9 F. 797 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1881
The orators are citizens of New York, and executors in that state of George Griswold, late a citizen of that state, and bring this bill to enforce liens upon rolling stock and earnings of rolling stock of the Vermont Central and Vermont & Canada Railroads, pledged by some of the defendants while in possession of those roads and the Central Vermont Railroad Company, their successor in possession, by consent of parties and order of the court of chancery of the state of Vermont thereupon, for the security of several series of equipment loans in which the orators, as executors, invested.
Some of the defendants have demurred, assigning for cause that owners of the different series of bonds have no common interest in the securities; that the bonds are not referred to as a part of the bill, nor made a part of, nor attached to, the bill; that the doings of the managers in possession prior to the possession of the Central Vermont Railroad Company cannot properly be joined with the doings of that company; and that on the face of the bill it appears that this court has not jurisdiction.
The Central Vermont Railroad Company has pleaded the proceedings of the state court of chancery in bar to the jurisdiction of this
The cause has now been heard upon"these causes of demurrer and this plea.
The causes of demurrer do not require any extended notice. The claims are assérted in favor of the same parties against the same parties to enforce a common trust. The Central Vermont Railroad Company succeeded to the duties of its predecessors in respect to the property, and still the predecessors were not discharged, therefore all are connected, and all are ¡properly joined. If the bonds or notes are sufficiently set forth to show their terms and effect, that is enough without reciting them, further referring to them, or attaching copies of them; and it is not pretended but that they are so set forth. The question as to the jurisdiction of this court is involved and included in that made by the plea, except as to a question made whether the orators, being executors in the state of New York, can suo out of that state. This does not involve any question as to whether they so , succeed to the right of their testator out of the state where they are executors, that they can' represent him and recover upon his rights elsewhere. These rights never accrued to him at all. They accrued to the orators themselves, and accrued to them in the same capacity; and, for aught that appears, in the samé place in which they are attempting to enforce the rights.
Letters of executorship or administration extend only to the goods or estate which were of the testator or intestate at the time of decease, and would not include these securities, if taken out in Vermont, as against the rightstof the orators.
“But if the plea had been perfect in this respect it would not follow that the complainant could not invoke the jurisdiction of the circuit court. He, being a non-resident, has his option to bring his suit in that court, unless he has submitted, or is made a party in some form, to the special jurisdiction of the eourt of common pleas. It appears from the bill that the assignees have refused to allow the claim of the plaintiff, or any part of it. To establish this claim as against the assignees the complainant has a right to sue in the circuit court, which was established chiefly for the benefit of non-residents. Hot that the claim should thus be established by any novel principle of law or equity, but that his rights might be investigated free from any supposed local prejudice or unconstitutional legislation. On the most liberal construction favorable to the exercise of the special jurisdiction, the rights of the plaintiff in this respeetfcould not, against his consent, be drawn into it.”
In Mallett v. Dexter, 1 Curt. 178, sometimes relied upon to avoid the jurisdiction of the circuit court, jurisdiction was entertained in favor of a non-resident to reopen accounts of administrators, settled in the probate court of Rhode Island, on the ground of fraud, although it was refused as to accounts then actually in process of settlement in the state court. Union Bank v. Jolly, 18 How. 503; Hyde v. Stone, 20 How. 170; Payne v. Hook, 7 Wall. 425.
According to the allegations of the bill, a particular fund was to be set apart for the payment of tlie orators’ notes, which was not set apart, or if set apart has not been applied to that purpose. The orators have the right to apply to the federal courts, on account of their citizenship, to have their claims investigated. The merit's of their claims are not yet before the court, and cannot be until answer and proofs are made. The only question now is whether the ease shall proceed to answer and proofs. Nothing is seen adequate to deprive the orators of their right to resort to the federal courts, in common with all citizens, no one state having or claiming to have cause of action against citizens of another state to have their causes tried.
The demurrer and plea are overruled; defendants to answer over by the first day of next term.