A policy was issued by the insurance company upon the life of Callahan, payable to the Great North Woods Club, as benefieiary. It contained the customary provision that it would be incontestable after two years from the date of issue (September 26,1927). Callahan having died, suit was commenced in a state court in Illinois by the beneficiary against the insurer. Just before the expiration of the two-year period, the insurer filed a bill in an equity court in Illinois, asking that the policy be canceled, and basing equity jurisdiction upon the incontestable clause [the jurisdiction sustained by us in New York Life v. Seymour,
The questions involved are two: Was the Illinois equity ease so far a suit in rem that jurisdiction must be yielded to that court? Was the stay of proceedings, if not obligatory, yet within the discretion of the trial judge?
We conclude that the Illinois equity suit was not such a proceeding in rem or quasi in rem as to bar the jurisdiction of the United States District Court in Michigan.
Where two courts are merely different divisions of the same sovereignty, and though the earlier suit is not a bar to the latter, it may well be within the limits of discretion to delay the second suit until the first is disposed of; but, where the federal court has jurisdiction of parties and of 'subject-matter, it is usually true that the plaintiff in that court has an absolute right to have his case in that jurisdiction proceed to trial, and that there is no discretion to stay that action, pending the result of an earlier one in the state court. McClellan v. Carland,
We conclude that Kansas City Southern v. U. S., does not indicate any applicable exception to the rule of McClellan v. Carland, and that, accordingly, the stay order now in controversy should not have been made. Doubtless no formal writ of mandamus will be necessary, but we assume that the stay order specified in the petition will be vacated, and that the cause will proceed to trial in the District Court.
