1. A motion by a defendant to quash service of process may be
made in and entertained by the district court after removal of the
cause,
Page 260 U. S. 262
though previously made and overruled in the state court before
removal. P.
260 U. S.
267.
2. Service on a foreign railway corporation in a state where it
had no railroad or office, upon a person not its agent,
held void. P.
260 U. S.
268.
3. A petition of removal filed in a state court, with or without
reservations as to jurisdiction, is a special appearance, and
leaves the validity of attempted service of process open to
question in the district court. P.
260 U. S.
268.
4. An objection to the validity of service of process made by
special appearance in the state court and renewed in like manner in
the district court after removal
held not waived by a
stipulation that evidence directly relating to it and used on the
first hearing, might be used on the second. P.
260 U. S.
269.
5. The filing of a brief, subscribed by solicitors as
"solicitors for the defendants,"
held to have been on
behalf of the one defendant duly served, and not to have been
intended or to have operated as a general appearance for another
defendant not duly served. P.
260 U. S.
270.
6. The restriction (Jud.Code, § 51) that no suit shall be
brought in the district court against any person by any original
process or proceeding in any other district than that whereof he is
an inhabitant does not affect the general jurisdiction of the court
over the particular cause as defined by § 24, but merely
establishes a personal privilege of the defendant which he may
waive, and does waive by entering an appearance without claiming
it. P.
260 U. S.
272.
7. Under Jud.Code, §§ 28, 29, permitting removal of
causes to the district court "for the proper district," the proper
district is that one which includes the county or place where the
suit in the state court is pending at the time of the removal. P.
260 U. S.
274.
8. In providing for removal of suits arising under the federal
Constitution or laws " of which the district courts . . . are given
original jurisdiction by this title," § 28 of the Judicial
Code (like § 2 of the Judiciary Act of 1888) refers to the
general jurisdiction conferred by § 24, and not to the venue
provision of § 51 (
see supra, par. 6). P.
260 U. S.
276.
9. A suit arising under the federal Constitution or laws may
therefore be removed to the "proper district" (embracing the seat
of the state court) by a defendant who is not an inhabitant of that
district, and who consequently could have objected to the venue
under Jud.Code § 51. P.
260 U. S.
279.
10. No change in the meaning of the Judiciary Act of August 13,
1888, was intended or wrought by the rearrangement of its parts in
the Judicial Code. P.
260 U. S.
278.
Page 260 U. S. 263
11. Like § 51 Jud.Code, the special provision as to venue
made by § 12 of the Clayton Act respecting suits under
antitrust laws does not affect the general jurisdiction of the
district courts, but allows the defendant a personal privilege
which he may waive. P.
260 U. S.
279.
12. A suit against two railroad companies -- one having lines
within and without, and the other lines without, the state of suit
-- to enjoin them from entering into consolidation and to dissolve
the consolidation if consummated
pendente lite is a suit
in personam to which the provisions of Jud.Code § 57
for special service of process in local suits directly relating to
specific property do not apply. P.
260 U. S.
279.
13. The office of a supplemental bill is to introduce matters
occurring after the filing of the original bill, or not then known
to the plaintiff (Equity Rule 34), but not to shift the right in
which the plaintiff sues or change the character and object of the
suit. P.
260 U. S.
281.
14. Application to file a supplemental bill is addressed to the
sound discretion of the court. P.
260 U. S.
281.
15. Where a decree of the district court dismissing a bill was
affirmed by the circuit court of appeals as to part of the bill,
but as to the remainder was reversed upon the ground that, as to
that part, the dismissal was erroneously based on a supposed defect
of parties,
held that, upon the return of the case, other
objections to the remaining part which might have been, but were
not, urged or considered on the appeal could be considered by the
district court and by the circuit court of appeals on a second
appeal. P.
260 U. S.
284.
16. In a suit by a shareholder to prevent two corporations from
carrying out an agreement for a consolidation alleged to be
unlawful, which was subject to ratification by their shareholders,
held that one of the corporations, which held shares of
the other, was an indispensable party as to so much of the bill as
sought to enjoin it from voting them and to enjoin the other from
permitting it so to do, but not as to so much as sought to enjoin
the other from entering into or consummating the proposed
consolidation. P.
260 U. S.
285.
17. Under § 16 of the Clayton Act, c. 323, 38 Stat. 730, a
private suit to enjoin a violation of that act or of the Sherman
Anti-Trust Act can only be brought in a federal court. Such a suit
cannot be brought in a state court. P.
260 U. S.
286.
18. Want of jurisdiction in a state court is not cured by
removal of the cause to the federal court. P.
260 U. S.
288.
Page 260 U. S. 264
19. A decree dismissing a bill for want of jurisdiction should
be without prejudice. P.
260 U. S.
288.
20. When a private individual, in virtue of a minute interest in
the stock of a railroad corporation acquired after it entered into
an agreement looking to consolidation with other companies, seeks
to enjoin it from entering the consolidation as contrary to the
policy of the state respecting control of parallel competing lines,
but shows by his .allegations that the control complained of has
long existed, practically, through stock ownership, and exhibits no
objection on the part of the state or the other shareholders, he
must show in his bill with precision and certainty in what respects
the law is about to be violated. and clearly and positively that
substantial and irreparable injury will result to his private
rights. P.
260 U. S.
288.
269 F. 235 modified and affirmed.
This suit in equity was begun in the Court of Common Pleas of
Cuyahoga County, Ohio, to enjoin a proposed consolidation of the
New York Central and Hudson River Railroad Company, the Lake Shore
and Michigan Southern Railway Company, and nine other companies,
not identified in the bill, and to secure other relief of an
incidental nature. The suit was brought by the General Investment
Company, a Maine corporation, and the New York Central and Hudson
River Railroad Company, the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern
Railway Company, the Central Trust Company, and three individuals,
called the Read Committee, were named as defendants.
The principal ground on which the proposed consolidation was
assailed was that it would contravene the Sherman Anti-Trust Act
and the Clayton Act, both laws of the United States. There were
also charges that it would be contrary to the constitution and laws
of Ohio and other states, but the general tenor of the bill made it
evident that these charges were to be taken as of secondary
importance. The plaintiff's right to sue was based on allegations
that it was a stockholder in the New York Central Company and the
Lake Shore Company and, as such,
Page 260 U. S. 265
would be subjected to irreparable loss and damage should the
consolidation be effected.
Process was duly served on the Lake Shore Company and there was
a purported service on the New York Central Company, but there was
neither service on nor appearance by the other defendants. The New
York Central Company, appearing specially for the purpose, promptly
challenged the validity of the service on it by moving to set the
same aside, but the state court overruled the motion.
In due time, the two railroad companies caused the suit to be
removed into the District Court of the United States for the
Northern District of Ohio. The plaintiff objected to this and
reserved an exception to the order allowing it. The removal was
sought and allowed on the ground that the suit, according to the
claim made in the bill, was one arising under the laws of the
United States, and of which the district courts of the United
States are given original jurisdiction. Diversity of citizenship
was shown, but not specified as a ground for removal.
Shortly after the removal, the New York Central Company, again
appearing specially for the purpose, sought and obtained in the
district court another hearing on its objection to the purported
service on it, and, on that hearing, the objection was sustained
and the service set aside. 226 F. 976. Afterwards, motions by the
plaintiff to remand the suit to the state court, to direct special
service on the New York Central Company and other defendants in the
mode provided in § 57 of the Judicial Code, and for leave to
file a supplemental bill and make new parties defendant were
severally overruled. And lastly, a motion by the Lake Shore
Company, the only defendant then before the court, to dismiss the
suit was sustained on the ground that the New York Central Company
was an indispensable party, had not voluntarily appeared,
Page 260 U. S. 266
and was not within the reach of the court's process.
From the decree of dismissal, the plaintiff appealed to the
circuit court of appeals. That court upheld the rulings setting
aside the service on the New York Central Company, denying the
motion to remand to the state court, declining to direct special
service on the New York Central Company and other defendants, and
refusing leave to file a supplemental bill and make new parties. It
also sustained the decree of dismissal as to much of the bill, with
the qualification that it be without prejudice, and reversed it as
to other parts of the bill to which that court thought the Lake
Shore Company was the only necessary defendant. 250 F. 160.
When the cause was returned to the district court, the
plaintiff, complying with a direction that the bill be made certain
in a particular in which the circuit court of appeals deemed it
uncertain, so amended it as to show the date on which the directors
of the Lake Shore and other companies adopted the agreement for the
proposed consolidation. The Lake Shore Company then moved that the
bill, as left by the decision of the circuit court of appeals, be
dismissed on the grounds (a) that, insofar as it was directed to
securing an injunction against alleged or threatened violations of
the Sherman Anti-Trust Act or the Clayton Act, the plaintiff had no
right or standing to maintain it, or, if having such a right or
standing, could not bring it in a state court, as was done, and (b)
that, insofar as it was directed against alleged or threatened
violations of state constitutions or laws, it did not show a right
in equity to the relief sought or any part thereof. This motion was
sustained, and a decree of dismissal entered. The plaintiff again
appealed to the circuit court of appeals, and that court affirmed
the decree, but without prejudice to the institution in a proper
court of a new suit based only on infractions of state
Page 260 U. S. 267
constitutions or laws. 269 F. 235. A further appeal brings the
case here.
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER, after stating the case as above,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Complaint is made of each of the rulings alluded to in the
foregoing statement together with some others. We take them up in
their order.
The setting aside of the purported service on the New York
Central Company.
While the state court considered the objection to the service
and overruled it before the removal, this was not an obstacle to an
examination of the question by the district court after the
removal. The state court's ruling was purely interlocutory, and its
status in this regard was not affected by the removal. Being
interlocutory, it was subject to reconsideration, and would
continue to be so up to the passing of a final decree. Had the
cause remained in the state court, the power to reconsider would
have been in that court, but when the removal was made, the power
passed with the cause to the district court. Of course, in the
latter the ruling was to be treated with respect, but not as final
or conclusive.
Garden City Manufacturing Co. v. Smith, 9
Fed.Cas. p. 1153;
Bryant v. Thompson, 27 F. 881.
And
see Goldey v. Morning News, 156 U. S. 518,
156 U. S.
522.
The sheriff returned that he had served the summons on the New
York Central Company in Cuyahoga County by delivering a copy to "W.
A. Barr, regular ticket agent, in charge of the business of said
company." As grounds
Page 260 U. S. 268
for assailing this service, the company alleged that it was a
New York corporation, had no railroad in Ohio, was not doing
business there, did not maintain a place of business or office in
that state, and had not made Barr its agent or employee. From the
evidence adduced on that issue, the district court, as also the
circuit court of appeals, found that the grounds of the company's
objection were all true in point of fact. We have examined the
evidence, and discover no occasion for disturbing the finding.
Indeed, we think a different one would have been quite
inadmissible. The substance of the evidence is accurately set forth
in the opinion of the circuit court of appeals (250 F. 165), and
need not be repeated here.
It follows that the purported service on this company was
invalid, and rightly set aside.
Philadelphia & Reading R.
Co. v. McKibbon, 243 U. S. 264, and
cases cited.
Alleged submission by New York Central Company to court's
jurisdiction.
The plaintiff contends that, even if the service was not good,
the company waived the fault and submitted to the court's
jurisdiction. Three things are relied on as constituting or showing
such a waiver and submission. They are the petition for removal, a
stipulation bringing before the district court evidence presented
in the state court, and a brief filed in opposition to the motion
to remand. We think the contention had no support in any of
them.
In fact, the petition for removal contained an express
declaration that the company was "not intending to waive any
question of the sufficiency of service or the want of service," but
was "reserving all questions of service, jurisdiction, and want of
service." Besides, it is well settled that a petition for removal,
even if not containing such a reservation, does not amount to a
general appearance, but only a special appearance, and that, after
the removal the party securing it has the same right to invoke the
decision
Page 260 U. S. 269
of the United States court on the validity of the prior service
that he has to ask its judgment on the merits.
Wabash Western
R. Co. v. Brow, 164 U. S. 271,
164 U. S. 279;
Mechanical Appliance Co. v. Castleman, 215 U.
S. 437,
215 U. S. 441;
Cain v. Commercial Publishing Co., 232 U.
S. 124,
232 U. S. 131.
The plaintiff insists that, even if that be the usual rule, it is
not applicable here, because by this petition the company sought
and secured a removal into a district court other than the one
designated by law. But, as will be shown presently, the court to
which removal was asked and effected was the proper one. So,
whether the petition be judged by what it says or by its legal
effect, it did not amount to a general appearance or a waiver of
any invalidity in the service.
The stipulation relied on was made between the plaintiff and the
New York Central Company, and related to the use of specific
evidence bearing directly on the validity of the service on the
latter. The evidence had been presented at the hearing in the state
court on that question, and the purpose of the stipulation was
merely to make it, or a report of it, available at a new hearing in
the district court on the same question. The stipulation did not in
terms restrict the use to that hearing, but such a restriction
inhered in the nature of the evidence specified, and was implied.
In the application whereon the new hearing was granted the company
had declared that it was appearing specially for the purpose only
of questioning the validity of the service. That declaration, made
at the outset, applied to and qualified every step taken by the
company in bringing the question to a hearing and decision. Joining
in the stipulation was merely such a step.
After the service on the New York Central Company was held
invalid and set aside, the plaintiff moved that the cause be
remanded to the state court. At that time, the Lake Shore Company
was the only defendant before
Page 260 U. S. 270
the court. A brief by solicitors subscribing themselves as
"Solicitors for Defendants" was filed in opposition to the motion.
The plaintiff insists this was a general appearance by the New York
Central Company. In the body of the brief, its authors referred to
the absence of any process against or appearance by the Central
Trust Company and the members of the Read committee, recited the
proceedings and order whereby the service on the New York Central
Company was set aside, said of that company that it "is not now a
defendant," spoke of the Lake Shore Company as "now the only real
and actual defendant," and otherwise indicated that in filing the
brief they were acting for the Lake Shore Company, and for it
alone. The plaintiff attaches much weight to the plural term
"defendants" in the subscription and gives little consideration to
the prior proceedings and the plain purport of the body of the
brief. We think all should be considered, and that, when this is
done, it is apparent, as was said by the circuit court of appeals,
that the use of the plural term was an inadvertence; the singular
being intended. Certainly the plural had no particular reference to
the New York Central Company, and yet the plaintiff treats it as
including that company, but not the Central Trust Company or the
members of the Read committee. This serves to show the fallacy of
the claim. If the term included any defendant not then before the
court, it included all -- one as much as another. But if it be
reconciled, as we think it should be, with the prior situation and
the general purport of the brief, it becomes evident that it
referred, and was intended to refer, to the Lake Shore Company, the
only defendant then in the suit, and to it alone.
Refusal to remand to state court.
A restatement of the facts bearing on the propriety of this
ruling will be helpful. The suit, according to the plaintiff's
statement of its case as made in the bill, was one
Page 260 U. S. 271
arising under the laws of the United States, and this was so
although the claim to the relief sought was based in part on local
Constitutions and laws. It also appeared that the matter in
controversy exceeded, exclusive of interest and costs, the sum or
value of $3,000. Because the suit possessed these elements, it was
removed from the Common Pleas Court of Cuyahoga County, Ohio, where
it had been brought and was pending, into the District Court of the
United States for the Northern District of Ohio, which included
Cuyahoga County. The removal, which was over the plaintiff's
objection and exception, was had on the petition of two defendants,
the only ones attempted to be brought before the state court. One
of these, the New York Central Company, was a corporate citizen of
New York, and therefore not an inhabitant of the Northern district
of Ohio, [
Footnote 1] while the
other, the Lake Shore Company, was a corporate citizen of Ohio and
an inhabitant of the northern district of that state.
The ground on which the plaintiff moved that the cause be
remanded to the state court was that, as the New York Central
Company, one of the defendants, was not an inhabitant of the
Northern District of Ohio, the suit could not have been originally
brought in the district court for that district, and therefore
could not be removed into it from the state court. The motion was
denied.
As we shall show, the argument advanced against that ruling
confuses venue with general jurisdiction, and also confuses the
venue prescribed for cases begun in the district courts with that
prescribed for cases removed into them from state courts.
Section 24 of the Judicial Code declares that
"The district courts shall have original jurisdiction . . . of
all suits of a civil nature at common law or in
Page 260 U. S. 272
equity, . . . where the matter in controversy exceeds, exclusive
of interest and costs, the sum or value of three thousand dollars,
and (a) arises under the Constitution or laws of the United States,
or treaties made, or which shall be made, under their authority, or
(b) is between citizens of different states. . . ."
This provision covers two distinct classes of suits. In one, the
distinctive feature consists in the fact that the suit arises under
the Constitution, or a law or treaty, of the United States, the
citizenship of the parties not being an element, while in the
other, the distinctive feature consists in the fact that the
parties are citizens of different states, the particular basis or
ground of the suit not being an element. This suit was within the
first class, and, the requisite amount being involved, it came
within the general jurisdiction of the district courts as defined
by § 24.
Section 51 deals with the venue of suits begun in those courts
and provides, subject to exceptions not material here, that
". . . 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."
This restriction, as repeatedly has been held, does not affect
the general jurisdiction of a district court over a particular
cause, but merely establishes a personal privilege of the
defendant, which he may insist on, or may waive at his election,
and does waive, where suit is brought in a district other than the
one specified, if he enters an appearance without claiming his
privilege.
Central Trust Co. v. McGeorge, 151 U.
S. 129;
Interior Construction, & Impro. Co. v.
Gibney, 160 U. S. 217;
In re
Moore,
Page 260 U. S. 273
209 U. S. 490,
209 U. S. 501;
United States v. Hvoslef, 237 U. S.
1,
237 U. S. 12;
Camp v. Gress, 250 U. S. 308,
250 U. S.
311.
It therefore cannot be affirmed broadly that this suit could not
have been brought against the New York Central Company in the
District Court for the Northern District of Ohio, but only that it
could not have been brought and maintained in that court over a
seasonable objection by the company to being sued there. And the
inability of the court to proceed with the cause in the presence of
such an objection would not have resulted from any want of power to
entertain and determine such a suit between such parties if they
were before it, but only because the company declined to yield the
necessary jurisdiction of its person.
Macon Grocery Co. v.
Atlantic Coast Line R. Co., 215 U. S. 501,
215 U. S. 503,
215 U. S.
508.
Respecting the jurisdiction of the district courts on removal
from state courts, § 28 of the Judicial Code declares:
"Any suit of a civil nature at law or in equity, arising under
the Constitution or laws of the United States, or treaties made, or
which shall be made, under their authority, of which the district
courts of the United States are given original jurisdiction by this
title, which may now be pending or which may hereafter be brought,
in any state court, may be removed by the defendant or defendants
therein to the district court of the United States for the proper
district. Any other suit of a civil nature at law or in equity, of
which the district courts of the United States are given
jurisdiction by this title, and which are now pending or which may
hereafter be brought, in any state court, may be removed into the
district court of the United States for the proper district by the
defendant or defendants therein, being nonresidents of that state.
. . ."
The next section (29) provides that the removal shall be "into
the district court to be held in the district where
Page 260 U. S. 274
such suit is pending," and § 53 provides that, where the
district is separated into distinct divisions, the removal shall be
into the district court "in the division in which the county is
situated from which the removal is made."
Shortly after the original enactment of the removal provisions
now embodied in §§ 28 and 29, the meaning of the words
"the proper district," found in § 28, was drawn in question,
and the courts, on examining the entire statute, very generally
reached the conclusion that the words mean the district which
includes the county or place where the suit is pending at the time
of the removal. Subject to exceptional departures soon disapproved,
that view has prevailed ever since, [
Footnote 2] and we regard it as obviously right.
From what has been said, it seems plainly to follow that this
suit was removable and that the removal was to the District Court
for the proper district. But the plaintiff insists that this view
does not give due effect to the clause in § 28, "of which the
district courts of the United States are given original
jurisdiction," and the provision in § 51 respecting the place
of suit or venue. These, it is argued, show that removability is
not to be determined by inquiring merely whether the particular
suit is one of which § 24 says the district courts "shall have
original jurisdiction," but by inquiring also whether it is one
which under § 51 could be brought, over the defendant's
objection, in the district court for the particular district within
which
Page 260 U. S. 275
it is pending in a state court. The argument means, and counsel
for plaintiff so claim, that a suit arising under the Constitution,
or a law or treaty, of the United States and brought in a state
court within a particular federal district is removable if the
defendant be an inhabitant of that district, but not if he be an
inhabitant of some district in another state -- in other words,
that, in respect of the right to remove such a suit, the statute
discriminates against defendants who are inhabitants of other
states and in favor of those who are inhabitants of the state and
district where the suit is pending. We think the contention runs
counter to both the letter and spirit of the statute.
Section 24 contains a typical grant of original jurisdiction to
the district courts in general of "all suits" in the classes
falling within its descriptive terms, save certain suits by
assignees of particular choses in action. Section 51 does not
withdraw any suit from that grant, but merely regulates the place
of suit, its purpose being to save defendants from inconveniences
to which they might be subjected if they could be compelled to
answer in any district, or wherever found. Like similar state
statutes, it accords to defendants a privilege which they may, and
not infrequently do, waive.
Coming to the removal section (28), it is apparent that the
clause "of which the district courts of the United States are given
original jurisdiction" refers to the jurisdiction conferred on the
district courts in general, for it speaks of them in the plural.
That it does not refer to the venue provision in § 51 is
apparent first because that provision does not except or take any
suit from the general jurisdiction conferred by § 24; next,
because there could be no purpose in extending to removals the
personal privilege accorded to defendants by § 51, since
removals are had only at the instance of defendants, and lastly
Page 260 U. S. 276
because the venue on removal is specially dealt with and fixed
by § 29.
There are still other reasons for thinking the venue provision
of § 51 has no bearing on removals. First, its own words
confine it to suits begun in the district courts, and, next, it
cannot be regarded as limiting the right of removal without
disregarding the plain import of § 28. That section provides
for the removal of suits falling within any one of several classes,
and declares who shall have the right to remove them. As to the
first class, which comprises suits arising under the Constitution
or a law or treaty of the United States, the right is given to the
defendant or defendants without any qualification, while as to the
other classes, the right is given to the defendant or defendants if
he or they be nonresidents of the state. Evidently the question of
what, if any, limitation in that regard should be attached to the
right was considered when the section was in process of enactment,
and was dealt with therein to the extent that Congress deemed a
limitation advisable. Of course, the omission of such a limitation
as to suits of the first class, when contrasted with the express
imposition of one as to suits of the other classes, means that
Congress intended there should be none as to the former.
Prior to the adoption of the Judicial Code, with its present
arrangement of sections, the jurisdictional provisions of § 24
and the venue provision of § 51 constituted the first section
of the Act of August 13, 1888, c. 866, 25 Stat. 443, the
jurisdictional provisions preceding the other. The removal
provision of § 28, with the clause, "of which the Circuit
Courts [
Footnote 3] of the
United States are given original jurisdiction," constituted the
second section of the same
Page 260 U. S. 277
act. Speaking of that act, and particularly of the meaning of
the clause just quoted, this Court on different occasions said the
clause referred "to the first part of § 1 by which
jurisdiction is conferred, and not to the clause relating to the
district in which suit may be brought," and that "the clause
vesting jurisdiction should not be confounded with the clause
determining the particular courts in which the jurisdiction must be
exercised."
Mexican National R. Co. v. Davidson,
157 U. S. 201,
157 U. S. 208;
Sweeney v. Carter Oil Co., 199 U.
S. 252,
199 U. S. 259.
There were also many decisions to the same effect in the Circuit
Courts. [
Footnote 4]
True, that view was departed from in the case of
Ex parte
Wisner, 203 U. S. 449,
where the provision relating to the district in which suit may be
brought was treated as strictly jurisdictional, not avoidable even
by the consent of both parties, and applicable to removals. But
much that was said in that of
In re Moore, 209 U.
S. 490, where the Court returned to its former view,
saying (p.
209 U. S.
501):
"The contention is that, as this action could not have been
originally brought in the Circuit Court for the Eastern District of
Missouri by reason of the last provision quoted from § 1, it
cannot under § 2 be removed to that court, as the authorized
removal is only of those cases of which by the prior section
original jurisdiction is given to the United States Circuit Courts.
But this ignores the distinction between the general description of
the jurisdiction of the United States courts and the clause
naming
Page 260 U. S. 278
the particular district in which an action must be brought."
That no change in the meaning of the Act of 1888 was intended or
wrought by the mere rearrangement of its sections or parts as
incorporated into the Judicial Code is shown by §§ 294
and 295 of the Code.
See Brown v. Fletcher, 235 U.
S. 589,
235 U. S. 597;
United States v. Cress, 243 U. S. 316,
243 U. S. 331;
J. Homer Fritch, Inc. v. United States, 248 U.
S. 458,
248 U. S.
463.
The plaintiff cites the cases of
Tennessee v. Bank of
Commerce, 152 U. S. 454,
Cochran v. Montgomery County, 199 U.
S. 260, and
In re Winn, 213 U.
S. 458, as holding that, to be removable into a
particular federal court, a suit must be one which as of right
could have been brought originally in that court. But those cases
are not fairly susceptible of that interpretation. In each, a right
of removal was claimed and was denied. In the first and third, the
right was claimed on the ground that the suit was one arising under
the laws of the United States, and the denial was put on the ground
that the plaintiff's statement of his cause of action, apart from
any anticipation of defenses, did not show that it arose under
those laws. Because of this, it was said in both cases that the
suit could not have been brought originally in the Circuit Court,
and therefore could not be removed into it. In the second case, the
right was claimed on the ground of diversity of citizenship coupled
with prejudice and local influence, and the denial was put on the
ground that the requisite diversity of citizenship did not exist,
the plaintiff and one of the defendants being citizens of the same
state. Thus, the turning point in each case was that the suit was
not one of which the Circuit Courts were given original
jurisdiction -- in other words, that it could not have been brought
in any of them, and not that there was any special obstacle to the
exercise of jurisdiction by the particular one to which removal was
sought. The opinions
Page 260 U. S. 279
in the cases show that the real holding was that the suit was
not removable, because not within the original jurisdiction
conferred on the Circuit Courts in general. Indeed, in the second
case, it was said to be the established rule that "those suits only
can be removed of which the Circuit Courts are given original
jurisdiction," and the first case was cited as so holding.
199 U. S. 199
U.S. 269.
We conclude that, as the present suit was one arising under the
laws of the United States, of which the district courts are given
original jurisdiction by § 24, the defendants were entitled
under §§ 28 and 29 to remove it from the state court
where it was begun into the district court for that district,
regardless of their citizenship or places of inhabitance, and
therefore that the motion to remand was rightly denied.
In presenting this question, counsel have treated § 51 of
the Judicial Code as regulating the district in which suits under
the antitrust laws may be brought, and our discussion of the
question has proceeded on that line. To avoid any misapprehension,
it should be observed that § 12 of the Clayton Act (38 Stat.
736) alters that venue provision in respect of such suits, but not
in a way which is material here. Like § 51, the special
provision in § 12 does not affect the general jurisdiction of
the district courts, but merely establishes a personal privilege
which a defendant is free to waive.
Refusal to direct special service under § 57 of the
Judicial Code on New York Central Company and other
defendants.
This section is, in terms, restricted to suits "to enforce any
legal or equitable lien upon or claim to, or to remove any
incumbrance or lien or cloud upon the title to, real or personal
property" located within the district of suit or partly within that
district and partly within another district "within the same
state." As to such a suit, it provides that, where a defendant is
not an inhabitant of
Page 260 U. S. 280
the district, nor found within the same, and does not
voluntarily appear, the court may make an order directing such
defendant to appear and plead by a day certain, to be fixed in the
order; that personal service of the order, if practicable, shall be
made on such defendant wherever found, and, if that mode of service
be not practicable, service may be had by publication; that the
order shall also be served on the person in possession or charge of
the property, if any there be, and that, after the order has been
properly served, the court may proceed with the cause, but with the
qualification that, as against any such defendant not appearing,
the adjudication shall affect only the property which shall have
been the subject of the suit and so located as to be under the
court's jurisdiction therein.
It has been doubted that this section applies to suits begun in
state courts and removed into federal courts, [
Footnote 5] but this question was not noticed in
argument, and we find its decision is not essential here.
Obviously the section is confined to suits which are local in
the sense of relating directly to specific property, real or
personal, within the district of suit or partly therein and partly
in another district of the same state. This suit was not within
that category. It was not brought to enforce a claim to or lien
upon specific property so located, nor to cancel an incumbrance or
lien thereon, nor to remove a cloud upon the title. On the
contrary, as the original bill plainly disclosed, it was brought to
enjoin two railroad companies -- one having lines both within and
without the state in which the suit was begun, and the other having
lines without that state -- from consolidating, along with nine
other companies, into a single corporation. Such a suit is
essentially
in personam, and strictly transitory, and is
not made
Page 260 U. S. 281
any the less so by including in the bill, as was done here, an
incidental prayer that the consolidation be annulled if consummated
pending the suit. So, tested by the original bill, this suit was
not one wherein special service could be had under § 57.
Denial of leave to file supplemental bill and make new
parties.
The original bill showed that the plaintiff was suing in its own
right as a stockholder in the New York Central and the Lake Shore
Companies to prevent loss and damage which it apprehended would
come to it as such stockholder if the consolidation were effected.
By the supplemental bill, proffered for filing eight months after
the suit was begun, the plaintiff sought, first, to show that, in
the meantime, the consolidation had been effected, that the
properties of the consolidating companies had been turned over to
the consolidated company, and that two mortgages had been executed
and delivered by the latter covering all the property received from
the Lake Shore Company; secondly, to change the character and
object of the suit in such way that the plaintiff would be suing in
the right and on behalf of the Lake Shore Company, of which it was
a stockholder, with the purpose (a) of having so much of that
company's property as was within that district freed from the claim
of the consolidated company, (b) of enforcing a restoration of that
part of the property to the Lake Shore Company, and (c) of having
the two mortgages executed by the consolidated company pronounced
void and of no effect as to that part of the property; and,
thirdly, to bring in various new parties as defendants.
An application for leave to file a supplemental bill is
addressed to the discretion of the court, and the ruling thereon
will not be disturbed on appeal unless the discretion has been
abused. Under Equity Rule 34, the office of a supplemental bill is
to introduce matters occurring
Page 260 U. S. 282
after the filing of the original bill, or not then known to the
plaintiff. Much more was attempted by the supplemental bill
tendered in this instance. By it, as we have shown, the plaintiff
sought to shift the right in which it was suing and to change the
character and object of the suit. Other matters also had a bearing
on the propriety of granting leave to file it. The railroad of the
Lake Shore Company extended from Buffalo, New York, to Chicago,
Illinois. Its maintenance and operation as a through line was a
matter of general concern. To dismember it might work a serious
disturbance of both public and private interests. If its inclusion
in the consolidation was unlawful, it was so in respect of the
entire line. The supplemental bill sought to deal with only a minor
part, and, if sustained, would result in restoring that part to the
Lake Shore Company, while leaving the major part with the
consolidated company. At a meeting of the stockholders of the Lake
Shore Company at which 459,461 shares were represented, the holders
of 459,379 shares had voted to ratify the consolidation. The
plaintiff held but 5 shares, and had purchased these knowing that
the directors had signed the agreement for the consolidation two
months before. The ownership of these shares was put forward as
entitling the plaintiff to proceed in the right of the Lake Shore
Company. No other shareholder was seeking to join in the
proceeding. Under the terms of the consolidation, the plaintiff
could surrender its shares and take five times their par value in
stock of the consolidated company, or, under a supplemental
arrangement, it could surrender its shares and receive five times
their par value in cash -- a sum not alleged to be less than the
actual or market value. The shareholders represented by the Read
committee availed themselves of the latter alternative. The circuit
court of appeals, considering all these matters, concluded that the
action of the district court in refusing leave to file the
supplemental bill was
Page 260 U. S. 283
within the limits of a reasonable discretion, and should not be
disturbed. We concur in that conclusion.
Dismissal of original bill on motions of Lake Shore
Company.
Insofar as the allegations of fact in the bill need be noticed
here, they may be summarized as follows: the railroad of the New
York Central Company extended from New York City to Buffalo, and
there connected with the Lake Shore Company's line from Buffalo to
Chicago. Continuously since 1898, the New York Central Company had
owned more than a majority of the stock of the Lake Shore Company
and the Michigan Central Company. For several years, the Lake Shore
Company had been, and it still was, the owner of more than a
majority of the stock of the Nickel Plate, the Big Four, the Lake
Erie, and the Ohio Central Companies. The railroad of the Michigan
Central Company and those of the several companies, a majority of
whose stock was owned by the Lake Shore Company, were all parallel
to and potential competitors of some part or all of the Lake Shore
Company's line. All of the lines named were engaged in both
intrastate and interstate commerce. The New York Central Company's
interest in and control over the Lake Shore and the Michigan
Central Companies had been acquired and was held with a view to
suppressing competition in intrastate and interstate transportation
and to restraining such commerce. In furtherance of that purpose,
the directors of the New York Central, the Lake Shore, and nine
other companies (the nine were not named in the bill) recently had
formulated and signed an agreement for the consolidation of the
eleven companies into a single corporation. The agreement called
for a ratification by stockholders' meetings. It was ratified over
the plaintiff's protest at a meeting of the stockholders of the New
York Central Company. The stockholders of the Lake Shore Company
were intending to act on it at a meeting called
Page 260 U. S. 284
for an early day, and would ratify it over the plaintiff's
opposition unless prevented from doing so by an injunction. Out of
2,555,810 outstanding shares in the New York Central Company, the
plaintiff was the owner of 300, which it had purchased two months
before the agreement for the consolidation was signed by the
directors, and out of 499,961 outstanding shares in the Lake Shore
Company, the plaintiff was the owner of 5, which it had purchased
two months after the directors signed the agreement.
The bill prayed that the New York Central Company be enjoined
from voting its shares in the Lake Shore Company in favor of the
consolidation agreement, or in any other way, or for any other
purpose, that the Lake Shore Company be enjoined from permitting
the New York Central Company to vote its shares in the former at
any meeting of the stockholders, and that the Lake Shore Company be
also enjoined from in any way entering into or consummating the
proposed consolidation. Other incidental relief was prayed, but it
need not be noticed here.
Two motions to dismiss were interposed by the Lake Shore Company
and sustained by the district court -- one before and the other
after the first appeal to the circuit court of appeals. On that
appeal the circuit court of appeals upheld the ruling on the first
motion as to part of the bill and reversed it as to the remainder.
The second motion was directed against all that remained of the
bill, and advanced objections thereto which might have been, but
were not, urged or considered on the first appeal. The district
court, regarding these as well taken, sustained the second motion,
and, on the next appeal, the circuit court of appeals approved that
ruling. These motions gave rise to several distinct questions which
we shall take up separately.
Effect of decision on first appeal.
The plaintiff takes the position that the partial reversal on
the first appeal amounted to an adjudication of the
Page 260 U. S. 285
sufficiency of so much of the bill as fell within the reversal
and that the district court could not thereafter treat its
sufficiency as an open question. This position is not tenable. The
reversal was put on the ground that the district court had erred in
holding in respect of that part of the bill that the New York
Central Company was an indispensable party. Whether that part was
rightly subject to other objections, such as afterwards were
advanced in the second motion to dismiss, was neither discussed nor
decided on that appeal. The opinions delivered on the two appeals
make this plain. In that situation, it was quite admissible for the
district court, after the case was returned to it, to examine and
pass on the objections presented in the second motion, and was
likewise admissible for the circuit court of appeals to consider
them on the second appeal.
Mutual Life Insurance Co. v.
Hill, 193 U. S. 551,
193 U. S. 553.
And see Messinger v. Anderson, 225 U.
S. 436,
225 U. S.
444.
Was the New York Central Company an indispensable
party?
As to so much of the bill as sought to enjoin the New York
Central Company from voting its shares in the Lake Shore Company
and to enjoin the latter from permitting it to vote them, we think
it is obvious that the New York Central Company was an
indispensable party, and that, with it neither appearing nor
reached by any effective process, no other course was open than to
dismiss that part of the bill.
Minnesota v. Northern Securities
Co., 184 U. S. 199,
184 U. S. 235,
184 U. S. 246;
Talbot J. Taylor & Co. v. Southern Pacific Co., 122 F.
147, 152, 154.
As to so much of the bill as sought to enjoin the Lake Shore
Company from entering or consummating the proposed consolidation,
the New York Central Company plainly was not an indispensable
party. Its stockholding interest in the Lake Shore Company did not
make its presence essential, its status in this regard being
merely
Page 260 U. S. 286
that of the stockholders in general. Nor did its participation
in the agreement for the consolidation give it any right which
required that it be brought in. At best, the agreement was not to
be effective unless and until ratified by the stockholders of the
several companies. It had not been ratified by the stockholders of
the Lake Shore Company, and they were under no obligation to ratify
it.
Was plaintiff entitled to sue under the Sherman Anti-Trust
Act and the Clayton Act, and, if so, could that right be exercised
through a suit brought in a state court?
In the part of the bill assailed in the second motion to
dismiss, as in the bill as a whole, the plaintiff based its right
to relief by injunction primarily on the ground that the proposed
consolidation would contravene the Sherman Anti-Trust Act, c. 647,
26 Stat. 209, and the Clayton Act, c. 323, 38 Stat. 730, c. 323,
and secondarily on the ground that it would be contrary to the
constitution and laws of Ohio and other states.
As respects the Sherman Anti-Trust Act as it stood before it was
supplemented by the Clayton Act, this Court has heretofore
determined that the civil remedies specially provided in the act
for actual and threatened violations of its provisions were
intended to be exclusive, and that those remedies consisted only of
(a) suits for injunctions brought by the United States in the
public interest under § 4, and (b) private actions to recover
damages brought under § 7.
Minnesota v. Northern
Securities Co., 194 U. S. 48,
194 U. S. 71;
Wilder Manufacturing Co. v. Corn Products Refining Co.,
236 U. S. 165,
236 U. S. 174;
Paine Lumber Co. v. Neal, 244 U.
S. 459,
244 U. S. 471;
Geddes v. Anaconda Mining Co., 254 U.
S. 590,
254 U. S. 593.
The present suit for an injunction, brought by a private
corporation in its own interest, was not within those remedies, and
so could not be maintained under that act standing alone.
Page 260 U. S. 287
That act was supplemented by the Clayton Act, particularly by
its sixteenth § reading as follows:
"That any person, firm, corporation, or association shall be
entitled to sue for and have injunctive relief, in any court of the
United States having jurisdiction over the parties, against
threatened loss or damage by a violation of the antitrust laws,
including sections two, three, seven and eight of this act, when
and under the same conditions and principles as injunctive relief
against threatened conduct that will cause loss or damage is
granted by courts of equity, under the rules governing such
proceedings, and upon the execution of proper bond against damages
for an injunction improvidently granted and a showing that the
danger of irreparable loss or damages is immediate, a preliminary
injunction may issue:
Provided, that nothing herein
contained shall be construed to entitle any person, firm,
corporation, or association, except the United States, to bring
suit in equity for injunctive relief against any common carrier
subject to the provisions of the act to regulate commerce, approved
February fourth, eighteen hundred and eighty-seven, in respect of
any matter subject to the regulation, supervision, or other
jurisdiction of the Interstate Commerce Commission."
This section undoubtedly enlarges the remedies provided in the
Sherman Anti-Trust Act to the extent of enabling persons and
corporations threatened with loss or damage through violations of
that act to maintain suits to enjoin such violations, save in the
instances specified in the proviso. This right to sue, however, is
granted in terms which show that it is to be exercised only in a
"court of the United States." This suit was brought in a state
court, and, insofar as its purpose was to enjoin a violation of the
Sherman Anti-Trust Act, that court could not entertain it. The
situation was the same in respect of the purpose to enjoin a
violation of the Clayton Act.
Page 260 U. S. 288
When a cause is removed from a state court into a federal court,
the latter takes it as it stood in the former. A want of
jurisdiction in the state court is not cured by the removal, but
may be asserted after it is consummated.
Cain v. Commercial
Publishing Co., 232 U. S. 124,
232 U. S. 131
et seq.; Cowley v. Northern Pacific R. Co., 159 U.
S. 569,
159 U. S. 583;
De Lima v. Bidwell, 182 U. S. 1,
182 U. S. 174;
Lambert Run Coal Co. v. Baltimore & Ohio R. Co.,
258 U. S. 377.
It follows that so much of the bill as based the right to relief
on asserted violations of the Sherman Anti-Trust Act and the
Clayton Act was rightly dismissed, but the dismissal, being for
want of jurisdiction, should have been without prejudice.
Did the bill show a right to relief in equity because of
infractions of state constitutions and laws?
This branch of the suit was loosely set forth, and, as was
observed by both courts below, there is some ground for thinking
the references to state constitutions and laws were merely
makeweights. With other matters eliminated, this branch, at best,
was left in a state of relative uncertainty. After commenting on
this, the circuit court of appeals said, with ample warrant (269 F.
239):
"We next observe that the consolidation sought to be enjoined
was only a new formulation of the situation which had been existing
for many years. It is expressly averred that the obnoxious control
of parallel and competing lines had been accomplished, and for many
years maintained, by stock ownership and control. It does not seem
to be claimed that the proposed consolidation would create any
restraints on competition that did not already exist. We find no
definite statement that what was proposed would be obnoxious to any
statute or constitutional provision which did not relate to
competition between parallel lines, excepting the claim that the
proposed consolidation would increase the capital stock and debts
above
Page 260 U. S. 289
the permitted limit. It is probable also from the silence of the
bill that, during all these years, the public authorities of the
various states have rested content and have not indicated any
belief that public policy was being violated, and it may likewise
seemingly be inferred that no public authorities are now objecting
to the proposed consolidation, but that, on the contrary, they are
all content."
"Further, we notice that plaintiff owns only one one-thousandth
of 1 percent of the capital stock, that no other shareholder has
accepted its invitation to join in preventing the imminent
irreparable injury, and that this interest plaintiff bought after
the consolidation contract was made. He seems to be a volunteer,
rather than a conscript. We have, then, a case where a private
suitor, with a minimum of ponderable interest and with no
disposition to beware of entrance to a quarrel, is seeking relief
upon the sole ground that the public policy of the state is being
violated, and where the state authorities have long acquiesced and
do acquiesce in any violation there may be. Under such
circumstances, the court of equity will be strict in requiring the
plaintiff to point out with precision and certainty in what
respects the law is about to be violated and to show, clearly and
positively, substantial and irreparable injury to its private
rights. A measure of imperfection in pleading that might well be
overlooked in the ordinary controversy should not be disregarded in
such a case as this."
We think this branch of the suit should be tested by the rule of
pleading there suggested, and that, when this is done, it is
apparent that a right to equitable relief was not shown.
Our conclusion is that the motions to dismiss were rightly
sustained. The circuit court of appeals qualified the dismissal by
making it without prejudice as to all parts of the bill save one.
We have indicated that the qualification should have included that
part.
Page 260 U. S. 290
The decree is accordingly modified by making the dismissal
without prejudice as to all parts of the bill, and, as thus
modified, it is
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
See Shaw v. Quincy Mining Co., 145 U.
S. 444.
[
Footnote 2]
See Ex parte State Insurance
Co., 18 Wall. 417;
Hess v. Reynolds,
113 U. S. 73;
Knowlton v. Empire Spring Co., 14 Fed.Cas. p. 796;
Hyde v. Victoria Land Co., 125 F. 970;
Rubber &
Celluloid Harness Trimming Co. v. Whiting-Adams Co., 210 F.
393, 395;
St. John v. Taintor, 220 F. 457;
Pavick v.
Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry. Co., 225 F. 395;
Eddy v. Chicago & Northwestern Ry. Co., 226 F. 120;
New York Coal Co. v. Sunday Creek Co., 230 F. 295;
Ostrom v. Edison, 244 F. 228;
Matarazzo v.
Hustis, 256 F. 882, 885, 892.
[
Footnote 3]
At that period, the jurisdiction here discussed was lodged in
the Circuit Courts. Afterwards they were abolished by the Judicial
Code, and the same jurisdiction was lodged in the district
courts.
[
Footnote 4]
Fales v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul R. Co., 32
F. 673;
Vinal v. Continental Construction Co., 34 F. 228;
Wilson v. Western Union Telegraph Co., 34 F. 561, 564;
Cooley v. McArthur, 35 F. 372;
Kansas City &
Terminal Co. v. Interstate Lumber Co., 37 F. 3;
Baltimore
& Ohio R. Co. v. Meyers, 62 F. 367, 372;
Duncan v.
Associated Press, 81 F. 417;
Rome Petroleum & Iron Co.
v. Hughes Specialty Co., 130 F. 585.
[
Footnote 5]
See Adams v. Heckscher, 80 F. 742, 744.