141 F. 610 | 8th Cir. | 1905
after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
The bill in equity which was exhibited in this suit disclosed no federal question and no diverse citizenship of a nature to give to the Circuit Court jurisdiction of the parties and the subject-matter; and these facts furnish one of the grounds of the demurrer which was sustained by the Circuit Court. If the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court is in issue and decided in favor of the defendant, the Circuit Court of Appeals has no jurisdiction to review the decision, because it disposes of the case, and the plaintiff must have the question certified and take his appeal or writ of error to the Supreme Court. U. S. v. Jahn, 155 U. S. 109, 114, 15 Sup. Ct. 39, 39 L. Ed. 87. Counsel for the appellees moved to dismiss this appeal upon this ground. But an examination of the record has brought to our attention the fact that, after the court had entered a decree that the demurrer should be sustained and that the bill should be dismissed for want of jurisdiction, it set that decree aside, and rendered another to the effect that the demurrer be sustained and the bill be dismissed out of court at the cost of the complainants. A general decree of dismissal without more is a decree that the court has jurisdiction, and that there are no merits in the case, and it renders every issue in it res adjudicata. Indian Land & Trust Co. v. Shoenfelt, 68 C. C. A. 196, 198, 135 Fed. 484, 487. The conclusion is unavoidable that the bill in this case was dismissed by the court below, not because it was of the opinion that it was without jurisdiction to hear and determine upon their merits the questions which the bill presented, but because it did hear and consider them, and determined that there were no merits in the cáse of the complainants. The suit falls in the second class of cases specified in U. S. v. Jahn, where the question of jurisdiction is in issue and the jurisdiction is sustained, and then a judgment or .decree is rendered in favor of the defendants upon the merits. In that class of cases the Circuit Court of Appeals has jurisdiction to review the decision below. The motion to dismiss the appeal must accordingly be denied.
The suit in hand cannot stand as an original suit, because no federal question is involved in it and the ■ requisite diversity of citizenship does not exist. But a suit in equity, dependent upon a former suit of which the federal court has jurisdiction, may be maintained in the absence of a federal question and of diversity of citizenship (1) to aid, enjoin, or regulate the original suit; (2) to restrain, avoid, explain, or enforce the judgment or decree therein; or (3) to enforce or obtain an adjudication of liens upon, or claims to, property in the custody of the court in the original suit. Such a suit is but the continuation in a court of equity of the original suit, to the end that more complete justice may be accomplished thereby. A defendant may maintain a suit in equity of this nature against a plaintiff and those in privity with the original action to enjoin the prosecution
But a cause of action in equity either to aid, restrain, or regulate an original action or suit of which the federal court has acquired jurisdiction, or the judgment or decree therein, or to determine claims to property in the custody of the court in such an original suit or action, is indispensable to the maintenance of a dependent suit. When a cause of action of this nature exists, and a court of equity has acquired jurisdiction of the subject and of the parties by means of it, it may undoubtedly draw to itself and decide all the issues between the parties, relative to the subject-matter, and determine the entire controversy. But without such a dependent cause of action it has no jurisdiction in equity, and, in- the absence of diversity of citizenship or a federal question, it can grant no relief. In Johnson v. Christian, 125 U. S. 642, 643, 8 Sup. Ct. 1135, 31 L. Ed. 820, for example, Johnson had obtained a judgment in ejectment for the possession of the land of Christian, when the latter brought suit in equity to enjoin the enforcement of this judgment on the ground that he had an equitable defense tp it, of which he was not1 permitted to avail himself at law, and he also prayed to remove the cloud of a deed of the land to Johnson. The court granted the entire relief sought, but it would have had no jurisdiction to remove the cloud of the deed or to quiet the title to the premises, unless there had been a good cause of action to restrain the enforcement of the judgment in ejectment. Dunn v. Clarke, 8 Pet. 1, 3, 8 L. Ed. 845. Does the bill in the suit under consideration state facts sufficient to constitute such a cause
The second and third divisions of the relief which they seek depend in no way upon the action at law, but are justifiable in an origina' suit between the parties, regardless of the further prosecution or defense of the action between the corporations. They are conditioned, not by the prosecution or the stay of the action at law, but by the possession of the property by the Cycle Company, by the assertion of invalid claims to it by the Theresa Company and Hill, and by the collusive or fraudulent refusal of the Cycle Company, its directors and officers, to proceed faithfully and vigorously to defeat these claims. The relief sought in these two divisions of the prayer may undoubtedly be granted, if a cause of action for the other relief prayed, the inhibition of the prosecution of the action at law, as stated in the bill, be proved, upon the ground that whenever a court of equity has acquired jurisdiction of the subject-matter and the parties it may determine all the controversies between the latter, relative to the subject of the litigation. But the causes of action for the quieting of the title to the property and for the exclusion of the Cycle Company, its officers and the majority of its stockholders and directors, from taking any part in the conduct of this suit, form no basis for a suit dependent upon the original action at law. The only foundation for such a suit is the alleged c-ause of'action for the prohibition of the prosecution of the action at law. That the nature and purpose of the suit under consideration have not been misapprehended appears from one of the opening statements of counsel for the complainants in their brief. They write:
“The primary purpose of the complainants in commencing the suit was to restrain the Theresa Company, one of the appellees herein, from prosecuting fur.ther a suit pending at law in the Circuit Court aforesaid, and instituted by that company against the Cycle Company, another of the appellees herein, and to litigate and settle finally in the equity suit, where the complainants as stockholders, could properly appear, the claims of the Theresa Company to the property of the Cycle Company involved in the suit at law.”
The question therefore becomes whether or not the complainants have stated facts in their bill sufficient to entitle them to an injunc
There are several reasons why these alleged estoppels furnish no tenable ground for the prohibition of the prosecution of the action at law. In the first place they rest on the allegation and the assumption that the claim of the Theresa Company to the ore in the ground of the Cycle Company is baseless. If the Theresa Company was or is the owner of these ores, if these ores were or are in veins whose apexes run longitudinally along the surface of the Theresa Company’s claim, there is no foundation for the estoppels, and the question whether or not these ores were or are in such veins is a question of fact, of which the Theresa Company has the right to a trial by jury in the action at law. If, upon such a trial, the jury find that these ores were or are the property of the Theresa Company, the fact that the officers of the Cycle Company conspired with the Theresa Company to demonstrate this fact, and used the money or property of the Cycle Company to disclose the truth, cannot estop the Theresa Company from asserting this truth and recovering the property, for it
Not only this, but the complainants have joined in this bill, and they seek affirmative relief against L. E. Hill, who is not a party or a privy to the original action at law, and whose claims, if any, accrued prior to its commencement. Persons who are hot parties to the original action, but who claim some lien upon, or interest in, the property in the custody of the court, and those who come into privity with the parties to the original action after its commencement, may properly be made parties to a dependent bill, and their claims and rights may be adjudicated thereunder. But a federal court may not lawfully determine the rights of those who do not fall within these classes otherwise than by an original suit, to its jurisdiction of which diversity of citizenship or a federal question is indispensable. There is no property in the custody of the court iñ the action between the corporations. All the rights and claims of the defendant Hill arose under a lease from the Theresa Company, made more than two years before the action at law was commenced. He was therefore neither a party to that action, nor has he come into privity with it or with any party to it since its commencement. .So far as the bill sets forth and seeks the adjudication of his claims, it is therefore an original, and not a dependent, bill, and for that reason it cannot be sustained. In Dunn v. Clarke, 8 Pet. 1, 3, 8 L. Ed. 845, a judgment in ejectment had been rendered in favor of Graham, and Dunn held the land recovered as a trustee under the will of Graham, who had died. A dependent suit against Dunn.and others to enjoin the execution of this judgment and for other relief was exhibited. The court said:
“If Graham had lived, the Circuit Court might have issued an injunction to his judgment at law, without a personal service of process, except on his
The facts set forth in this bill are insufficient to sustain a dependent suit, because they disclose no equitable ground for the prohibition of the prosecution of the action at law, which is thé only alleged basis for such a suit presented by the bill, and because those who are neither parties nor privies to the action at law are joined as parties in the bill, and an adjudication is sought in this suit of rights and interests not involved in the action at law, in the absence of diversity of citizenship, or of a federal question, the indispensable conditions, of jurisdiction to determine rights and interests of this character. For these reasons the demurrer was rightly sustained. Since, however, the complainants have not here sought permission to present and prove in the action at law in behalf of the Cycle Company, by counsel of their own choice, any defenses which that company may, in their opinion, have to the claim of the Theresa Company, and as they may yet desire to do so, the decree below is modified so that it shall read:
“It is ordered, adjudged, and decreed by the court that the demurrer to the bill of complaint herein be, and the same Is hereby, sustained, and that the bill of complaint herein be, and the same hereby is, dismissed out of this court at the costs of the complainants, without prejudice to their right to apply to the court in the action at law, or by a bill in equity, for permission to plead and prove in the action at law, by means of counsel of their choice, any defenses which the Cycle Company may, in their opinion, have to that action.”
And, as thus modified, the decree below is affirmed, with costs against the appellants.