'dеlivered the opinion of the court. He stated the facts in the foregoing language and continued:
The sole question presented for our decision is whether it was error in the State court to permit a recovery of the possession of property, thus held, against a marshal of the United States or his deputy, in behalf of'the rightful owner; and whether, on the other hand, it shоuld not have adjudged in favor of the defendant below, that his- possession of the property by virtue of the levy under the writ was, in itself, a complete defence to the action of replevin, without regard to the rightful ownership'.
The case of
Freeman
v. Howe,
In the opinion in that case, Mr. Justice Nelson refers to the case of
Taylor
v.
Carryl,
The opinion then proceeds to sho w that no distinction can be made, affecting the question, between process in rem, and an attachment issued by a common-law court, although the latter is not the foundation of the jurisdiction, and the property seized is not the subject matter оf the suit, which is simply for the recovery of a debt, without a lien or charge upon the property, except that resulting from its seizure, as security for the" judgment. The objection that the process was directed against i. the property of the defendant and conferred no authority upon the marshal to take the property of the plaintiffs in the replevin suit, is then answered, the court saying — • “ for the property having been seized under the process of attachment, and in the custody of the marshal, and the right to hold it being a question belonging to the Federal court, under whose process it was seized, to determine, there was no authority, as we have seen, under the process of the State court to interfere with it.”
The opinion of the court then points out the error of Chancellor Kent, in his statement, 1 Kent, 410, that, “ if a marshal of the United States, under an execution in favor of the United States against A, should seize the person or property of B, then the State courts have jurisdiction to protect the person and the property so illegally invaded.” Comfnenting on this statement, it is said, that the effеct. of the principle, if admitted, would be to draw into the State courts, “ not only all questions of the liability of property seized upon mesne and final process issued under the authority of the Federal courts, including the admiralty, for this court can be no exception, for the purposes for which it was seized, but also the arrests upon mesne and imprisonment upon final process of the person in *179 both civil and criminal cases, for in every case the question of jurisdiction could be made;” and the court adds: “We need scarcely remark, that no government could maintain the administration or execution of its laws, civil or criminal, if the jurisdiction of its judicial tribunals were subject to the determination of another.”
To meet the objection, that the party whose property had been wrongfully taken and withheld would be left without remedy, unless by virtue of citizenship he could sue in a Federal court, the opinion then explains the remedy in such cases, by an ancillary proceeding in the court whose process has been made the instrument of the wrong; a remedy the principle and procedurе of which we had occasion recently in the case of
Krippendorf
v.
Hyde,
The point of the decision in Freeman v. Howe, supra, is that, when property is taken and held under process, mesne or final, of a court of the United States, it is in the custody of the law, and within the exclusive jurisdiction of the court from which the process has issued, for the purposes of the writ; that the possession of the officer cannot be disturbed by prоcess from any State court, beeause to disturb that possession would be to invade the jurisdiction of the court by whose command it is held, and to violate the law which that jurisdiction is appointed to administer; that any person, not a party to the suit or judgment, whose property has been wrongfully, 'but under color of process, taken and withheld, may prosecute, by ancillary proceedings, in the court whence the process issued, his remedy for restitution of the property or its proceeds, while remaining in the control of that court; but that all other remedies to which he may be entitled, against officers or parties, not involving the withdrawal of the property or its proceeds, from the custody of the officer and the jurisdictiоn of the court, he may pursue in any tribunal, State or federal, having jurisdiction over the parties and the subject matter. And vice versa, the same principle protects the possession of property while thus held, by process issuing from State courts, against any disturbance under process of the courts of the United States; excepting, of course, those cases wherein the latter exercise jurisdiction for the pur *180 pose of enforcing the supremacy of the Constitution and laws of the United States.
The doctrine of
Freeman
v.
Howe, supra,
was further defined by the decision in
Buck
v.
Colbath,
Here it will be perceived that no distinction is made betAveen *181 writs of attachment and executions upon judgments, and that the princiрle embraces both, as indeed both are mentioned as belonging to the same class elsewhere in the opinion.
And'-there is nothing in the nature, office, or command of the two descriptions of process, by which, so far as the question here involved .is concerned, they can be distinguished. One is mesne process and the other final; but in the courts of the United States thе attachment cannot be used, as in the practice of other jurisdictions, as means of compelling the appearance of the defendant, or of founding jurisdiction as a proceeding
in rem.
Both alike command the seizure of the property of the defendant without a specific description, and in obeying the precept, the officer еxercises precisely the same discretion, and with the same consequences, if he commits a wrong under color of it. The court has .the same control over both forms of its process, and has custody of the property seized by virtue of them in the same sense. The circumstance that, as to property held under an attachment, the final judgment may direct its sale, while the execution is issued upon prgecipe of the party, and is executed without further order, cannot alter the relation of the court, either to the officer or the property. It has jurisdiction over the latter to meet and satisfy the exigency of either writ, and that jurisdiction can be maintained only by retaining the possession acquired by the officеr in executing it. A third person, a stranger to the suit and claiming as owner, may prosecute his right to restitution in either case, in the same methods as pointed out in
Krippendorf
v. Hyde,
The very point .was involved in the decision in
Hagan
v.
Lucas,
That which cannot be done by final process, is equally out of the reach of original or mesne process.
The forbearance which courts of co-ordinate jurisdiction, administered under a single system, exercise towards each other, whereby conflicts are avoided, by avoiding interference with the process of each other, is a principle of comity, Avith perhaрs no higher sanction than the utility Avhich comes from concord; but betAveen State courts and those of the United States, it is something more. It is a principle of' right and of laAV, and therefore, of necessity. It leaves nothing to discretion or mere convenience. These courts do not belong to the same system, so far as their jurisdiction is concurrent; and although they cо-exist in the same space, they are independent, and have no common superior. They exercise jurisdiction, it is true, Avithin . the same territory, but not in the same plane; and when one takes into its jurisdiction a specific thing, that
res
is as much withdraAvn from the judicial poAver of the other, as if it had been carried physically into a different territorial sovereignty. To attempt tо seize it by a foreign process is futile and void. The
*183
regulation of process, and the decision of questions relating to it, are part of the jurisdiction' of the court from which it issues. “ The jurisdiction of a court,” said Chief Justice Marshall, “ is not exhausted by the rendition of its judgment, but continues until that judgment shall be satisfied. Many questions arise on the process, subsequent to the judgment, in which jurisdiction is to bе exercised.”
Wayman
v.
Southard,
The principle which defines the boundaries of jurisdiction between the judicial tribunals of the States and of the United States, the application of which effectually prevents their confusion; was set forth and vindicated in the judgment of this court in
Ableman
v.
Booth,
In Lammon et al. v. Feusier et al. already cited, it was said by Mr. Justice Gray, in reference to the case of a common-law attachment, that “ the taking of the attachable property of the person named in the writ is rightful, the taking of the property of another person is wrongful; but each, being done by the marshal in executing the writ in his hands, is an attempt to perform his official duty and is an official, act.” The same is true of a similar levy under an execution, as we have shown that there is no difference, relevant to the point, between the two writs.
Property thus levied on by attachment, or taken in execution, is brought by the writ within the scope of the jurisdiction of the court whose process it is,, and as long as it remains in the possession of the officer it is in the custody of the law. It is the bare fact of that possession under claim and color of that authority, without respect to the ultimate right, to be asserted otherwise and elsewhere, as already sufficiently explained, that furnishes to the officer complete immunity from the process of every other jurisdiction that attempts to dispossess him. That *185 was the defence made and relied on by the plaintiff in error in the present case, and to which the Supreme Court of Michigan refused tp give its due and conclusive effect. For that error its judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded with directions to affirm the judgment of the Circuit Court for the County of Kent, in favor of the plaintiff'in error; and
It is so ordered.
