after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
The order which the petitioner challenges stays its action in the Circuit Court of the United States until the questions which that action presents shall have been finally determined by the courts of the state. That order is not reviewable by writ of error or by appeal, and the Barber Company applies to this court for its writ of mandamus to direct the judge holding the court below to proceed to the trial of its case.
The plaint of the petitioner is that by the order of the court below it is practically prohibited from a trial and decision -by the national courts of a controversy over $38,316.14 between citizens of different states, which is pending in that court, and which involves nothing but the question of the existence and the amount of a simple contract debt. It is unnecessary to the determination of the issues now presented to consider or decide whether or not the district court of St. Louis county had acquired, by means of the appeals, jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the parties to the action in the federal court when that court ordered all proceedings in the action before it stayed until the final determination of those appeals. If the state court had not acquired such jurisdiction, there was no reason for staying the cause in the federal court. If it had acquired jurisdiction, the order practically prohibits the trial of the controversy in the national courts, and remits its decision to the courts of the state, and the only reason urged in support of it is that the same controversy was pending in the district court of the state, that that court had jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the parties, and that by the charter of the city its officers were forbidden to pay the claim of the petitioner until that court should so direct. It will accordingly be conceded — but it is not decided — that the district court of St. Louis county had acquired jurisdiction by means of the appeals of the parties to the action in the federal court and of the controversy there presented when that action was commenced, and before the order which enjoined its progress was made. It is also conceded for the purposes of this decision, although that question is not decided, that the petitioner might have removed the appeals to the federal court, and that the question here presented stands as though the Barber Company had first brought actions to collect its debt in the state court, and had afterwards brought one in the federal court to enforce the same obligation.
The question, then, is, would the pendency of such actions be, or was the pendency of the appeals, a sound reason for prohibiting the trial of the controversy between the petitioner and the city in the federal court until the state courts had finally decided the questions which it involves? The general rule upon this subject has been so clearly announced and so often affirmed by the Supreme Court and by this court that it is no longer open to debate or con
The contention of counsel for the respondent is that the action in the federal court was properly stayed because by the charter of the city of Duluth the petitioner's claim is payable only out of the permanent revolving fund of the city, and the appeals to the state court have the effect to attach this fund, and to enjoin the officers of the city from paying it until the state court so directs. It does not, however, appear that the liability of the city to its contractor is in any way limited to the amounts which may at any time be found in its revolving fund, or that it is anything less than a direct contract liability. Barber Asphalt Paving Co. v. City of Denver,
Nor does the provision of the city charter which prohibits the officers of the city from paying the claim of the Barber Company pending the appeals without the order of the state court in any way restrict or impair the jurisdiction of the United States Circuit Court to proceed to the trial of the controversy before it, and to the enforcement of the judgment which it may render. The provisions of section 80 of the charter were not intended to limit or affect the jurisdiction of the federal court. They furnish a convenient and speedy method of securing the opinion of the state courts of the validity of claims against the city, and, while they provide in terms that, when appeals are taken from the allowance of such claims,
By the law of their organization, counties in Illinois were exempt from suit elsewhere than in the circuit courts of the county. But a suit by a citizen of another state against such a county in the federal court was sustained, and Chief Justice Chase said:
“The power to contract with citizens of other states implies liability to suit by citizens of other states, and no statute limitation of suability can defeat a jurisdiction given by the Constitution.” Mercer County v. Cowles,7 Wall. 122 ,19 L. Ed. 87 .
The Legislature of the state of Arkansas provided that no suit or proceeding against a county in that state should be maintained in any court otherwise than by a presentation of a verified claim to the county court for allowance or rejection, that the defeated party might appeal from the decision of that court to the state court of general jurisdiction, where the case should be tried in the usual course, but that in the absence of the presentation of' a verified claim to the county court no case against or controversy with a county could arise of which any court, state or federal, could take cognizance or jurisdiction. Citizens of New York brought an action against a county of the state of Arkansas in the federal court by original process without presenting any claim to the county court. The Supreme Court sustained the action, and. said:
“Any other view of the subject would prevent citizens of other states from resorting to the federal courts for,the enforcement of their claims against counties of the state, and limit them to the special mode of relief prescribed by the act of February 27, 1879 [St. Ark. 1903, c. 32, §§ 810-812], The jurisdiction of the federal courts is not to be defeated by such state legislation as this. In Hyde v. Stone,20 How. 170 , 175,15 L. Ed. 874 , it is said: ‘But this court has repeatedly decided that the jurisdiction of the courts of the Unitel States over controversies between citizens of different states cannot be impaired by the laws of the states which prescribe the modes of redress in their courts, or which regulate the distribution of their judicial power. In many cases state laws form a rule of decision for the courts of the United States, and the forms of proceeding in these courts have been assimilated to those of the states, either by legislative enactment or by their own rules. But the courts of the United States are bound to proceed to judgment, and to afford redress to suitors before them in every case to which their jurisdiction extends. They cannot abdicate their authority or duty in any ease in favor of another jurisdiction. Suydam v. Broadnax,14 Pet. 67 ,10 L. Ed. 357 ; Union Bank v. Vaiden,18 How. 503 ,15 L. Ed. 472 .’ This principle has been steadily adhered to by this court.” Chicot County v. Sherwood,148 U. S. 529 , 533, 534, 13 Sup. Ct. 695,37 L. Ed. 546 .
These principles and authorities render the following conclusions unavoidable: The petitioner’s right of action in the Circuit Court to recover the debt which it alleges to be due to it from the city was not conditioned by its presentation of. its claim to the city council, or by any of the other requirements of the charter of the city of
It is, however, earnestly argued that the order of the court below constituted neither a bar nor an abatement of the action before it, but that it was a mere discretionary order staying proceedings for a definite time, and hence not subject to challenge upon an application for a writ of mandamus. The answer is that it stayed proceedings until they would in all probability be futile, until the petitioner would probably be estopped by the final judgments of other courts from any hearing or trial of its controversy upon the merits in the courts of the nation. Insurance Co. v. Harris,
But it is said that the error may not be corrected by the writ of mandamus, and we turn to the consideration of that question. Section 12 of the act of March 3,1891, c. 517, 26 Stat. 829 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 553], provides that “the Circuit Courts of Appeals shall-have the power specified in section 716 of the Revised Statutes of the United States.” Section 716 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 580] provides that “the Supreme Court and the Circuit and District Courts shall have power to issue writs of scire facias. They shall also have power to issue all writs not specifically provided for by statute, which may be necessary for the exercise of their respective jurisdictions and agreeable to the usages and principles of law.” Writs of mandamus are among those “not specifically provided for by statute which may be necessary for the exercise of théir respective jurisdictions” within the meaning of this section. Bath County v. Amy,
In United States v. Judges of the United States Court of Appeals of the Indian Territory,
There is no dissent among courts or lawyers from the proposition that the national courts may issue the writ either in the exercise of or in aid of their appellate jurisdiction. The only question here is whether they may issue it in aid of that jurisdiction whenever it exists, or only when it has been actually invoked by a writ of error or by an appeal. This question has now been ably and exhaustively argued by counsel for the respective parties to this application. All the authorities upon it appear to have been called to our attention, and it has again received the thoughtful and deliberate consideration of the court in the light of the numerous decisions which have been cited. It is obvious that the primary reason for the grant to the federal appellate courts of the dominant power to issue their writs of mandamus to the inferior courts in the exercise of and in aid of their appellate jurisdiction was to enable them to protect that jurisdiction against possible evasions of it. It is not less evident that the grant must in many, nay, in most, cases, fail to accomplish its chief end if the power to. issue the writ can be exercised only after the appellate jurisdiction has been actually invoked by an appeal or by a writ of error. Under the acts of Congress the proceedings in every suit in the Circuit Court of the United States are now reviewable either in the Supreme Court or in the Circuit Court of Appeals. The moment such a suit is commenced, the appellate jurisdiction over it exists, the power and the right to ultimately review the proceedings in it are vested in one of the appellate courts. But in the great majority of cases it is only by an appeal or by a writ of error which challenges the final decision in the case that any of the proceedings in it may be reviewed. The opportunities for subordinate courts to evade the jurisdiction of the appellate courts, to prevent the exercise of this jurisdiction, and to destroy or make ineffectual the right of the unsuccessful party to review their rulings by failures to settle bills of exceptions, by unreasonable delays, by stays of proceedings, and by direct and indirect refusals to proceed to final judgments and to their enforcement are far more numerous before the writs
Thus, in Livingston v. Dorgenois,
In Ex parte Bradstreet,
In New York Life & Fire Ins. Co. v. Wilson,
In Ex parte Roberts,
In Insurance Co. v. Comstock,
In Virginia v. Rives,
In the case of the United States, Petitioner,
The reasons and decisions to which we have now adverted have impelled our minds with irresistible force to the conclusion that the true test of the appellate jurisdiction in the exercise or in the aid of which the Circuit Courts of Appeals may issue the writ of mandamus is the existence of that jurisdiction, and not its prior invocation; that it is the existence of a right to review by a challenge of the final decisions, or otherwise, of the cases or proceedings to which the applications for the writs relate, and not the prior exercise of that right by appeal or by writ of error; and that the power of those courts to issue the writ is not restricted as was stated in United States v. Judges of the United States Court of Appeals of the Indian Territory,
Finally, it is insisted that the writ of mandamus should not issue in this case because that writ may not be used to compel a subordinate court to reverse or revise its decision of a question properly submitted for its consideration in the progress of a case before it, or to direct it how to decide or by what rules to proceed. Ex parte Whitney,
The petitioner invoked the jurisdiction of the United States Circuit Court in an action in personam to determine the simple question, debt or no debt, between him and a citizen of another state. Actions for the same cause between the same parties were pending in the state court. It was the duty of the judge who held the Circuit Court to proceed with convenient speed to try, and by means of the exercise of his own independent judgment to adjudicate, the petitioner’s controversy. He stayed all proceedings in the cause before him until that controversy should be finally determined by the courts of the state. This stay deprived the petitioner of its right to the independent judgment of the national courts upon the merits of its action, and destroys the jurisdiction of this court to review the adjudication which may be made upon it in the
Let a writ of mandamus issue accordingly.
