4 Dill. 524 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Iowa | 1876
This cause is before the court upon a plea in abatement. The plea sets up the pendency of a prior suit upon the same subject matter, and between the same parties, in the district court of Mills county, Iowa. If the plea really presented the question which the pleader intended to raise, it would be one of no little difficulty. That question is whether or not a party may, in the United States circuit court for any district, plead in abatement of a suit therein the pendency of a prior suit in a state court within the same district, between the same parties, upon the same subject matter. This precise question has never been decided by the supreme court of the United States. It seems, however, to be assumed by counsel that it has been repeatedly decided by the circuit courts of the Union. We shall presently see how much of truth there is in this assumption.
Let us first, however, consider the question in the light of reason and sound policy. If the circuit court of the United States, and a state court in the same federal district, may proceed at the same time to adjudicate the same matter between the same parties, what results must inevitably follow? First, the suitor would be harassed by the same litigation in two several tribunals of competent jurisdiction. Congress has seen fit so to frame the law as to leave the state courts in possession of concurrent jurisdiction with the United .States circuit court in civil actions and suits between citizens of different states. Why, then, should the suitor be harassed with two suits at the same time, for the same matter, before two courts of competent and concurrent jurisdiction?
Two courts so proceeding and exercising judicial power within the same territorial limits would move upon parallel lines, with no authority to review each other’s judgments, and no common superior to bring them into harmony. Thus the federal court might decide the controversy for the plaintiff and the state court for the defendant, so that the parties would have a conflicting adjudication of their rights. The judgment of the one court might be a lien upon the defendant’s property, and the judgment of the other a lien upon the .plaintiff’s property. The one might proceed to levy execution upon the plaintiff’s goods, and the other upon the defendant’s goods. All this would lead to “confusion worse confounded.” It would tend to bring the two jurisdictions into unseemly and dangerous conflict.
'But it is said that this evil of conflicting adjudications could be prevented by very simple means. The party first obtaining judgment could go into the other jurisdiction and plead his judgment puis darrein in bar of the action there pending. It is evident, however, that this remedy might prove utterly impracticable and ineffectual; since the two courts might render diverse judgments on the same day, or, at all events, at times so near as to render it impossible for the successful suitor in the one court to set up his judgment in bar in the other. Again, the unsuccessful suitor in the one court might very easily suspend the judgment against himself by appeal or otherwise, so as to prevent his successful adversary from pleading his judgment in bar in the other jurisdiction in time to make the plea effectual. It would, therefore, seem most rational and just that a plea in abatement should be allowed in order to avert consequences so mischievous.
It must, however, be conceded that the current of authority, so far as there is any authority on this question, runs in opposition to the plea in question. The dicta of the United States circuit judges seem to proceed upon the assumption that the two jurisdictions are foreign to each other in the same sense that the courts of independent countries and of the different states of the Union are foreign to each other. Of course the pendency of a suit in a foreign country, or even in a state or district different from that of the court in which the plea
Loring v. Marsh is not strictly, in point, since it came before the court, not by plea in abatement, but by motion to continue the cause in the United States circuit court of Massachusetts, upon the ground that the same cause was pending in the supreme judicial court of that state. Mr. Justice Clifford, however, seems to have considered the motion analogous to a plea in abatement, and he discussed it in that view. Thus he says, “Cases may unquestionably be found deciding that the mere pendency of another suit for the same matter, between the same parties, in another jurisdiction, may be pleaded in abatement or in bar of another suit.” But he adds that, “the undeviating rule in this circuit has been that the pendency of another action for the same cause in a state court is not a good plea in abatement.” “Suppose, however,” he adds, “it were otherwise, the rule would not apply to this case, because the nature of the proceedings is different, the parties are not the same, and there are questions presented for decision here which are not involved in the suit in the state court.” It will not escape notice that Mr. Justice Clifford admits that, even supposing the plea to be valid, the rule would not apply to the case he was deciding, “because the nature of the proceedings is different, the parties are not the same, and there are questions presented for decision here which are not involved in the state court.” In view of this statement, the opinion expressed by the learned and venerable judge, that the pendency of a suit in the stare court could not be pleaded in abatement or bar in the federal court in that state, appears to be something in the nature of an obiter dictum. I have examined carefully all the cases cited by him from the reports of state and federal decisions, and I do not hesitate to affirm that not one of them is in point to sustain his dictum when applied to such cases as Loring v. Marsh, and the case now before us. In the cases cited, the suits pleaded in abatement were pending invariably either in foreign countries, or in other states, or in United States judicial districts other than the one in which the plea was presented. Whoever may wish to verify this statement can readily do so by reference to the cases cited by Mr. Justice Clifford and also in this opinion. I have not examined all the English cases, but I apprehend ' that such of them as appear to be opposed to the validity of the plea relate to the pendency of prior actions in the courts of foreign countries, or .of the British colonies, or Scotland, or Ireland, all of which are foreign to the English judicature. I venture to state that an English case cannot be found in which it has been held that the pendency of a suit in one of the courts of Westminster was not a good plea in abatement to a subsequent suit in another of the courts of Westminster of concurrent jurisdiction. Maule v. Murray, 7 Term R. 470; Imlay v. Ellefsen, 2 East, 453; Dillon v. Alvares, 4 Ves. 358; Foster v. Vassall, 3 Atk. 587; Bayley v. Edwards, 3 Swanst. 703; Howell v. Waldron, 2 Ch. Cas. 85; 2 Daniell, Ch. Pr. 721; Story, Eq. Pl. 741.
The case now before us presents no real difficulty, since it appears upon the face of the plea that the parties to the suit in the state court are not the same as the parties to this bill. The plea must, therefore, be overi’uled, and the respondent required to answer. Plea overruled.