 369
we have no occasion at this time to express an opinion. Still
less do we say that the plaintiffs have not an efficient remedy in
some court, either against the defendant corporation or against the
several individuals who, under its sanction, or by its authority,
are maintaining in Tennessee the nuisance complained of. We only
mean to say -- and cannot properly go further in this case -- that
the statute in question does not cover this particular case, and
that the United States circuit court, sitting in Tennessee -- the
New Jersey company refusing to voluntarily appear in the suit as a
defendant -- is without jurisdiction to give the plaintiffs,
citizens of New York and West Virginia, the particular relief asked
against that corporation.
The bill was properly dismissed for want of jurisdiction in the
Circuit Court, and the decree below is
Affirmed.