1. The court first assuming jurisdiction over property may
maintain and exercise that jurisdiction to the exclusion of other
courts. P.
296 U. S.
477.
Page 296 U. S. 464
2. This principle governs the state and federal courts, and is
so applied by this Court as to insure harmony and cooperation
between them P.
296 U. S.
477.
3. The principle is not restricted to cases where property has
been actually seized under judicial process before a second suit is
instituted. It applies as well where suits are brought to marshal
assets, administer trusts, or liquidate estates, and in suits of a
similar nature, where, to give effect to its jurisdiction, the
court must control the property. P.
296 U. S.
477.
4. The jurisdiction granted to the District Court over suits by
the United States, Jud.Code, § 24(1); 28 U.S.C. 41, is not
exclusive, and the propriety of its exercise in a given case is
determined by the particular circumstances. P.
296 U. S.
479.
5. Upon the state courts, equally with the courts of the Union,
rests the obligation to guard and enforce every right secured by
the Constitution and laws of the United States whenever those
rights are involved in any suit or proceedings before them. P.
296 U. S.
479.
6. In intervening to present a claim in proceedings in a state
court, the United States is a voluntary actor, not a defendant. P.
296 U. S.
480.
7. Separate funds which had been deposited with the
Superintendent of Insurance of the New York by three Russian
insurance companies to qualify them for local business were
liquidated and administered by him, under direction of the state
court, for the satisfaction of local claims and of other claims
that had been filed with him. In two of the cases, this
administration was over, but the surpluses had, by order of court,
been deposited with local trust companies, and proceedings were
going on in the state court to determine the rights of other
creditors and shareholders. In the other case, the statutory
administration by the Superintendent was still in progress. In this
posture, the United States brought three suits in the federal court
against the three depositaries, respectively, in which it demanded
accountings for and delivery of the funds in their hands. Its bills
alleged that the companies had been dissolved and their assets
confiscated by the Russian Government, and that that Government, in
connection with its recognition by this one in 1933, had assigned
the property in controversy to the United States.
Held:
(1) That the statutory proceeding was essentially
in
rem, the Superintendent being virtually a receiver. P.
296 U. S.
475.
Page 296 U. S. 465
(2) In the other two cases, the proceedings in the state court
were
quasi in rem, control of the funds being essential to
the exercise of the court's jurisdiction to protect the rights of
claimants. The funds being already in the hands of depositaries
appointed by the court and subject to its direction, appointment of
receivers was unnecessary. P.
296 U. S.
476.
(3) The suits of the Government were not merely
in
personam to establish a right to share in property; their
object was to take the property from the depositaries and from the
control of the state court, and to vest it in the United States to
the exclusion of all those whose claims were being adjudicated in
the state proceedings. P.
296 U. S.
478.
(4) Whatever the effect of the recognition of the Russian
Government, it did not terminate the state proceedings. The state
court still had control of the property, and questions as to the
rights of the parties who were before it, or of those who might
come before it, were legal questions which that court had
jurisdiction to decide. P.
296 U. S. 478.
(5) The fact that the complainant in the federal court is the
United States does not justify a departure from the rule which
would otherwise be applicable. The United States is free to invoke
the jurisdiction of the state court for the determination of its
claims, and the decision by the state court of any federal question
which may be presented upon such an invocation may be reviewed by
this. Court, and thus all the questions which the Government seeks
to raise in these suits may be appropriately and finally decided.
Jud.Code, § 237; 28 U.S.C. 344. P.
296 U. S.
479.
(6) The claimants in the state proceedings are entitled to be
heard, and are indispensable parties to any proceeding for the
disposition of the property involved; convenient and orderly
administration of justice requires that the jurisdiction of the
state court should be respected. P.
296 U. S.
480.
77 F.2d 866, 880, 881, affirmed.
Certiorari to review decrees which affirmed in three cases
decrees of the District Court 10 F. Supp. 269, dismissing bills
brought by the United States for an accounting and delivery of
funds in the custody of the respondents.
Page 296 U. S. 470
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE HUGHES delivered the opinion of the Court.
The United States, claiming to be the owner of certain funds
which originally had belonged to Russian insurance companies,
brought these suits for accounting and delivery. The companies had
made deposits with the superintendent of insurance of the State of
New York in order to obtain authority to transact business within
the state. The complaints alleged that, in 1917 or 1918, the
companies had been dissolved, and their properties had been
"confiscated and appropriated," by decrees of the Russian State.
The claim of the United States is based upon an assignment made by
the Russian Government, on November 16, 1933, in connection with
the recognition of that Government. Defendants hold the funds in
question under orders and judgments of the state court in New York
providing for liquidation and distribution.
In each case, defendants moved to dismiss the complaint for
insufficiency, and, in opposition to complainant's motion for an
interlocutory injunction restraining distribution, set up the
proceedings of the state court. The District Court denied the
motions for injunction and dismissed the complaints upon the
grounds (1) that the Russian decrees, by reason of their
confiscatory character, were ineffective to vest in the Russian
Government the title to these funds situated in New York, and (2)
that these funds were not covered by the assignment to the United
States. 10 F. Supp. 269. The Circuit Court of Appeals held that the
jurisdiction of the state court should be respected, and in that
view affirmed the decrees of the District
Page 296 U. S. 471
Court. 77 F.2d 866, 880, 881. Because of the nature and
importance of the questions presented, we granted writs of
certiorari, October 14, 1935.
The special facts of the three cases are these:
(1) The case against the Bank of New York & Trust Company
(No.195) relates to the deposit made by the Moscow Fire Insurance
Company. By order of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, in
1925, the superintendent of insurance was appointed liquidator of
the United States branch of the company pursuant to § 63 of
the state insurance law, and creditors were enjoined from pursuing
their legal remedies against the assets so sequestered. The
superintendent of insurance took possession of the assets and
proceeded in the course of liquidation to satisfy the claims of
domestic creditors and policyholders. There remained a substantial
surplus.
Similar results followed the superintendent's liquidation of the
branches of other Russian companies, and the disposition of the
surplus assets was brought before the Court of Appeals of New York.
Creditors and policyholders with claims arising out of foreign
business insisted that the time had come when their claims should
be enforceable. The insurance companies insisted that they were
still "juristic persons," that they were represented by boards of
directors competent to act, and were entitled to possession subject
to the remedies of creditors. The court declined to sustain the
position of the superintendent that the surplus should be left in
his hands indefinitely until the recognition of a Russian
Government. As the superintendent had fulfilled the statutory
trust, the court considered it to be no part of his duty to
ascertain the validity of the claims that would be paid out of the
surplus "unless inequity would be done if the claimants were
remitted to a remedy at law." Exceptions were recognized where
attachments or executions had been levied before the date of
liquidation and also where
Page 296 U. S. 472
proofs of claim had been filed and diligently pressed while the
superintendent was still in charge and the injunction was still in
force. As the creditors so proving were acting in response to an
invitation -- published in accordance with the order of liquidation
-- to submit claims of every kind without reference to the place of
origin, and were meanwhile stayed, the court thought that there
would be manifest inequity if, at that late day, they were remitted
to their legal remedies and compelled to prove anew. A court of
equity having assumed control over a fund might continue to grant
relief if justice so required. But the court took the view that,
after the liquidator had made provision for the payment of claims
already filed, the surplus then remaining "should be paid to the
corporations, represented by directors, a quorum of the board."
Matter of People (Russian Reinsurance Co.), 255 N.Y. 415,
420-424, 175 N.E. 114, 117.
The Moscow Fire Insurance Company, however, had been left with
but one director, and although he might be treated as a
"conservator" of the property of his company when there were assets
within the state "that might otherwise be lost," the Court of
Appeals was of the opinion that a measure of discretion should be
exercised by a court of equity "before surrendering possession."
Exercising that discretion, the court directed that the delivery of
the assets in the case of that company should be conditioned upon
the execution of a bond to the people of the state in a sum equal
to the value of the assets delivered, with a condition that the
director should faithfully apply the assets to the use of the
corporation, its creditors, and shareholders. In the event of
inability or failure to give the bond, the court directed that
delivery should be made to a trust company "as agent or depositary"
upon the stipulation of the insurance company and its "conservator"
that the fund would "not be withdrawn except upon the order of a
court of competent jurisdiction."
Matter of
Page 296 U. S. 473
People (Moscow Fire Insurance Co.), 255 N.Y. 433, 435,
175 N.E. 120, 121. On the remittitur of the Court of Appeals,
judgment was entered in the Supreme Court of the state on August
11, 1931, and provided, in the stated alternative, that the
superintendent should deliver the surplus assets to the Bank of New
York & Trust Company. The Moscow Company and Paul Lucke, "its
sole surviving director and conservator," took advantage of this
alternative and gave the required stipulation, whereupon the Trust
Company received the surplus assets, of about $1,000,000, on April
18, 1933.
Immediately -- on April 19, 1933 -- the Moscow Company and Lucke
brought suit in the Supreme Court of the state to determine the
disposition of these assets, including the determination of the
claims of creditors. A second suit was brought in June, 1933, by a
shareholder of the Moscow Company. In October, 1933, the first of
these suits was referred to a referee to hear and determine, and
later the two suits were consolidated. Trial was had before the
referee, and proofs of claims of various creditors and shareholders
of the Moscow Company were submitted. On August 13, 1934, when the
referee was about to file his report, the United States' attorney
presented to the referee a proof of claim of the United States to
the entire fund, based upon the assignment of November 16, 1933, by
the Russian Government. Apparently the claim was not pressed, and
an understanding was reached that the referee would withhold his
report until August 21, 1934, and that the United States would
meanwhile determine in what manner it would assert its claim --
whether by intervention in a proceeding in the state court or by
suit in the federal court. The referee made no mention of the claim
in his report, which was filed on August 22, 1934. Judgment was at
once entered upon the report directing payment of the claims of
creditors as allowed by the referee and, after making reservation
for future claims
Page 296 U. S. 474
and expenses, ordering the distribution of the residue in
liquidating dividends to the shareholders of the Moscow Company.
There was also provision that any shareholder or any party to the
action or successor in interest might apply at the foot of the
judgment for further directions. On the same day. the United States
brought the present suit.
(2) The case against the President and Directors of the
Manhattan Company (No.196) relates to the Northern Insurance
Company of Moscow. Under an order of the state court, in 1926, the
superintendent of insurance took possession of the assets of the
United States branch of the company. The statutory liquidation was
completed. But, as the company was left with but two directors,
provision was made in April, 1931 -- under the decision of the
Court of Appeals of New York -- for the delivery of the surplus
assets to a trust company in case the required bond was not given.
Matter of People (Northern Insurance Co.), 255 N.Y. 433,
435, 175 N.E. 120. In the following year, an assignment for the
benefit of creditors was made on behalf of the Northern Insurance
Company to the Bank of Manhattan Trust Company, the predecessor in
interest of the defendant in the present suit. Pursuant to a
decision of the Court of Appeals on reargument (
Matter of
People (Northern Insurance Co.), 262 N.Y. 453, 188 N.E. 17),
judgment was entered, on June 6, 1933, in the Supreme Court of the
state directing the superintendent of insurance to deliver the
surplus assets to the Bank of Manhattan Trust Company "as agent or
depositary" to be held subject to the order of a court of competent
jurisdiction. The delivery was made, the amount being upwards of
$245,000. On November 13, 1933, the state court directed the
president and directors of the Manhattan Company, as successor in
interest, to transfer the fund to itself "as assignee for the
benefit of creditors of the Northern Insurance
Page 296 U. S. 475
Company of Moscow." In July, 1934, the state court appointed a
referee to take and state the account of the assignee, and to take
proof and report as to the claims of creditors and those entitled
to share in the disposition of the fund. That proceeding was in
progress when the present suit by the United States was begun on
August 25, 1934.
(3) The third case (No.197) relates to the assets of the United
States branch of the First Russian Insurance Company, which the
state court, in 1925, placed in the hands of the superintendent of
insurance as liquidator. This case differs from the others in that
the superintendent is still in possession. After the payment of
domestic creditors, the surplus assets were retained by the
superintendent under the order of the state court for the purpose
of satisfying valid claims founded upon foreign business, where
proofs of claim had been filed with him during the statutory
liquidation.
Matter of People (First Russian Insurance
Co.), 255 N.Y. 415, 423, 175 N.E. 114. It appears that some of
these foreign claims had been allowed by the liquidator, and
payments on account had been made under orders of the state court,
and that other claims which the liquidator had disallowed were
being heard before a referee appointed by the state court when the
United States brought the present suit on November 14, 1934. The
Government states that the fund then held by the superintendent
amounted to over $1,000,000.
First. When the state court directed the superintendent
of insurance to take possession of the assets of the United States
branches, and to conserve those assets until its further order, the
court took jurisdiction of the
res. While the
superintendent was a statutory liquidator, he took possession under
the direction of the court, and the fund was at all times subject
to the court's control. The proceeding was essentially one
in
rem, and the superintendent was protected by a sweeping
injunction in the
Page 296 U. S. 476
unimpeded liquidation of the sequestered property.
Matter of
People (Russian Reinsurance Co.), supra, p. 420, 175 N.E. 114.
Under § 63 of the state statute (Insurance Law, Consol.Laws,
c. 28), the liquidator had rights and duties such as had previously
been "exercised by and imposed upon ancillary receivers of foreign
corporations."
Id., p. 424.
When the statutory trust was satisfied by the payment of
domestic creditors and policyholders, it did not follow that the
remaining assets were automatically released and the state court
was
ipso facto shorn of its jurisdiction. The court still
had control of the property, and necessarily had the pertinent
equitable jurisdiction to decide what should be done with it. In
such a case, the court might direct that the surplus assets should
be remitted to a domiciliary receiver -- if there were one -- on
appropriate conditions.
Matter of People (Norske Lloyd
Insurance Co.), 242 N.Y. 148, 151 N.E. 159. Or the court might
direct further liquidation, in order to provide for the payment of
other claims, if that course appealed to the sense of equity in the
particular circumstances.
Matter of People (Russian Reinsurance
Co.,) supra, p. 423. The latter action was taken, and the
superintendent of insurance was continued in possession of the
assets subject to the control of the court. He was virtually its
receiver for the purposes specified. In No.197, the superintendent
still holds possession by virtue of that authorization, and the
res thus remains under the court's jurisdiction.
In the other two cases (Nos.195 and 196), the superintendent
completed the additional liquidation and turned over the remaining
assets to the designated depositaries. To safeguard all rights in
the funds, they were not to be withdrawn from the depositaries
except upon a court order. We need not pause to inquire as to the
effect of that limitation, for, if jurisdiction was relinquished,
it was soon resumed. On the very next day, in the case of the
Page 296 U. S. 477
Moscow Fire Insurance Company, suit was brought in its name, and
by the sole surviving director and conservator, against the
depositary and those alleged to be creditors and shareholders of
the insurance company to determine the disposition of the fund.
Claims of creditors and shareholders were in course of adjudication
in that proceeding when the present suit was brought. At that time,
also, in the case of the Northern Insurance Company, the
depositary, which had received an assignment for the benefit of
creditors, was accounting in the state court for the fund in its
hands and the claims of creditors and of those entitled to share in
the fund were being heard.
In both these cases, the proceedings in the state court were
quasi in rem. Control of the funds was essential to the
exercise of the court's jurisdiction to protect the rights of
claimants. It was not necessary for the court to appoint receivers,
as the funds were already in the hands of depositaries appointed by
the court and subject to its direction. The principle, applicable
to both federal and state courts, that the court first assuming
jurisdiction over property may maintain and exercise that
jurisdiction to the exclusion of the other is not restricted to
cases where property has been actually seized under judicial
process before a second suit is instituted. It applies as well
where suits are brought to marshal assets, administer trusts, or
liquidate estates, and in suits of a similar nature, where, to give
effect to its jurisdiction, the court must control the property.
Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Lake Street Elevated R.
Co., 177 U. S. 51,
177 U. S. 61. If
the two suits are
in rem or
quasi in rem, so that
the court must have possession or control of the
res in
order to proceed with the cause and to grant the relief sought, the
jurisdiction of one court must of necessity yield to that of the
other.
Penn General Casualty Co. v. Pennsylvania,
294 U. S. 189,
294 U. S. 195.
This principle is applied in the discharge of the long recognized
duty of this Court to give effect to such
Page 296 U. S. 478
"methods of procedure as shall serve to conciliate the distinct
and independent tribunals of the States and of the Union, so that
they may cooperate as harmonious members of a judicial system
coextensive with the United States."
Taylor v.
Carryl, 20 How. 583,
61 U. S. 595.
See also Peck v.
Jenness, 7 How. 612,
48 U. S. 625;
Buck v.
Colbath, 3 Wall. 334,
70 U. S. 341;
Wabash R. Co. v. Adelbert College, 208 U. S.
38,
208 U. S. 54;
Palmer v. Texas, 212 U. S. 118,
212 U. S. 129;
Lion Bonding & Surety Co. v. Karatz, 262 U. S.
77,
262 U. S. 89;
Harkin v. Brundage, 276 U. S. 36,
276 U. S.
43.
The Government urges that the present suits for an accounting
are not suits
in rem, but
in personam; and that
to allow the federal court to pass upon the right asserted would
not necessarily interfere with the jurisdiction or control by the
state court over the
res. See Kline v. Burke
Construction Co., 260 U. S. 226,
260 U. S. 230.
But these suits are not to enforce a personal liability, but to
obtain possession of the respective funds. The suits are not merely
to establish a debt or a right to share in property, and thus to
obtain an adjudication which might be had without disturbing the
control of the state court.
Compare Waterman v. Canal-Louisiana
Bank & Trust Co., 215 U. S. 33,
215 U. S. 44-46;
Riehle v. Margolies, 279 U. S. 218,
279 U. S.
223-224. Complainant demands that the depositaries
account and pay over to the complainant, as "the sole and exclusive
owner," the entire funds in their hands. Thus, the object of the
suits is to take the property from the depositaries and from the
control of the state court, and to vest the property in the United
States to the exclusion of all those whose claims are being
adjudicated in the state proceedings.
The Government also insists that the courts of the state had
lost jurisdiction of the funds, prior to the time when the present
suits were begun, by reason of the fact that the funds were the
property of the Russian Government which our Government had
recognized. But, whatever
Page 296 U. S. 479
the effect of recognition, it is manifest that it did not
terminate the state proceedings. The state court still had control
of the property, and questions as to the rights of the parties who
were before it, or of those who might come before it, were legal
questions which the court had jurisdiction to decide.
Second. The fact that the complainant in these suits is
the United States does not justify a departure from the rule which
would otherwise be applicable. The Government invokes § 24(1)
of the Judicial Code (28 U.S.C. § 41), which confers
jurisdiction upon the District Court to entertain all suits of a
civil nature brought by the United States. The Government insists
that the United States is entitled to have its claim determined in
its own courts. But the grant of jurisdiction to the District Court
in suits brought by the United States does not purport to confer
exclusive jurisdiction. It is a general rule that the grant of
jurisdiction to one court does not, of itself, imply that the
jurisdiction is to be exclusive.
See Gittings v. Crawford,
Taney's Dec. 1;
Ames v. Kansas, 111 U.
S. 449,
111 U. S. 464;
Plaquemines Tropical Fruit Co. v. Henderson, 170 U.
S. 511,
170 U. S.
517-518;
Merryweather v. United States, 12 F.2d
407, 409, 410. Upon the state courts, equally with the courts of
the Union, rests the obligation to guard and enforce every right
secured by the Constitution and laws of the United States whenever
those rights are involved in any suit or proceedings before them.
Robb v. Connolly, 111 U. S. 624,
111 U. S. 637.
In this instance, it cannot be doubted that the United States is
free to invoke the jurisdiction of the state court for the
determination of its claim, and the decision of the state court of
any federal question which may be presented upon such an invocation
may be reviewed by this Court, and thus all the questions which the
Government seeks to raise in these suits may be appropriately and
finally decided. Jud.Code, § 237, as amended, 28 U.S.C. §
344.
Page 296 U. S. 480
The statutory grant of jurisdiction to the District Court leaves
open the question of the propriety of its exercise in particular
circumstances. Even where the District Court has acquired
jurisdiction prior to state proceedings, the character and adequacy
of the latter proceedings in relation to the administration of
assets within the state, and the status of those assets, may
require in the proper exercise of the discretion of the federal
court that jurisdiction should be relinquished in favor of the
state administration.
Pennsylvania v. Williams,
294 U. S. 176,
294 U. S. 185;
Gordon v. Ominsky, 294 U. S. 186,
294 U. S. 188;
Penn General Casualty Co. v. Pennsylvania, supra, p.
294 U. S. 197.
In the instant cases, not only had the state court first acquired
jurisdiction, but there are numerous persons whose claims in
relation to these funds are in course of adjudication. Whether or
not their claims are valid against the claim of ownership by the
United States, they are entitled to be heard, and they are
indispensable parties to any proceeding for the disposition of the
property involved. They have not been made parties to the present
suits, and this fact, in itself, would be a sufficient reason for
the District Court to refuse to proceed in their absence. Only the
stakeholders are defendants. The adverse claimants are parties to
the respective proceedings in the state court and, from every point
of view, the principles governing the convenient and orderly
administration of justice require that the jurisdiction of the
state court should be respected.
There is no merit in the suggestion that the United States, in
presenting its claim in the state proceedings, would be compelled
to take the position of a defendant being sued without its consent.
In intervening for the presentation of its claim, the United States
would be an actor, voluntarily asserting what it deemed to be its
rights, and not a defendant. We cannot see that there would be
impairment of any rights the United States may
Page 296 U. S. 481
possess, or any sacrifice of its proper dignity as a sovereign,
if it prosecuted its claim in the appropriate forum where the funds
are held.
As we are dealing simply with the question of the exercise of
jurisdiction by the District Court, we intimate no opinion upon the
merits.
The decrees are
Affirmed.
* Together with No.196,
United States v. President and
Directors of the Manhattan Co., and No.197,
United States
v. Louis H. Pink. Both cases were on writs of certiorari to
the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. In No.197, Mr.
Louis H. Pink, Superintendent of Insurance of New York, was
substituted by an order of the court below for his predecessor in
office, Mr. George S. Van Schaick, the original defendant in that
case.