after stating the case, delivered, the opinion of the court.
Ufider the act of March 3,1875, determining the jurisdiction of Circuit Courts of the United States (18 Stat. 470, 472) the objection to the -jurisdiction upon a denial of the averment of citizenship is,not confined to a plea in abatement or a demurrer, but may be taken in the .answer, and the time at which it may be raised is not restricted. Although the averment as to citizenship may be sufficient, yet, if if appear that that averment is untrue, it is the duty of the Circuit Court to dismiss the suit; and this court, bn appeal or writ of error, must g$e to it that the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court has in no respect been imposed upon.
Morris
v.
As remarked in
Bernards Township
v. Stebbins,
Although the Fourteenth Amendment declares all citizens of-the United States to be citizens “ of the' State where .they reside,” yet as the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court is limited in the sense that it has none except that conferred by the Constitution and laws of the United States, and the presumption is that a cause is without its jurisdiction unless the contrary affirmatively appears, it is essential that in cases where jurisdiction depends upon , the citizenship of the parties, such citizenship, or the facts which in legal intendment constitute it, should be distinctively and positively averred in the pleadings, or should appear affirmatively with equal distinctness in other parts of- the record. It is not sufficient that jurisdiction may be inferred argumentatively from the averments.
Robertson
v.
Cease,
Since the act of 1875, if it appears from the pleadings and proofs tallen together that the defendants are citizens of the United States and reside, in the sense of having their permanent domicil, in the State of which the complainants are citizens, (or that each of the indispensable adverse parties is not competent to sue or liable'to be sued, therein,) the Circuit Court cannot maintain cognizance of the suit. And ■ the inquiry is determined by the condition of. the parties at the
*703
commencement of the suit.
Mullen
v.
Torrance,
9 Wheat. Co
nolly
v.
Taylor, 2
Pet. 556;
Crehore
v.
Ohio
&
Mississippi Railway,
The bill in this case was properly filed in the name of the two executors under the will of Symington, the mortgagee, to whom letters testamentary had issued; McClellan’s Dig. Laws Florida, c. 2, § 73, p. 97; 3 Williams on Executors, (6th Am. ed. bottom paging,) 1867; 1 Williams on Executors, 267, 687 and notes; 1 Daniell Ch. Pr. (4th Am. ed.) 226;
Rubber Co.
v.
Goodyear,
Hugh C. Wilson and Edward. C. Wilson were appointed executors of and trustees under the will of Edward J. Wilson, .the mortgagor, and letters testamentary issued to them, describing them as “ both of Peekskill, Westchester County, New York.”' By the will certain legacies were bequeathed, and all the rest, residue, and remainder of the estate, both real and personal,'of whatsoever nature or kind, and wherever situated, was directed to be divided into five equal shares, one of which was bequeathed and devised to Edward C. Wilson and the other four shares to Hugh C. and Edward C. Wilson, to hold upon certain trusts therein described. Neither the executors and trustees, nor the devisees, nor the heirs at law were made parties defendant to this bill.
Under the statutes of Florida it was provided that “ when any person shall die leaving property in this State, and for the space of six months thereafter no person shall be appointed administrator on the estate of such deceased person, it shall be the duty of the sheriff of the county ex officio, to take charge of such estate, and to administer on and settle said estate, in-the same manner as directed for other administrators.” (McClellan’s Dig. c. 2, sec. 15, p. 81.)
It is indicated by the record that J. C..Anderson was sheriff of'Orange County, and it was admitted that he was duly appointed by the county court of that county administrator of the estate of Edward J. Wilson, deceased, July 20, 1SS5, but
*704
not with the will annexed, although Edward J. Wilson died testate in New York, where he resided, and where his will •was admitted to probate, which will conformed to the laws of Florida in the form .and manner of its execution, and might have been admitted to record in the county court. McClellan’s Dig. c. 200, §§ 1, 8, pp. 985, 987;
Crolly
v. Clark,
Mr. Davis appears to have been a necessary party. McClellan’s Dig. c. 150, p. 754; 1 Daniell Ch. Pr. (4 Am. ed.) 178;
Lignoski
v. Bruce,
A person who has not been named as defendant tó a bill may appear at the hearing, with the consent of all the parties to the cause, Dyson v. Morris, 1 Hare, 413, 419; Bozon v. Bolland, 1 Russ. & Myl. 69; and in this instance the objection of want of consent cannot be taken.
The plea which Mrs. Davis interposed under oath, December 7, 1885, stated that “before and at the time of the. filing of the bill, she was, and now is, under the coverture of one George W. Davis, who is still living, to wit, in the city andi State of New York.” No replication was filed to the plea, but notice given by' the plaintiffs, setting it down for hearing. No further action upon it is disclosed by the record. The answer of Mrs. Davis and her husband set forth “ that in the winter of 1878 and spring of 1879 these defendants were residing in. the city of New York, where they had been residing for some years; that the health of the defendant Sarah J. Davis not-’ being good, she thought residing in Florida would benefit her, and that in the summer of 1879 she and her husband investigated the subject as well as they could by reading and talking with people from Florida, and from such investigation they concluded that if the climate should prove beneficial to the said Sarah J. Davis they would find it profitable to purchase an orange grove in South Florida, which the said Sarah j, Davis could take care of and manage, except in the summer months, while the said George "W. Davis remained at his', business in New York, the said Sarah J. Davis spending the-the summer with him there;” and that after the purchase was consummated with the approval of Mr. Davis in New York in September, 1879, Mrs. Davis went to Florida in October and took actual possession of the property herself. The proofs showed that she continued .personally in occupation of it from that time forward, and improved and cultivated it, Mrs. Davis was examined as a witness and testified that her husband was living in New York and was a party to the suit and that she resided on the property and had occupied it ever *706 since she purchased it, except when she went “ North in the summer for a few months.”
The deed of Thomas E. Wilson to her of October 13, 1879, recorded November 24,1879, described her as “ Sarah J. Davis, wife of George W. Davis, of the city of New York,” and the mortgage back was given by “ Sarah J. Davis and George W. Davis, her husband, of the city of New York.” On the 30th of March, 1884, Mr. and Mrs. Davis gave a mortgage to D. Appleton & Co., which was recorded in Orange County, Florida, February 12, 1884, and described the mortgagors as “ George W. Davis, of the city of New York, and Sarah J. Davis, his wife.”
We are satisfied the pleadings and proofs in the record, taken together, negative the averment of the bill as to the citizenship of Sarah J. Davis, and show that she and her husband were not citizens of Florida when the suit was commenced, and that it is fairly to be presumed that they were citizens of the State of New York.
The place where a person lives is taken to be his domicil until facts adduced establish- the contrary, and a domicil when acquired is presumed to continue until it is shown to have been changed.
Mitchell
v.
United States,
The rule is, said Chief Justice Shaw in
Harteau
v.
Harteau,
Mrs. Davis, was not separated from her husband,'and no element of separate domicil, in any legal sense, existed.
It is clear that the Circuit Court, upon the development of the facts, should have proceeded no further, and dismissed the case.
But it is contended that the supposed defect was curable by amendment, and that this was actually done, and the court thereby justified in retaining jurisdiction.
Conolly
v.
Taylor,
In this case, on the 21st of December, 1886, after the proofs had been taken, but before the hearing, an amendment was permitted by the court by striking out the original averment as to the citizenship of the complainants Faber and Watt, executors, and inserting a new averment stating Faber’s citizenship as before, but Watt to be “a subject.of the kingdom of Great Britain, temporarily residing in the State of New York,” and the cause was then directed, upon the ground that the letters to Faber had been revoked, to proceed in the name of James S. Watt, sole surviving executor of James Symington, and was discontinued as to Faber. But the difficulty with this attempt to obviate the fatal defect in jurisdiction was that the record showed that Watt was not the sole surviving executor of James Symington when the bill was filed,, but on the contrary, when the application to amend was made,, plaintiffs exhibited to the court and filed in the case exemplified copies of the records a,nd files in the office of the surrogate of the county of New York in the matter of the application of Gustavus W. Faber for a revocation of the letters testamentary issued to him „as one of the executors, by which it was. shown that on the 4th of May, 1886, Faber filed his petition for the revocation of the letters as to him, .and that the order of revocation was entered on that day. It therefore appeared that Watt could not have maintained the bill as amended, on the 25th day of August, 1885, when the bill as originally framed was filed, and jurisdiction could no more be given to-the-Circuit Court by' the amendment than if a .citizen of Florida had sued another in that court and subsequently sought to'give it jurisdiction by removing from the State,
Clarke
v. Mathewson,
The decree is reversed esnd the cause remanded with instructions to dismiss the hill for want of jurisdiction.
