A person was sued in the territorial court of Florida.
After the admission of Florida as a state, the case was
transferred to a state court.
The defendant appeared, and pleaded the general issue.
The verdict was given against him.
He then moved in arrest of judgment upon the ground that the
case ought to have been transferred to the district court of the
United States, instead of a state court.
The motion was overruled, and judgment entered up against
him.
Upon an appeal to the Supreme Court of Florida, this judgment
was affirmed.
This Court has no jurisdiction under the 25th section of the
Judiciary Act, to review that decision.
What the state court decided was the motion in arrest of
judgment, where the record only is examined, and no new evidence
admitted. There was nothing in the pleadings to show that the
defendant was a citizen of Georgia, and no defect of jurisdiction
was apparent.
The defendant might have pleaded in abatement, that he was a
citizen of Georgia, but not having done so, it was two late to
introduce the matter upon a motion in arrest of judgment.
Page 56 U. S. 355
As it does not appear, therefore, that the supreme court of the
state must have decided adversely to the party now claiming the
interposition of this Court, and decided so upon the construction
of an act of Congress, the writ of error must be dismissed for want
of jurisdiction.
The case is set forth in the opinion of the Court.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TANEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case comes before us upon a writ of error directed to the
Supreme Court of the State of Florida, and a motion has been made
to dismiss it for want of jurisdiction.
The suit was brought by Bennett, the defendant in error, against
Carter, the plaintiff in error, in December, 1842, while Florida
was yet a territory, and was continued from term to term, until she
was admitted into the Union as a state. The action was trover for
certain property. The declaration was in the usual form, and the
defendant pleaded the general issue of not guilty. After Florida
became a state, and the territorial court, in which the suit was
pending, ceased to exist, the papers were transmitted by the clerk
to the circuit court of the state for the same county.
The plaintiff and defendant both appeared in the circuit court,
and the case was continued until December, 1848, when the parties
proceeded to trial -- and the jury found for the defendant in
error, and assessed his damages at $19,999.66.
Several exceptions were taken to the rulings of the court on the
trial, which it is not necessary to mention, because they relate to
the laws of the state, over which this Court can exercise no
jurisdiction upon this writ of error. After the verdict was
rendered against him, the plaintiff in error, moved for a new
trial. But the motion was overruled by the court. He thereupon
offered to prove that he was a citizen of Georgia at the time the
suit was instituted in the territorial court, and had continued to
be so, and still was a citizen of that state. And this fact being
admitted by that opposite party, he moved in arrest of judgment,
and that the case be dismissed from the court, with an order to the
clerk to transfer the papers to the District Court of the United
States for the Northern District of Florida, or hold the papers and
proceedings subject to any order of transfer or demand from the
said court.
Page 56 U. S. 356
This motion was refused, and judgment entered on the verdict.
Whereupon he appealed to the supreme court of the state, and the
judgment of the circuit court being there affirmed, he has brought
the case before this Court by writ of error.
In support of this writ the plaintiff in error contends, that as
he was a citizen of Georgia at the time the suit was brought in the
territorial court, and also when the Act of Congress of February
22, 1847, was passed, the suit was, by operation of that law,
transferred to the District Court of the United States for the
Northern District of Florida, and that the circuit court of the
state had no right to take possession of the papers in the case,
nor any authority to try and decide it; and that, by moving in
arrest of judgment upon this ground, he had claimed a right under a
law of the United States, and that, as the decision was against the
right claimed, he is entitled to a writ of error under the 25th
section of the act of 1789.
Upon this motion to dismiss the writ of error, the construction
of the Act of Congress of 1847 is not before us. In this stage of
the case, we are not called on to decide whether this act of
Congress did or did not,
proprio vigore, transfer the case
to the district court of the United States. The only question
presented by the motion is whether, upon the record before us, we
have a right to reverse the judgment of the state court. And in
order to give this Court jurisdiction over the judgment of the
state court, it must appear by the record that the right now
claimed by the plaintiff in error, to remove the case to the
district court of the United States, was so drawn in question in
the state court, that it must have been decided in the judgment it
has given.
Now there is nothing in the pleadings to show that Carter was a
citizen of Georgia. It is not so stated in the declaration or plea.
And when the papers were transmitted to the state court, he
appeared there and defended himself upon the plea of the general
issue, which he had put in, in the territorial court. This plea
admitted the jurisdiction of the court; and the case was tried and
the verdict rendered upon these pleadings. And upon a motion in
arrest of judgment the court cannot look beyond the record; and the
judgment cannot be arrested, unless there is some error in law or
defect of jurisdiction apparent in the proceedings. And here there
was no error or defect of jurisdiction apparent on the record, even
if the construction of the act of 1847, contended for by the
plaintiff in error, is the true one. Both parties, by their
pleadings, admitted the jurisdiction of the court; and there was no
averment, in any part of them, that Carter was a citizen of
Georgia. And after a verdict is rendered, the judgment cannot be
arrested by the introduction
Page 56 U. S. 357
of new evidence on a new fact. It may, in a proper case, lay the
foundation of a motion for a new trial, but not in arrest of
judgment.
It is evident, therefore, that the state court, in proceeding to
give judgment on the verdict, could not legally have decided upon
the validity of the plaintiff's objection to its jurisdiction. They
could not hear evidence, in that stage of the case, to prove that
Carter was a citizen of Georgia, nor judicially notice it when
admitted by the opposite party. And we are bound to presume that
they proceeded to judgment on this ground, and did not consider the
right claimed by the plaintiff in error as properly before
them.
In an action in a circuit court of the United States, where the
jurisdiction depends upon the citizenship of the parties, it has
always been held, that where the plaintiff avers in his declaration
that he and the defendant are citizens of different states, if the
defendant means to deny the fact and the jurisdiction, he must
plead it in abatement; and if he omits to plead it in abatement,
and pleads in bar to the action, he cannot avail himself of the
objection at the trial. Still less could he be permitted to do so
upon a motion in arrest of judgment. And the same principles which
this Court sanction in such cases in the courts of the United
States, upon questions of jurisdiction depending upon personal
privilege, we are bound to apply to the proceedings in the state
court.
Undoubtedly it was in the power of the plaintiff in error, when
he appeared to the suit in the circuit court of the state, to have
pleaded to the jurisdiction, upon the ground that he was a citizen
of Georgia. Whether such a plea could have been maintained or not,
it is not necessary for us to say. But it would have brought before
the court the construction of the act of 1847, and it must have
been judicially decided. And if the decision had been against the
right he claimed under it, this Court would have been jurisdiction
to hear and determine that question. But upon the record, as it
comes before us, it does not appear that this question was ever
presented to the state court in a manner that would enable it
judicially to notice or decide it. And the writ of error must
therefore be
Dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
Order
This cause came on to be heard on the transcript of the record
from the Supreme Court of the State of Florida, and was argued by
counsel. On consideration whereof, it is now here ordered and
adjudged by this Court that this cause be, and the same is hereby,
dismissed, for the want of jurisdiction.