90 F. 539 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Virginia | 1898
The plaintiffs in these causes move to dismiss the same on the ground that this court is without jurisdiction to entertain those suits. On the 21st of June, 1898, M. M. Callahan, the plaintiff in the first cause, in her own name instituted a chancery suit, in the circuit court of Wythe county, Va., against the defendants, Benjamin E. and George E.Hicks, who are spoken of in the pleadings as Hicks Bros., and who will be so designated herein. Hicks Bros, were nonresidents of the state of Virginia, and were proceeded against by an order of publication, under the statute law of Virginia. The object of the suit, as alleged, was to subject a certain tract of land, containing 181 acres, conveyed by the plaintiff and her husband, C. W. Callahan, to
“M. M. Callahan vs. Benjamin E. Hicks and Geo. E. Hicks, and C. W. Callahan and M. M. Callahan vs. Benjamin E. Hicks and Geo. E. Hicks.
“In Equity.
“It appearing to the court that the parties to these two causes are the same, and that the suhject-ma tiers thereof are so intimately related that the interests of justice as well as the rights of the parties require that they should he hoard and decided together, it Is thereupon, hy the United States circuit court in and for the Western district of Virginia, this 15th day of March, 1898, adjudged, ordered, and decreed that these two causes he henceforth heard together, and that all proceedings, orders, and decrees had and taken in either case shall he read and considered as having been taken in the other case.”
“M. M. Callahan vs. Geo. E. and B. E. Hicks, and C. W. and M. M. Callahan vs. Geo. E. and B. E. Hicks.
“These two causes came on again to be heard upon the papers heretofore read in said causes, and the answer of G. E. and B. E. Hicks to the bill in said causes of C. W. and M. M. Callahan, which by leave of the court is allowed t:o he filed therein, and was argued hy counsel. On consideration whereof, it appearing to the court chat the process to answer the cross bill in said cause of M. AX. Callahan vs. said Hicks was not in fact served upon said C. W. Oallahan, who is a party to this cause, but upou another man bearing his name, it is ordered that the said decree against C. W. & M. M. Oallahan of March JG, 1884, be, and is hereby, annulled and set aside, but without prejudice to the rights and remedies of any party to either of said causes, but leaving them just as they existed before said decree was entered. Upon request of counsel for said parlies, it is further ordered that this cause be removed to this court at Danville, to he further proceeded in at that place, and it is ordered that the papers in said two causes be sent to Danville by the clerk of this court.”
Counsel for the plaintiffs on this motion to dismiss asserts that the proceedings in the state court in the suit oí M. M. Callahan v. Hicks Bros, was irregular, in the proceedings necessary to make Hicks Bros, parties defendant to that suit. Whatever irregularities there may have been in that suit, — and the court finds none, — they were cured by the appearance of Hicks Bros., and filing their petition for removal of the cause into this court, and filing their answer after removal. They were the only parties who could have made such objection. They found none, and the plaintiff M. M. Oallahan will not be allowed to make it after having invoked the jurisdiction of the state court.
The main ground on which counsel for Callahan and wife insists that this court is without jurisdiction in the cause in which they are joint plaintiffs is that neither the plaintiffs nor the defendants are citizens of this district; (hat the plaintiffs being citizens of the state of Maryland, and the defendants citizens of the state of Hew York, the diverse citizenship necessary to give this court jurisdiction does not exist. This contention is based on that clause of the judiciary act of March 8, 1887, as amended by the act of August 13, 1888, which provides that “no civil suit shall be brought in the circuit courts of the United States against any person, by any original process or proceeding in any other district than that whereof he is an inhabitant.” It has been frequently decided by the supreme court that this provision of the statute exempting a defendant from being sued in a district other than that in which he has his domicile may be waived by him, and that, if he wishes to
"The act of congress prescribing a place where a person may be sued is not one affecting the general jurisdiction of the courts. It is rather in the nature of a personal exemption in favor of a defendant, and it is one which he may waive. If the citizenship of the parties is sufficient, a defendant may consent to be sued anywhere he pleases, and certainly jurisdiction will not be ousted because he has consented.”
The same doctrine was held in Bank v. Morgan, 132 U. S. 141, 10 Sup. Ct. 37. In Railway Co. v. McBride, 141 U. S. 127, 11 Sup. Ct. 982, the court, in passing on this question, said:
“Without multiplying authorities on this question, it is obvious that the party who in the first instance appears and pleads to the merits waives any right to challenge thereafter the jurisdiction of the court on the ground that the suit has been brought in the wrong district.”
Trust Co. v. McGeorge, 151 U. S. 129, 14 Sup. Ct. 286, was a case in which the plaintiff in the circuit court was a corporation created'under the laws of the state of Hew York, and the defendant a corporation created under the laws of the state of New Jersey. The defendant appeared and submitted itself to the jurisdiction of the court. In that case, as in the case at bar, both parties were nonresidents of the district in which the suit was brought. The supreme court said:
“Nor do we see any reason for a different conclusion as to the subject of waiver when the auestion arises where neither of the parties are residents of the district from that reached where the defendant only is not such resident.”
In the cases before us the defendants, Hicks Bros., have raised no objection to the jurisdiction of this court. They appeared in the state court in the suit of M. M. Callahan against them, and, invoked the jurisdiction of this court, by having the cause removed, and filed their answer after removal. When sued in this court by the plaintiffs, C. W. Callahan and wife, they appeared and filed their answer to the plaintiffs’ bill, and thus waived the question of jurisdiction, if they had a right to raise it. But the plaintiffs seek to raise the question of jurisdiction, which the defendants have waived; and that, too, after the plaintiffs themselves have invoked the jurisdiction of the court, have without objection allowed the defendants to file their answer to the plaintiffs’ bill, and after the decrees above of March 15, 1898, had been entered at a former term. The plaintiffs, C. W. Callahan and wife, having-brought their suit in this court, and the defendants appearing, and by their answer waiving all objections that they might have taken to the plaintiffs’ right to sue in this district, the plaintiffs cannot be heard to raise a question which the defendants alone had a right to raise, and which they waived by filing their answer to the merits.
The contention of the plaintiffs, Callahan and wife, that they have a right to dismiss their suit, and thus compel the defendants, Hicks Bros., in order to assert their claim, to bring a separate suit against the plaintiffs in the state of Maryland, cannot be maintained. The doctrine of the right of a plaintiff to dismiss his bill is thus stated (Fost. Fed. Prac. § 291):
“The plaintiff may dismiss bis bill, without costs, at any time before the defendant’s appearance. * * * After appearance, and before a decree or de-*543 (■ratal order, a plaintiff can usually obtain a dismissal upon payment of the costs of such of tlio defendants as have appeared, but not if they, or any of them, would be injured thereby. Leave to dismiss may be refused wliero the defendant claims affirmative relief by cross bill, or by answer in a case where he is entitled to affirmative relief on an answer.”
The defendants in their answer claim affirmative relief. To permit the plaintiffs to dismiss their bill, and compel the defendants to bring a suit to establish against the plaintiffs the claim the defendants assert in their answer, would subject them to serious injury, should the plaintiffs rely on the plea of the statute of limitations, or assert some other defense to which they might resort. There would be neither reason nor justice in putting the defendants to a new suit to establish a claim that can be disposed of in the present litigation. Stevens v. The Railroads, 4 Fed. 97. Electrical Accumulator Co. v. Brush Electric Co., 44 Fed. 602; Chicago & A. R. Co. v. Union Rolling-Mill Co., 109 U. S. 702, 3 Sup. Ct. 594. In the last case the supreme court quotes from Connor v. Drake, 1 Ohio St. 170, as follows:
“The propriety of permitting a complainant to dismiss bis bill is a matter within the sound discretion of the court, which discretion is to be exercised with reference to the rights of both parties,--as well the defendants as the complainants. After a defendant has been put to trouble in making his defense, if, in the progress of the case, rights have been manifested that he is entitled to claim, and which are valuable to him, it would be unjust to deprive him of them merely because the complainant might come to the conclusion that it would he for his interests to dismiss his bill. Such a mode of proceeding would be trilling with the court, as well as with the rights of defendants.”
The authorities cited thoroughly sustain the defendants in their objection to a dismissal of these causes, and the motion to do so will be overruled.