Under § 51 of the Judicial Code (Act of 1887-1888, §
1), when an action for damages is brought against several
defendants in the district where some of them reside and the
jurisdiction of the district court is founded solely on diversity
of citizenship, a codefendant cannot be compelled to submit to the
jurisdiction by service in that district if he is a citizen and
resident of another state. P.
250 U. S. 311.
Smith v. Lyon, 133 U. S. 315.
This construction is confirmed by the reenactment of the subject
matter, already so construed, as part of the Judicial Code,
together and in juxtaposition with the provision (Jud.Code, §
52) expressly permitting an action not of a local nature against
defendants residing in different districts of the same state to be
brought in either district. P.
250 U. S.
314.
In what is now Jud.Code § 50, providing for the exercise of
jurisdiction
"when there are several defendants . . . and one or more of them
are neither inhabitants of nor found within the district in which
the suit is brought, and do not voluntarily appear,"
the words "found within the district" are confined, as a result
of the Act of 1887-1888, § 1 (Jud.Code § 51), to cases in
which the action is brought in the district of the plaintiff's
residence. P.
250 U.S.
313.
Where an action on contract is brought against resident and
nonresident defendants, the exemption of the nonresident from suit
under Jud.Code § 51 is personal to him, and cannot be availed
of by his codefendants. P.
250 U. S. 316.
Page 250 U. S. 309
In an action for damages on a joint contract, all of the
obligors are not indispensable parties, and, under Jud.Code §
50, the district court may render judgment against those over whom
it has acquired jurisdiction. P.
250 U. S.
316.
In such case, error in assuming jurisdiction and rendering
judgment as to all of the joint contractors will not necessitate a
reversal as to those properly included if their interests could not
have been prejudiced thereby. P.
250 U. S.
317.
Appellate proceedings in this Court and in the circuit court of
appeals are not affected by the Conformity Act, but are governed
entirely by the acts of Congress, the common law, and the ancient
English statutes.
Id.
In cases coming from federal courts, this Court has statutory
power to enter such judgment or order as the nature of the case
requires, and by the Act of February 26, 1919, amending Jud.Code,
§ 269, the duty is especially enjoined of giving judgment in
appellate proceedings without regard to technical errors, defects,
or exceptions which do not affect the substantial rights of the
parties. P.
250 U. S.
318.
A writ of certiorari to the circuit court of appeals brings up
the whole case, including questions affecting the merits, if
properly saved, as well as those concerning the jurisdiction of the
district court.
Id.
A, the owner of all the shares of a corporation in which, or its
assets, no other person was shown to be interested, agreed under
seal to convey certain sawmill property standing in its name to a
common venture with other parties, who agreed to convey timber
lands, and that he and they should share in the venture in stated
proportions. Due to their repudiation of their obligation, the
sawmill property depreciated in value, and, it appearing that he
was either its equitable owner, independently of his stock
ownership, or acted as secret agent for the corporation,
held that A could recover the full damage in an action on
the contract, without any accounting and settlement of the
corporation's affairs, and that the measure was the whole
depreciation, and not merely a part of it proportionate to the
other parties' stipulated interest in the proposed enterprise.
Id.
244 F. 121 reversed in part and affirmed in part.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 250 U. S. 310
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Section 51 of the Judicial Code declares that (with exceptions
not here material)
"no civil suit shall be brought in any district court 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."
Resting jurisdiction wholly on diversity of citizenship, Gress,
a citizen and resident of Florida, brought, in the District Court
of the United States for the Eastern District of Virginia, this
action against P. D. Camp, P. R. Camp, and John M. Camp, alleging
them to be citizens of Virginia and residents of that district. One
of them, John M., filed a "plea to jurisdiction," asking that the
suit be dismissed because he was not a citizen or resident of the
district in which it was brought, but a citizen of North Carolina,
resident in the Eastern district thereof. P. D. and P. R. Camp
filed a separate "plea to jurisdiction" setting up the same facts,
alleging that the cause of action sued on was joint and
inseparable, and denying jurisdiction as to themselves also,
because there was none as to John M. Camp. The pleas were
overruled; the case proceeded to trial; a verdict was rendered
against the three defendants, and judgment was entered thereon.
Exceptions had been duly taken both by John M. and by P. D. and P.
R. Camp to the decision overruling their pleas to the jurisdiction,
and by the three defendants to certain ruling at the trial alleged
to be erroneous, but
Page 250 U. S. 311
the judgment was affirmed by the circuit court of appeals. 244
F. 121. A writ of certiorari was granted by this Court. 245 U.S.
655.
First. The several defendants below, although not
citizens of the same state, were all citizens of states other than
that of the plaintiff. Hence, the diversity of citizenship
requisite to federal jurisdiction existed.
Sweeney v. Carter
Oil Co., 199 U. S. 252. The
objection of John M. Camp is not to the jurisdiction of a federal
court, but to the jurisdiction over him of the court of the
particular district -- that is, the objection is to the venue. He
asserts the personal privilege not to be sued in a district other
than that of his residence, since the action is not brought in the
district of the plaintiff's residence. If he were a sole defendant,
or if none of the defendants resided in the district where suit was
brought, the privilege asserted would be supported by the very
language of the statute.
Macon Grocery Co. v. Atlantic Coast
Line R. Co., 215 U. S. 501.
Section 51 of the Judicial Code does not in terms provide for the
case where there are several defendants. Does the limitation of
jurisdiction to the district of the residence "of either the
plaintiff or the defendant" mean also of all the plaintiffs or all
the defendants, so that, when the several defendants are not all
residents of the district in which they are sued, the nonresident
may assert the privilege not to be sued therein? The precise
question has not been decided by this Court, but the construction
already given to this section in analogous cases and to analogous
provisions in other statutes makes it clear that the privilege
asserted should be sustained.
Section 51 of the Judicial Code embodies in substance the Act of
March 3, 1887, c. 373, § 1, 24 Stat. 552, as corrected by Act
of August 13, 1888, c. 866, § 1, 25 Stat. 433. From the
passage of the original Judiciary Act, September 24, 1789, c. 20,
§ 11, 1 Stat. 73, 79, until 1887, suit could be brought not
only in the district of defendant's residence,
Page 250 U. S. 312
but also in any other district in which the defendant was found.
The 1887-1888 act accomplished its purpose of restricting the
jurisdiction of the federal courts, in part, by limiting the
districts in which suit might be brought to that of the defendant's
or of the plaintiff's residence.
See In re Keasbey &
Mattison Co., 160 U. S. 221,
160 U. S. 228.
In
Smith v. Lyon, 133 U. S. 315, the
question was presented whether this limitation prohibited suit in a
district in which some, but not all, of the plaintiffs were
resident. The court felt itself controlled largely by the
construction which had been given in
Strawbridge
v. Curtiss, 3 Cranch 267, to a clause of the
original Judiciary Act, similar in language and analogous in
subject matter, and had been steadfastly adhered to since. There,
this Court construed the phrase "where . . . the suit is between a
citizen of the state where the suit is brought, and a citizen of
another state" as meaning
"that, where the interest is joint, each of the persons
concerned in that interest must be competent to sue, or liable to
be sued, in those courts [courts of the United States]."
Adopting a like construction, this Court held in
Smith v.
Lyon, supra, that suit could not be brought in a district in
which some, but not all, of the plaintiffs resided. The rule
declared in
Strawbridge v. Curtiss had been applied
indiscriminately to plaintiffs and defendants, and after the
decision in
Smith v. Lyon, it was generally assumed in the
lower courts that the rule there applied to plaintiffs must
likewise be applied to defendants. [
Footnote 1]
Compare 145 U. S. Quincy
Mining
Page 250 U. S. 313
Co., 145 U. S. 444;
Geneva Furniture Co. v. Karpen, 238 U.
S. 254,
238 U. S. 259.
The same assumption appears to have been made in
Interior
Construction & Improvement Co. v. Gibney, 160 U.
S. 217, where the question was raised whether the
resident defendant could avail himself of the objection that
another defendant, who was a nonresident, was not liable to suit
therein. And in
Ladew v. Tennessee Copper Co.,
218 U. S. 357,
218 U. S.
364-365, a like rule was applied, for it was there held
that, although an alien defendant could be sued in any district
where found, an American citizen joined with him as codefendant
could not, without his consent, be sued in a district other than
that of his or the plaintiff's residence.
It is said, however, that § 51, if read in connection with
§ 50 and in the light of their legislative history, shows that
it was the intention of Congress to confer jurisdiction over all
the defendants found within the district if one of them resides
therein. Section 50, [
Footnote
2] which embodies without substantial change the Act of
February 28, 1839, c. 36, § 1, 5 Stat. 321, makes provision
for enforcing a cause of action which exists against several
persons, although one of them is neither an inhabitant of nor found
within the district in which suit is brought and does not
voluntarily appear. It does so by permitting the court to entertain
jurisdiction without prejudice to the rights of the party not
regularly served nor voluntarily appearing. The argument is that,
in order to give
Page 250 U. S. 314
effect to the retention in § 50 of the words "found within
the district," we must, although these words were omitted from
§ 51, hold that where there are several defendants, the court
has jurisdiction of all if one or more are residents of the
district and the others are found there. The argument overlooks the
fact that § 50 is applicable not only to cases in which the
venue is dependent upon the residence of a defendant in the
district where suit is brought, but also to those cases in which it
is dependent upon the residence of the plaintiff. Ordinarily,
jurisdiction could be obtained in the district of the plaintiff's
residence only over nonresidents, because all of the defendants
must be nonresidents in order to satisfy the requirement of
diversity of citizenship. And as to these, there can be personal
jurisdiction only so far as found within or voluntarily appearing
within the district. To such persons, the term "inhabitants" in
§ 50 obviously cannot refer. If the provision therein
concerning those not "found" had been omitted, a suit would fail in
case any one of those who at common law was a necessary party
defendant should not be found therein or voluntarily appear.
Shields v.
Barrow, 17 How. 130. As the Act of 1887-1888 did
not restrict jurisdiction based on diversity of citizenship in
those cases where the venue is determined by the residence of the
plaintiff, it was appropriate to retain in the earlier statute (now
§ 50) the words "found within the district," although it had
ceased to be operative in cases where the venue is determined by
the residence of the defendants.
On the other hand, § 52 of the Judicial Code makes it clear
that the construction contended for by defendant is unsound. It
provides that, where a state contains more than one district, a
suit (not of a local nature) against a single defendant must be
brought in the district where he resides, "but if there are two or
more defendants, residing in different districts of the state, it
may be
Page 250 U. S. 315
brought in either district." We thus have an express declaration
by Congress that, under one particular set of circumstances, a
codefendant may be sued in a district in which he does not reside.
"
Expressio unius est exclusio alterius." This section
follows directly after that which contains the general prohibition
against suing a defendant in a district other than that in which he
or the plaintiff resides, and constitutes one of the specified
exceptions to the general prohibition. It shows, therefore, that
the prohibition of § 51 expresses the deliberate purpose of
Congress that a person shall not be compelled to submit to suit in
the federal district court in a state within which neither he nor
the plaintiff resides, although a codefendant may reside therein.
The history of § 52 confirms this conclusion. It is
substantially a reenactment of § 740 of the Revised Statutes.
After the passage of the Act of 1887-1888 restricting the
jurisdiction of the federal courts, considerable doubt arose as to
whether the provisions of that act now contained in § 51 of
the Judicial Code did not repeal § 740 of the Revised
Statutes.
Compare Petri v. Creelman Lumber Co.,
199 U. S. 487.
[
Footnote 3] Congress reenacted
in the Judicial Code this provision expressly permitting, in states
having more than one district,
all defendants resident within
the state to be sued in any district thereof in which one of
them resides, while it made no similar provision for the case where
the several defendants reside in different states. If Congress, in
reenacting the provisions of § 51, had intended that it should
establish a rule with reference to defendants resident in different
states contrary to the construction placed by the overwhelming
weight of authority upon
Page 250 U. S. 316
the identical provision contained in the earlier statute, it
would have expressed that intention in unmistakable language.
No reason appears therefore for refusing to apply here the rule
of
Smith v. Lyon, supra. The objection made below that the
plea to the jurisdiction is bad because not limited, by its terms,
to the question of jurisdiction over the particular defendant is
highly technical, and was hardly insisted upon here, and the
contention that his exemption from suit was waived by the
acknowledgment on the summons of service is clearly unfounded. John
M. Camp properly asserted his privilege by plea to the
jurisdiction, and the plea should have been sustained. It follows
that the judgment against him is void, that the judgment of the
circuit court of appeals, insofar as it affirms the judgment of the
district court against him, should be reversed, and the suit should
be dismissed as to him.
Second. The plea to the jurisdiction filed by P. D. and
P. R. Camp was properly overruled. The objection was based wholly
on the fact that John M. Camp was not suable within the district.
This is an exemption from suit personal to the nonresident of the
district. A resident codefendant cannot avail himself of the
objection. [
Footnote 4] If John
M. had been an indispensable party, the failure to obtain
jurisdiction over him would, of course, be fatal to the maintenance
of the suit.
Barney v. Baltimore
City, 6 Wall. 280. But he was not an indispensable
party, and, under § 50 of the Judicial Code, the trial court
might, if it had sustained John M.'s plea to the jurisdiction, have
rendered judgment against the other two defendants,
Page 250 U. S. 317
for this is an action on a joint contract, and one of the
several joint contractors is not an indispensable party defendant
in such a suit.
Clearwater v.
Meredith, 21 How. 489.
Third. P. D. Camp and P. R. Camp contend that, in view
of the error in overruling John M. Camp's plea to the jurisdiction
and proceeding to judgment against him, the court may not confine
its action to correcting the error by setting aside the judgment
and dismissing the suit as to him, but must set aside the judgment
as against all the defendants, thus requiring a new trial as
against the other two. But this is not a necessary result of
erroneously retaining jurisdiction over John M. Camp, for, as above
shown, John M. was not an indispensable party to a suit to enforce
the liability of the other two joint obligors, and if the trial
court had sustained his plea to the jurisdiction, the suit might,
under § 50 of the Judicial Code, have proceeded to judgment as
against the other defendants. Whether the error committed in
retaining jurisdiction over John M. requires a reversal of the
judgment as against the other defendants depends upon whether that
error may have prejudiced them. The record does not show that the
error committed could have prejudiced them in any way, and their
counsel admitted at the bar that the error had not prevented them
from availing themselves of any defense, and had not influenced the
admission or rejection of evidence or the granting or refusal of
any instruction asked or given. Only error which may have resulted
in prejudice could justify reversal of a judgment.
Compare
Yazoo & Mississippi Valley R. Co. v. Mullins, 249 U.
S. 531.
It is, however, contended that the Virginia practice would
require a reversal of the judgment as against all defendants, and
that the Conformity Act (Revised Statutes, § 914) requires
that the state practice be followed. If such were the Virginia
practice, which is denied, it
Page 250 U. S. 318
would not be binding on this Court. The Conformity Act, by its
express terms, refers only to proceedings in district (and formerly
circuit) courts, and has no application to appellate proceedings
either in this Court or in the circuit court of appeals. Such
proceedings are governed entirely by the acts of Congress, the
common law, and the ancient English statutes.
United
States v. King, 7 How. 833,
48 U. S. 844;
Boogher v. Insurance Co., 103 U. S.
90,
103 U. S. 95;
Chateaugay Ore & Iron Co., Petitioner, 128 U.
S. 544;
St. Clair v. United States,
154 U. S. 134,
154 U. S. 153;
Francisco v. Chicago & A. R. Co., 149 F. 354, 358-359;
United States v. Illinois Surety Co., 226 F. 653, 664. In
cases coming from federal courts, the Supreme Court is given by
statute full power to enter such judgment or order as the nature of
the appeal or writ of error (or certiorari, § 240 of the
Judicial Code) requires. Revised Statutes, § 701. Circuit
Court of Appeals Act of March 3, 1891, c. 517, § 11, 26 Stat.
826, 829.
See also § 10 of the same act.
Compare
Ballew v. United States, 160 U. S. 187,
160 U. S. 198
et seq. And, by Act of February 26, 1919, c. 48, 40 Stat.
1181, amending § 269 of the Judicial Code, the duty is
especially enjoined of giving judgment in appellate proceedings
"without regard to technical errors, defects, or exceptions which
do not affect the substantial rights of the parties."
The error in retaining jurisdiction over John M. Camp does not,
therefore, require that the judgment as against the other two
defendants be set aside.
Fourth. P. D. and P. R. Camp contend, however, that the
judgment against them should be reversed also on the ground that
there was error in the instructions as to the measure of damages.
The contention must be examined, as the whole case is here on writ
of certiorari and the objection was properly saved.
Lutcher
& Moore Lumber Co. v. Knight, 217 U.
S. 257,
217 U. S. 267;
Delk v. St. Louis & San Francisco R. Co., 220 U.
S. 580,
220 U. S.
588.
Page 250 U. S. 319
Gress was the owner of the entire capital stock of the Morgan
Lumber Company, a corporation which held the title to sawmill
properties in Florida. The three defendants Camp were the owners of
valuable timber lands near the mill. By contract under seal dated
August 18, 1913, the Camps agreed to join with Gress in organizing
a corporation under the name of Levy County Lumber Company, to
which Gress would convey the sawmill properties, which the parties
valued at $125,000, and the Camps would convey the timber lands,
which they valued at $375,000; that Gress should receive, in
exchange for the mill properties, five-eighteenths of the stock in
the new company, and the Camps, in exchange for the lands,
thirteen-eighteenths of the stock, and that the parties should in
that proportion finance the company. Gress was ready and willing
and able to perform his part of the contract, and the Camps broke
it by definitely refusing to perform. The only question in the case
seriously controverted was the amount of damages recoverable. There
was evidence that, by reason of the breach of contract, which
resulted in depriving the mill of its timber supply, its value
depreciated heavily. The trial judge charged the jury that among
the elements of damages recoverable was the amount of the
depreciation in the market value of the mill between the date of
the contract and the date of the breach. The objection made to this
ruling was based wholly on the ground that, as the mill properties
were vested in the Morgan Lumber Company, Gress could not recover
more than nominal damages, although he owned all of its stock. The
contention is that, before it could be determined whether
plaintiff, as owner of the stock of the Morgan Lumber Company,
sustained any damages by reason of the depreciation in value of the
mill property, an accounting and settlement of the Morgan Lumber
Company's affairs would be necessary, and it is urged that the
lower court, in rejecting a ruling to that
Page 250 U. S. 320
effect and in charging as it did, held erroneously that the
person who owns the entire capital stock of a corporation is in
fact and in law identical with the corporation.
The contention appears to rest upon a misapprehension of the
plaintiff's position. The contract recited that Gress owned the
mill, and that the title only was in the Morgan Lumber Company. If
so, the depreciation would clearly be a loss suffered by Gress, and
he could recover as compensation an amount equal to that loss,
since he was equitable owner with power to require an immediate
conveyance of the legal title. There was also introduced in
evidence a vote of the directors of the Morgan Lumber Company
which, referring to the contract of August 18, 1913, as having been
made by Gress "representing the Morgan Lumber Company," approved
the same "in its entirety." There was not a particle of evidence
that any other person had any interest of any kind in the
corporation or its assets. Consequently, whether Gress entered into
the contract technically on his own behalf or technically as agent
for the corporation, his undisclosed principal, is immaterial. In
either case, the suit is one brought by him individually; in either
case, all the loss suffered through defendant's breach of contract
is recoverable by Gress; in either case, the measure of damage is
the same. [
Footnote 5] There is
no basis for the contention that an accounting and settlement of
the Morgan Lumber Company's affairs was necessary in order to
determine the amount of plaintiff's loss, and the failure to
require such an accounting does not involve any disregard of the
corporate entity.
The decision of the circuit court of appeals denying the
contention that the plaintiff was entitled to recover only
thirteen-eighteenths of the loss due to the depreciation
Page 250 U. S. 321
in the mill properties was clearly correct. If the jury
believed, as contended, that defendant's breach of contract, by
depriving those properties of a timber supply, reduced their value,
the plaintiff's loss in that respect was the whole of the reduced
value. On the other hand, if the market value of the timber lands
increased, the plaintiff's loss from being deprived of the gain
from this source was, as the court ruled, only five-eighteenths of
that gain. There was no other objection taken which requires us to
consider whether the rulings as to damages were in other respects
proper.
The judgment as to P. D. Camp and P. R. Camp is affirmed, and as
to John M. Camp is reversed, and the case, as so modified, is
remanded to the district court of the United States for the Eastern
District of Virginia with directions to dismiss the suit as to John
M. Camp.
Modified and affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
E.g., Turk v. Illinois Cent. R. Co., 218 F. 315, 316
(Sixth Circuit);
Excelsior Pebble Phosphate Co. v. Brown,
74 F. 321 (Fourth Circuit);
Revett v. Clise, 207 F. 673,
676 (Wash.);
Schultz v. Highland Gold Mines Co., 158 F.
337, 340 (Or.);
Tice v. Hurley, 145 F. 391 (Ky.);
Lengel v. American Smelting & Refining Co., 110
Fed.19, 21 (N.J.);
Bensinger Self-Adding Cash Register Co. v.
National Cash Register Co., 42 F. 81 (Mo.).
But see
Jennings v. Smith, 232 F. 921, 925 (Ga.);
Rawitzer v.
Wyatt, 40 F. 609 (Cal.).
[
Footnote 2]
"When there are several defendants in any suit at law or in
equity, and one or more of them are neither inhabitants of nor
found within the district in which the suit is brought, and do not
voluntarily appear, the court may entertain jurisdiction and
proceed to the trial and adjudication of the suit between the
parties who are properly before it, but the judgment or decree
rendered therein shall not include or prejudice other parties not
regularly served with process nor voluntarily appearing to answer,
and nonjoinder of parties who are not inhabitants of nor found
within the district, as aforesaid, shall not constitute matter of
abatement or objection to the suit."
[
Footnote 3]
See also Doscher v. United States Pipe Line Co., 185 F.
959;
John D. Park & Sons Co. v. Bruen, 133 F. 806;
New Jersey Steel & Iron Co. v. Chormann, 105 F. 532;
Goddard v. Mailler, 80 F. 422;
East Tennessee v. &
G. R. Co. v. Atlanta & F. R. Co., 49 F. 608.
[
Footnote 4]
Tice v. Hurley, 145, F. 391, 392;
Chesapeake &
O. Coal Agency Co. v. Fire Creek Coal & Coke Co., 119 F.
942;
Smith v. Atchison, T. & S.F. Ry. Co., 64 F. 1, 2;
Jewett v. Bradford Sav. Bank & Trust Co., 45 F. 801;
Bensinger Self-Adding Cash Register Co. v. National Cash
Register Co., 42 F. 81, 82.
[
Footnote 5]
United States Telegraph Co. v. Gildersleve, 29 Md. 232,
246;
Leterman v. Charlottesville Lumber Co., 110 Va. 769,
772;
Groover v. Warfield, 50 Ga. 644, 654;
Joseph v.
Knox, 3 Campb. 320.