1. A state court receiver who, as such, had taken possession of
personal property (cattle) afterwards found in another state in
possession of another, is entitled to sue for repossession in that
state, without an ancillary appointment. P.
290 U. S.
61.
2. The principle upon which the receiver may do this is one of
law, and not of comity. P.
290 U. S. 63.
3. Assuming, but not deciding, that, in a suit in a federal
court in Idaho under the so-called claim and delivery statute of
that state, property held by a sheriff under process issued by a
state court cannot be repossessed, nevertheless the value of the
property and damages may be recovered. P.
290 U. S.
64.
2 F.2d 728 reversed.
Certiorari, 289 U.S. 717, to review a judgment affirming a
judgment of nonsuit in an action brought in the District Court by a
foreign receiver under the Idaho claim and delivery statute.
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an action under the Idaho "claim and delivery" statute
brought by petitioner in the Federal District Court for the
District of Idaho. The complaint alleges that petitioner is a
resident and inhabitant of the State of Oregon, and is the duly
qualified receiver of the property which is the subject matter of
the action, having been so appointed by an Oregon state circuit
court; that, following
Page 290 U. S. 60
his appointment and qualification, and prior to March, 1931, as
such receiver, he took into his possession certain designated
cattle, and has ever since been entitled to the immediate and
exclusive possession thereof; that, about the 1st day of July,
1931, the respondent took possession of the cattle in the State of
Idaho by virtue of a writ of attachment; that respondent has
refused to return said cattle to petitioner, although demand
therefor was made prior to the commencement of the action. Judgment
was prayed to the effect that petitioner is the owner and entitled
to the immediate possession of the cattle, and in lieu thereof that
he recover from respondent the sum of $5,000.
The answer, among other things, denies that petitioner took
possession of the cattle as alleged, or any of them, and avers
affirmatively that respondent, in his official capacity, seized the
cattle upon a writ of execution duly issued by an Idaho state
district court.
The case was tried before the Federal District Court and a jury.
Petitioner offered evidence tending to show that he had taken
actual possession of the cattle in the State of Oregon, and that
the cattle thereafter were found in Idaho and there seized by
respondent. At the conclusion of petitioner's case, respondent
moved for nonsuit and dismissal upon the grounds: (1) that the
proof shows that plaintiff had no capacity to sue in the courts of
Idaho, since he had neither title to the property under the Oregon
law or the order of the court appointing him, nor actual possession
thereof, either in the State of Oregon or in the State of Idaho;
(2) that an action of replevin will not lie in a United states
court against a sheriff to take property from the possession of a
state court. A third ground was urged, which we do not consider. It
is without merit, and is not pressed here. The court granted the
motion, saying "that the proof is insufficient to initiate the
liability on this hearing."
Page 290 U. S. 61
1. Upon appeal to the Circuit Court of Appeals, that court,
without considering other assignments of error, affirmed the
judgment upon the ground that a receiver appointed in a state court
is not entitled to sue in a foreign jurisdiction to repossess
cattle which, after being put in charge of his agent, cross over
the boundary line into a foreign jurisdiction. Although respondent
contends otherwise, the court below reached that conclusion in the
face of an assumption that actual possession of the cattle had been
taken by petitioner in Oregon. The language of the court
follows:
"Granting the soundness of the contention that the receiver was
entitled to the undisturbed possession of the property, and
assuming that he actually had such possession [italics
supplied], and granting or assuming that he had the power to sue
locally in replevin for an unlawful interference with his right of
possession, nevertheless such right of possession did not vest him
with the title necessary to sue in the court below without an
ancillary appointment therein, and he was not entitled to bring the
suit as a matter of comity."
62 F.2d 728, 730.
Upon the same assumption, namely, that the receiver had reduced
the property to his actual possession in the State of Oregon, we
reach a different conclusion.
The general rule undoubtedly is that an ordinary chancery
receiver, having no other authority than that arising from his
appointment as such, cannot as of right maintain an action in a
state other than that in which he was appointed. The decision in
Booth v.
Clark, 17 How. 322, to that effect has been
uniformly followed by this Court.
See, for example, Great
Western Mining Co. v. Harris, 198 U.
S. 561;
Sterrett v. Second National Bank,
248 U. S. 73. The
very terms in which the rule is expressed, however, clearly
recognize that, where the receiver has "other authority than that
arising from his
Page 290 U. S. 62
appointment as such," he may, under some circumstances, maintain
an action outside the state of his appointment. And so it
definitely has been held.
The foreign receiver may maintain such a suit, so far at least
as the federal courts are concerned, where title to the property in
question has been vested in him by conveyance or statute. In
Bernheimer v. Converse, 206 U. S. 516, it
was held that a receiver might sue in a foreign jurisdiction to
collect upon the statutory liability of stockholders of a
corporation where the statute of the state conferred the right upon
the receiver as
quasi-assignee. Following that decision,
this Court, in
Converse v. Hamilton, 224 U.
S. 243,
224 U. S. 256
et seq., while reiterating the rule laid down in
Booth
v. Clark, supra, pointed out that the receiver suing in the
Hamilton case was not merely an ordinary chancery
receiver, but much more; that, under the laws of the state of his
appointment, he became a
quasi-assignee, vested with the
rights of the creditors against the stockholders, and charged with
the enforcement of those rights in the courts of the state and
elsewhere; that his right to maintain an action in another state
properly could not be denied as presenting a question only of
comity unaffected by the full faith and credit clause of the
federal Constitution. The case involved the right of a receiver of
an insolvent Minnesota corporation to maintain a suit in Wisconsin
against two stockholders to enforce an asserted double liability
imposed by the Minnesota statute. The Wisconsin court refused to
entertain the suit, holding it to be a matter of comity, but this
Court, denying that view, reversed on the ground that thereby the
laws of Minnesota and the judicial proceedings of that state had
not been accorded the faith and credit to which they were entitled
under the Federal Constitution.
In the case just dealt with, and in other cases where the
receivership property has been assigned to the receiver by
Page 290 U. S. 63
its owner, the suit is brought not strictly in his capacity as
receiver, by virtue of his appointment in another state, but in his
capacity as assignee. High, Receivers (4th Ed.) § 244. His
designation as receiver, etc., in the title of the cause may be
regarded as
descriptio personae merely.
Coming immediately to the present case, the authorities, federal
and state, are in practical accord to the effect that, where the
receiver appointed in one state has taken possession of property
which thereafter is found and seized upon process in another state,
the receiver may maintain an action in the latter state to recover
possession or for other appropriate relief.
The Willamette
Valley, 66 F. 565, 567;
Hopkins v. Lancaster, 254
F.190-192;
Wilkinson v. Culver, 25 F. 639;
Jenkins v.
Purcell, 29 App.D.C. 209, 215;
Lyon v. Russell, 41
App.D.C. 554, 559;
Pond v. Cooke, 45 Conn. 126, 132;
Robertson v. Staed, 135 Mo. 135, 137, 36 S.W. 610;
Woodhull v. Trust Co., 11 N.D. 157, 163, 164, 90 N.W. 795;
Cagill v. Wooldridge, 67 Tenn. 580, 582-583. Other cases
might be cited to the same effect. The only decision which we have
found definitely to the contrary is
Humphreys v. Hopkins,
81 Cal. 551, 22 P. 892, but in which there is a convincing
dissenting opinion in harmony with the general current of
authority.
In some of the cases cited, the courts seem to have put their
determination in favor of the receiver upon the ground of comity.
With this view, however, we do not agree. It is a matter of right,
as this Court has said.
Converse v. Hamilton, supra.
The true rule is stated in
Robertson v. Staed, supra,
by the Supreme Court of Missouri, where it was held that, where the
receiver has taken possession of property in pursuance of his
appointment, a special property is thereby vested in him which
enables him to maintain a suit for the recovery of the property in
a foreign jurisdiction, and that the principle upon which that may
be done is "one of law, and not of comity."
Page 290 U. S. 64
2. The other ground upon which respondent asked a dismissal of
the action by the trial court is that an action of replevin "will
not lie in a United states court against a sheriff to take property
from the possession of a state court." Respondent, in support of
that contention, relies on
Freeman v.
Howe, 24 How. 450, and later cases decided by this
Court following that decision. It was held in the
Freeman
case that replevin would not lie in a state court against a United
states marshal who held property seized by him under process issued
by a federal court -- this for the reason, as stated in
Covell
v. Heyman, 111 U. S. 176,
111 U. S. 179,
that such property is in the custody of the law and within the
exclusive jurisdiction of the court, from which the process has
issued, for the purposes of the writ; that to disturb this
possession by process from a state court would be to invade the
jurisdiction of the federal court by whose command it is held.
We do not stop to consider whether this rule is applicable to
the present case, where the property is in the hands of a sheriff
under process issued by a state court, and the action to recover
possession, normally within the exclusive jurisdiction of the state
courts, is brought in a federal court on the sole ground of
diversity of citizenship.
* We find it
unnecessary to do so for the reasons now to be stated.
The effect of the Idaho so-called claim and delivery statute is
to abolish the common law action of replevin and substitute
therefor the statutory action. Under the statute, the action will
lie whether immediate possession be demanded or not. If immediate
delivery be claimed, an affidavit must be filed setting forth
certain facts, and a written undertaking in a prescribed form be
given. Here, petitioner filed no affidavit or undertaking, nor did
he seek
Page 290 U. S. 65
the immediate possession of the property. If, upon the trial, he
proves his case, the form of judgment prescribed by the statute is
for the possession of the property or the value thereof in case a
delivery cannot be had.
Bates v. Capital state Bank, 21
Idaho, 141, 149, 121 P. 561.
Respondent's position is based upon the view that, since a state
court cannot interfere with property held by a United states
marshal under process issued by a federal court, by parity of
reasoning, a federal court cannot interfere with property held by a
sheriff under process issued by a state court. Petitioner, making
no attempt to distinguish the one case from the other, in terms
neither concedes nor denies this view. He replies simply that,
under the Idaho statute, no conflict between the courts is
involved, for, since the sheriff's possession has not been and need
not be disturbed, there is no question of conflict of possession
before the court. He rests his case, in this respect, upon the
provision of the statute allowing judgment for the value of the
property where delivery cannot be had. In this aspect, we put aside
the question of interference with the jurisdiction of the state
court as not being really involved. If, upon a new trial,
petitioner and respondent unite in the view that a delivery cannot
be had, we perceive no reason why the trial court may not proceed
with the case upon that theory and dispose of it as one to recover
the value of the property and damages, and we hold accordingly.
Should a different situation be presented, it can be appropriately
dealt with when it arises. That, under the Idaho statute, the court
may thus dispose of the case when for any reason a delivery cannot
be had is a proposition which finds abundant support in the
decisions.
Boley v.
Griswold, 20 Wall. 486;
Erreca v. Meyer,
142 Cal. 308, 310, 75 P. 826;
Claudius v. Aguirre, 89 Cal.
501, 504
et seq., 26 P. 1077;
De Thomas v.
Withereby, 61 Cal. 92, 97;
Donovan v.
Page 290 U. S. 66
Aetna Indemnity Co., 10 Cal. App. 723, 727-729, 103 P.
365.
In
Porter v. Davidson, 62 F. 626, 629, a similar
conclusion was reached under a North Carolina statute. That court,
after stating the rule laid down in
Freeman v. Howe, supra,
Covell v. Heyman, supra, and other cases, held that these
decisions went only to the possession of the
res, and that
the remedy might be pursued against the sheriff for damages in any
court.
"The proceedings of the plaintiff in this case by which he took
from the possession of the sheriff the chattels levied on was
ancillary, not in any way affecting the merits of the original
case. That can go on without conflicting with any of the cases
quoted above."
The Court of Appeals did not consider the question whether
petitioner had made out a case of actual possession in Oregon. Nor
can we say from the very general words of the judge in granting
respondent's motion and in discharging the jury that this precise
question of fact was passed upon by the trial court. We therefore
do not consider it, but leave it to be disposed of in the further
proceedings which must be had in the District Court.
Judgments reversed, and cause remanded to the District Court for
further proceedings in conformity with this opinion.
Reversed.
* Compare Wise v. Jefferis,
51 F. 641; Gilman v.
Perkins, 7 F. 887;
Wood v. Weimar, 104 U.
S. 786.