The right to challenge the jurisdiction of the district court
over the person of the defendant is not waived by a special
appearance for that purpose, by a postponement of the hearing at
the instance of the plaintiff for the purpose of enabling him to be
fully heard on the subject of jurisdiction reserving the right of
defendant to plead to the merits if jurisdiction be sustained, or
by an order of the court,
sua sponte, directing plaintiff
to amend his complaint so as to disclose citizenship more fully
before the hearing on the jurisdictional question.
A motion to quash is a proper mode of attacking service and
jurisdiction thereon depending in the district court; the
Conformity Act does not require resort to a demurrer for this
purpose, even though the state procedure does. So
held
where the motion was based on the grounds that defendant
corporation was not doing business or possessed of property in the
state and on want of representative capacity in the person
served.
Affirmed.
Page 244 U. S. 55
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE White delivered the opinion of the court:
Alleging himself to be a citizen of New York and a resident in
the Eastern District, the plaintiff in error sued below to recover
from the defendant in error the amount of damages alleged to have
been by him suffered as the result of an explosion of dynamite
while he, the plaintiff, was engaged as a servant of the defendant
in working in a coal mine belonging to and operated by it near
Shamokin, Pennsylvania. The defendant was alleged to be a
corporation created under the laws of the State of Pennsylvania and
a resident of that state, having its principal place of business at
Shamokin. It was alleged, however, as a basis for jurisdiction that
the corporation carried on business in the State of New York and
had property therein. The summons was personally served upon the
president of the corporation, who was found in the Borough of
Manhattan, in the Southern District.
Upon the complaint and summons and an affidavit of its
president, the corporation, appearing specially "for the sole and
single purpose of objecting to the jurisdiction of this court over
the defendant in this action," moved "to set aside and declare
null, void, and of no effect the attempted service of the summons,"
upon the ground that the corporation had no property in the State
of New York and transacted no business therein, and, although its
president
Page 244 U. S. 56
was personally served while temporarily in the Southern District
of New York, he was there engaged in the transaction of no business
for or on account of the corporation, and had no authority so to
do. A hearing was ordered on the motion. At the hour fixed for the
hearing at the request of the plaintiff, it was continued, the
court, however, in express terms subjecting the continuance to the
condition that the defendant should not lose his right to plead to
the merits if, on the hearing on the question of jurisdiction on
the postponed day, authority to entertain the cause was sustained.
In addition, the plaintiff was ordered, within six days, to file an
amended complaint
"showing whether the plaintiff is an alien or a citizen of the
United States, and if a citizen, whether native born or
naturalized, and the date and place of such naturalization, if
any."
The amended complaint was filed, showing the plaintiff to be an
alien, and subsequently, on the hearing on the motion to quash the
summons, an affidavit for the purpose of supporting the
jurisdiction was filed on behalf of the plaintiff. It is true,
however, to say that this affidavit did not rebut the facts as to
the nondoing of business and the absence of property of the
corporation in the State of New York, and the want of authority on
the part of its president, upon whom the summons had been served,
to represent the corporation or transact any business in New York
in its behalf. The summons was quashed and the suit dismissed, and
the direct appeal which is before us on the question of
jurisdiction was then taken.
Despite some apparent contention to the contrary, there is no
room for any controversy concerning the facts upon which the court
below based its action -- that is, the nondoing of business by the
corporation in New York and the absence of authority in its
president to represent it there. Indeed, the argument freely admits
this, and proceeds upon the theory that, although the facts
clearly
Page 244 U. S. 57
establish the correctness of the ruling below if they are
considered, yet they are not subject to be so considered because
the challenge to the jurisdiction was waived by the proceedings
which were taken to question it. Generically, this would seem to
rest upon the proposition that, because there was a special
appearance on the face of the summons and complaint, challenging
the jurisdiction, thereby the right to so challenge was waived. But
the contrary has been so long established and is so elementary that
the proposition need be no further noticed.
Although this be true, the argument further is that the right to
be heard on the challenge to the jurisdiction was lost because of
the postponement of the hearing on that subject which was granted.
This, however in a different form, but embodies the error involved
in the proposition just disposed of. But, aside from this, as the
continuance was granted at the request of the plaintiff and for the
purpose of enabling him to be fully heard on the subject of
jurisdiction, no further reference to the proposition is required.
Again, it is urged that, because, as a condition of the
continuance, the court reserved the right of the defendant to plead
to the merits if, on the hearing, jurisdiction was found to exist,
therefore the question of jurisdiction was waived -- a conclusion
which is again too obviously wrong to require more than statement
to refute it. Moreover, it is insisted that, as the order directing
the plaintiff to amend so as to fully disclose citizenship before
the day for the hearing on the motion as to jurisdiction was an
exercise of jurisdiction resulting from some suggestion of the
defendant, therefore the question of jurisdiction was not open. But
this disregards the fact that the order in question was expressly
made by the court, doubtless in the discharge of its duty to see to
it that from no point of view was its jurisdiction abused.
Finally it is said that as, under the local law, the right to
challenge the summons and the jurisdiction resting
Page 244 U. S. 58
on it could only have been raised by demurrer, therefore, under
the Conformity Act (§ 914, Rev.Stats.), the motion to quash
the summons could not be entertained, and, on the contrary, should
have been disregarded. We do not stop to discuss the proposition,
since it is too clear for discussion that its want of merit is
foreclosed by previous decisions of this Court which have
recognized and upheld the practice of challenging the jurisdiction
under circumstances like those here present by way of motion to
quash, instead of by demurrer.
Goldey v. Morning News,
156 U. S. 518;
Wabash Western Railway. v. Brow, 164 U.
S. 271;
St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co. v.
Alexander, 227 U. S. 218.
Affirmed.