A Circuit Court of the United States has no jurisdiction to
issue an order of attachment in a case where no personal service
can be had upon the defendant and where there has been no personal
appearance in the action.
Neither under § 915, Rev.Stat., nor under any provision of
the Act of March 3, 1887, as amended August 13, 1888, can the
auxiliary remedy by attachment be had in a Circuit Court of the
United States where that court cannot obtain jurisdiction over the
defendant personally.
Page 229 U. S. 32
An attachment is still but an incident to a suit, and unless
jurisdiction can be obtained over the defendant, his estate cannot
be attached in a federal court.
This Court will not construe an amendment to the judiciary
statute as making such a radical change as granting a new remedy
unless provision is clearly made for making the remedy effective,
and so
held that, as Congress did not, in the Act of March
3, 1887, as amended August 13, 1888, make any provision for service
by publication, the act will not be construed as giving
jurisdiction to federal courts to grant attachments in cases where
the defendant cannot be served. In the federal courts, an
appearance may be made for the sole purpose of raising
jurisdictional questions without thereby submitting to the
jurisdiction of the court over the action, and where, as in this
case, no issue involving the merits was made, a special appearance
to object to the jurisdiction does not give the court jurisdiction
to issue an attachment.
The facts, which involve the jurisdiction of a circuit court of
the United States to issue an order of attachment in a case where
no personal service could be had upon the defendant and wherein
there was no personal appearance to the action, are stated in the
opinion.
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case involves the jurisdiction of a circuit court of the
United States to issue an order of attachment in a case where no
personal service could be had upon the defendant and wherein there
was no personal appearance to the action.
The case was begun in the Circuit Court of the United
Page 229 U. S. 33
States for the Northern District of West Virginia to recover in
debt upon certain promissory notes. A summons was issued against
the defendant, Benjamin H. Read, trading as Lynah & Read, and
return was made by the the marshal that the writ had not been
served, as defendant was not found in his district. Thereafter an
affidavit was filed for an attachment, setting forth that the
defendant was one of the receivers of the Circuit Court of the
United States for the Northern District of West Virginia of the
property of the Oakland Coal & Coke Company, and that there had
been allowed to him for his services as such receiver the sum of
$2,000. An order of attachment was issued, and the return of the
marshal stated that he had been unable to locate any property in
his district upon which to serve the attachment, and accordingly
returned the writ, "No property found." Afterwards, an order was
made which, after reciting the beginning of the suit, and that the
defendant was a nonresident of West Virginia; that the Special
Master had found the sum of $2,000 due him as such receiver, and
that an order of attachment had been issued and placed in the hands
of the marshal for the purpose of attaching the estate of the
defendant, provided that a copy of the order be served upon the
defendant, that he appear before the court, and that a copy of the
order served upon the defendant and one Slingluff, special
receivers in a suit entitled
The Baltimore Trust & Guaranty
Company v. Oakland Coal & Coke Company should be notice to
them of the proceedings, and that the claim of the defendant was
sought to be attached therein.
A copy of the order was served upon the defendant in Baltimore,
Maryland, who thereafter appeared by his counsel for the purpose
only of objecting to the jurisdiction of the court, and moved the
court to dismiss the suit and quash the attachment upon the
following grounds:
"First. The record shows that this defendant is not a
Page 229 U. S. 34
citizen of or resident in, nor found within, the Northern
District of West Virginia."
"Second. The record shows that the defendant has no property
whatever within the said state or district."
"Third. That this court has no jurisdiction
in rem or
in personam in said action."
"Fourth. That, at the time of the suing out of the writs of
summons and of attachment herein on the 26th day of June, 1911,
this defendant was not a citizen or resident or found within West
Virginia, and he had no property in said state or district, and at
no time since has this defendant been such citizen or resident, or
had any property within the said district, although the return day
of the said writs has long since passed, and the defendant makes
the said writs and returns thereon by the Marshal for the Northern
District of West Virginia a part of this motion."
"Fifth. The fund or compensation ordered by this Honorable Court
to be paid to the defendant for services as receiver was not at the
time of the issuance of said writs or at any time since then,
liable to be attached upon the alleged indebtedness of the
plaintiff, or for the payment thereof, in this Honorable
Court."
"Sixth. This Honorable Court has no jurisdiction either of
property or person giving jurisdiction for the maintenance of the
said action."
Thereafter, the case coming on to be heard, counsel appearing
for the defendant for the purpose of objecting to the jurisdiction
and for the purpose of the motions filed only, and further moving
the court to vacate and set aside the orders issued, and to quash
the service of summons in the action, and to dismiss the case,
certain facts were found, without prejudice to any motion of the
defendant, and without enlarging the appearance of the defendant,
as follows:
"Messrs. Read and Slingluff were appointed receivers in the
cause of the
Baltimore Trust & Guarantee Company
Page 229 U. S. 35
v. Oakland Coal & Coke Company of West Virginia, a
cause pending in the United States Circuit Court for the Northern
District of West Virginia, by an order in said cause passed on the
12th day of June, 1907, and the receivership estate being ready for
distribution on June 20, 1910, this court passed a decree referring
the cause to Special Master C. D. Merrick, with directions, among
other things, to make a report 'including costs and allowances and
fees, to the end that a full and complete decree might be made for
the distribution and settlement of the estate.'"
"On May 15th, 1911, the Special Master filed such report. Among
other allowances were the following:"
"That Benjamin H. Read, for his services as receiver, is
entitled to and should be allowed the sum of $2,000."
"That no objection had been taken or exceptions made to the
above allowance at the time the attachment was laid in this
cause."
"That, on July 7, 1911, this court passed an order ratifying the
report of the master as to the above and similar allowances, but
directed that the allowance of $2,000 commissions to B. H. Read be
retained by the receivers pending the determination of the
questions arising out of such attachment."
Afterwards, the court delivered an opinion in which the judge
directed that the former order, amounting to an attachment, should
be set aside, and held that, inasmuch as personal service upon the
defendant in the action might yet be obtained by alias summons, he
would not then dismiss the action. Later, the plaintiff refused to
direct the issuance of alias summons, and, upon motion, judgment
was entered dismissing the action and a certificate was made by the
court.
The certificate states that the judgment complained of in
plaintiff's writ of error, which was set out, is based solely upon
the ground that the court had no jurisdiction as a
Page 229 U. S. 36
federal court to grant relief to the plaintiff by subjecting to
the claim of the plaintiff the assets and credits of the defendant,
to be attached in the case, without personal service of summons
upon him, or his voluntary appearance in the cause, and that the
motion filed in the case did not constitute a voluntary appearance,
and that the court, as a federal court, had no jurisdiction to
grant a personal judgment against the defendant, or to make a final
judgment or order, subjecting to the claim of the plaintiff the
assets and credits of the defendant so sought to be attached.
The attachment was sought to be levied and was claimed to be
authorized under the Act of June 1, 1872, 17 Stat.196, c. 255, now
§ 915 of the Revised Statutes. It is as follows:
"In common law causes in the circuit and district courts, the
plaintiff shall be entitled to similar remedies, by attachment or
other process, against the property of the defendant which are now
provided by the laws of the state in which such court is held for
the courts thereof, and such circuit or district courts may, from
time to time, by general rules, adopt such state laws as may be in
force in the states where they are held in relation to attachments
and other process: Provided, that similar preliminary affidavits or
proofs, and similar security, as required by such state laws, shall
be first furnished by the party seeking such attachment or other
remedy."
Assuming that the attachment could be issued under the laws of
West Virginia, under this statute, was there authority in the
courts of the United States to issue the attachment, it appearing
that no service had been or could be made upon the defendant, and
that he had not appeared in the action?
Section 915 was before this Court in
Ex Parte Railway
Company, 103 U. S. 794, and
it was held that as, under § 739 of the Revised Statutes, Act
of March 3, 1875, 18
Page 229 U. S. 37
Stat. 470, c. 137, then in force, no civil action not local in
its nature could be brought against anyone by original process in
any United States circuit court other than that for the state of
which he was an inhabitant or in which he was found at the time of
serving the writ, an attachment could not be issued, the defendant
being a nonresident and not having been served with process. It was
further held that an attachment was but an incident to a suit, and
unless the suit could be maintained, the attachment must fall. In
other words, in cases where the defendant could not be sued and
jurisdiction acquired over him personally, the auxiliary remedy by
attachment could not be had, as attachment was not a means of
acquiring jurisdiction. The same view was taken in
Nazro v.
Cragin, 3 Dill. 474, by Mr. Justice Miller, on the circuit.
Ex Parte Railway Company supra, was but an affirmance, as
to the right of attachment where no personal service could be had,
of the former case of
Toland v.
Sprague, 12 Pet. 300, wherein it was held that a
person was not amenable to attachment against his property except
where process could be served upon his person.
It is contended, however, that, since the Act of March 3, 1887,
24 Stat. 552, c. 373, as amended August 13, 1888, 25 Stat. 433, c.
866, the right of attachment should be held to exist in cases like
the present. The statute of 1888 provides:
"And 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; 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 argument is that the right to issue an attachment under the
Act of 1872 should obtain, since the law now permits suit in the
district of the residence either of the
Page 229 U. S. 38
plaintiff or defendant, omitting the provision of the Act of
1875 that the defendant could be sued only in the district in which
he was an inhabitant or could be found at the time of commencing
the proceeding. But we are of the opinion that this amendment to
the statute was not intended to do away with the settled rule that,
in order to issue an attachment, the defendant must be subject to
personal service or voluntarily appear in the action. If Congress
had intended any such radical change, it would have been easy to
have made provision for that purpose, and doubtless a method of
service by publication in such cases would have been provided. We
think the rule has not been changed; that an attachment is still
but an incident to a suit, and that, unless jurisdiction can be
obtained over the defendant, his estate cannot be attached in a
federal court.
See Laborde v. Ubarri, 214 U.
S. 173;
United States v. Brooke, 184 F.
341.
Another contention is that the defendant, in appearing for the
purpose of the motion submitting to the court the question of the
right to attach his compensation as receiver in the court, had
voluntarily submitted to the jurisdiction of the court; but we are
of the opinion that this contention is untenable. It is the settled
practice in the federal courts that an appearance may be made for
the sole purpose of raising jurisdictional questions, without
thereby submitting to the jurisdiction of the court over the
action.
Goldey v. Morning News, 156 U.
S. 518;
Shaw v. Quincy Mining Co., 145 U.
S. 444,
145 U. S.
453.
It is true that, where the defendant appears by motion and
objects to the jurisdiction, and also submits a question going to
the merits of the action, it being one of which the court had
jurisdiction, there is a general appearance in the case which gives
jurisdiction, as in
St. Louis & S.F. R. Co. v.
McBride, 141 U. S. 127,
where a demurrer was interposed raising two grounds of
jurisdiction, and the third going to the merits of the cause of
action, and it was held
Page 229 U. S. 39
that there had been a submission to the jurisdiction of the
court.
See also Western Loan Co. v. Butte & Boston Min.
Co., 210 U. S. 368.
In this case, however, the submission was not of any question
involving the merits of the suit, but of one with reference to the
jurisdiction of the court to issue the attachment; adding the
further ground that the property in question was not subject to
attachment or garnishment. No issue was made involving the merits
of the action. This special appearance was sufficient to raise the
question of jurisdiction only.
Davis v. C., C.C. & St.L. R.
Co., 217 U. S. 157.
In our opinion, the Circuit Court did not err in holding that it
had no jurisdiction to issue the attachment in this case.
Judgment affirmed.