after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court;
*138 This appeal is prosecuted under the fifth section of the judiciary act of March 3, 1891, providing “ that appeals or writs of error may be taken from the District Courts or from the existing Circuit Courts direct to the Supreme Court in the following cases: (1) In any case in which the"jurisdiction of the court is in issue. In such cases the question of' jurisdiction alone shall be certified to the Supreme Court from the court below for decision.”
■ By the sixth section the Circuit Court of Appeals, in cases within its. appellate jurisdiction, may certify to the Supreme Court “ any quеstions or propositions of law concerning which it desires the instruction of that court for its proper decision,” and our thirty-seventh rule requires in. such cases that “ the certificаte shall contain a proper statement of the facts on which such question or proposition of law arises.”
The District Court has observed that rule in form, but it is under the fifth section that our jurisdiction is invoked, and, as the record accompanies the statement, we are enabled to dispose of the appeal.
It was-settled, soon after the passage of the act of 1891, that cases in which the jurisdiction of the District or Circuit Courts was in issue could be brought to this court only after final judgment.
McLish
v.
Roff,
The preliminary question is, therefore, whether the decree dismissing this cross-libel is a final judgment, within the rule upon that subject-. It was long ago held that a decrеe dismissing a cross-bill in equity could not be considered, standing alone, as a final decree in the suit, and was not the subject of an independent appeal to this court under the judiciary act of 1789 ; and. that it could only be reviewed on an appeal from a final decree disposing of the whole case.
Ayres
v. Carver,
*139 It is argued that Ayres v. Carver is distinguishable from the case at bar becаuse the twenty-second section of the judiciary act of 1789, under which the appeal in that case was taken, provided, in terms for the revision of final decrees, whereаs no specific mention is made of final decrees or judgments in section five of the judiciary act of 1891. But that difference was specifically disposed of in McLish v. Roff, as not affecting the principle that the decree must be final in order to be appeal-able.
Counsel quote the language of Mr. Chief Justice Waite in
Railroad Company
v.
Express Company,
Generally speaking, the .same principles apply to cross-libels *140 as to cross-bills, and this case affords no ground of exception therefrom.
In admiralty, if tbe respondent desires to obtain entire damages'against the libellant, or damages in excess of those planned by libеllant, a cross-libel is necessary, although matters of recoupment or counterclaim might be asserted in the answer.
The Sapphire,
In The Dove a final decree was entered in favor of the libel-lants in thp original suit, and á decree rendered at the same time dismissing the cross-libel. No appeal was taken from the decree of dismissal, but the case was carried to the Cirсuit Court from the District Court by appeal from the decree on the libel, which was affirmed, and the cause brought to this court.
The principal question involved on the appeаl to this court was whether the submission to the dismissal of the cross-libel in the.District Court by the parties who had filed it, prevented thein from making the same defence to the original libel that they might have made if no cross-libel had been filed, and it was held that while the parties were bound by the decree of the District Court dismissing the cross-libel, the issues of law and fact involved' in the originаl suit were not thereby disposed of.-
In the course of some general observátions, Mr. Justice Clifford, delivering the opinion, after remarking that causes of that kind might be heard separаtely, said: “Usually such suits are heard together, and are disposed of by one decree or by separate decrees entered at the sametime; but a decision in the cross-suit adverse to the libellant, even if'the decree is entered before the original suit is heard, will not • impair the right of the respondent in the original suit to avail himself of every legаl and just defence to the charge there made which is regularly set up in the answer, for the plain reason that the adverse decree in the cross-suit does not dispose of the answer in the original;suit. . . . Whether the controversy pending is a suit, in equity or in admiralty, a cross-bill or libel is a bill or libel brought by a defendant in the shit against the plaintiff in the same suit, or' against other dеfendants in the original suit or against both, touching the matters in question in the original
*141
bill or libél. It is brought in the admiralty to obtain full and complete relief to all parties as to the matters charged in the original libel; and in equity the cross-bill is sometimes used to obtain a discovery of facts.' New and distinct matters, not included in the original bill or libel, should not be embraced in the cross-suit as they cannot be properly examined in such a suit, for the reason that they constitute the proper subject-matter of a new original bill or libel. Matters auxiliary to the pausе, of action set- forth in the original libel or bill may be included in" the cross-suit, and no others, as the cross-suit is, in general, incidental to, and dependent upon, the original suit
. Ayres
v.
Carver,
'In this case the сross-libel was, as stated therein, “across-' libel brought under admiralty rule 53 of the Supreme Court of the United States, being a counterclaim arising out of the same cause .of actiоn as the suit brought by the United States against' the said schooner William H. Davenport in a cause of collision, by a libel filed November 3, 1899, in said court.” The 53d admiralty rule provides .that the resрondents in a cross-libel shall give security to respond in damages, unless otherwise directed, and that all proceedings on the original libel shall be stayed until such security shall be given.
Thе cross-libel and the.answer to the libel were consistent, the subject-matter of the libel and the cross libel was the same, and the latter, in no proper sense, introduced new and distinct matters. The cross-libel occupied the same position as a cross-bill in equity, and .the general rule is that the original bill and the cross-bill should be heard together and disposed of by one decree, although, where the cross-bill asks affirmative relief, and is therefore not a pure cross-bill, the dismissal of the original bill may not dispose of the cross-bill, which mаy be retained for a complete determination of the cause.
Holgate
v.
Eaton,
Appeal dismissed.
