Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
The refusal of-the State corn! of Wisconsin to allow the removal of the case into the United States Circuit Court of Wisconsin, and its justification under the agreement of the company and the statute of Wisconsin form the subject of consideration in the present suit.
The State courts of Wisconsin held that this sfatute and their agreement under it justified a denial of the petition to remove the case into the United States court. The insurance company deny this proposition, and this is the point presented for consideration.
Is the agreement thus made by the insurance company one that, without reference to the statute, would bind the party making it?
Should a citizen of the State of New York enter into an agreement with the State of Wisconsin, that in no event would he resort to the courts of that State or to the Federal tribunals within it to protect his rights of property, it could not be successfully contended that such an agreement would be valid.
Should a citizen of New York enter into an agreement with the State of Wisconsin, upon whatever consideration, that he would in no case, when called into the courts of that State or the Federal tribunals within it, demand a jury to determine any rights of property that might be called in question, but. that such rights should in all such cases be submitted to arbitration or to the decision of a single judge, the authorities are clear that he would not thereby be debarred from resorting to the ordinary legal tribunals of the State. There is no sound principle upou which such agreements can be specifically enforced.
' That the agreement of the insurance company is invalid upon, the principles mentioned, numerous cases may be cited to prove.
In Scott v. Avery (one of the cases), the Lord- Chancellor says: “ There is no doubt of the general principle that par.ties cannot by contract oust the ordinary courts of their jurisdiction. That has been decided in many case's. . Perhaps the first case I need refer to was- a case decided about a century ago.
And the principle, Mr. Justice Story, in his Commentaries on Equity Jurisprudence,
In Stephenson v. P. F. and M. C. Ins. Co.,
, Does the agreement in question gain validity from the statute of Wisconsin, which has been-qnótcd ? Is the statute of the State of Wisconsin, which enacts-that a corporation organized in another State shall not transact business within its limits, unless it stipulates in advance that it will not remove' into the Federal courts any suit that may be commenced agaiiist it by á citizen of Wisconsin, a valid statute in respect to such requisition, under the Constitution of the United States?
The Constitution of,the United. States declares that the judicial power of the United States shall extend to all cases in law and equity arising under that Constitution, the laws of the United States, and to the treaties made or which shall be .made under their authority, ... / to controversies between a State and citizens of another State, and between citizens of different States.
The jurisdiction of the Federal courts, under this clause of the Constitution, depends upon and is regulated by the laws of the United States. State legislation cannot confer jurisdiction upon the Federal courts, nor can it limit or restrict the authority given by Congress i.ii pursuance of the Constitution. This has been held many times.
It has also been held many times, that a corporation is a' citizen, of the State by which it is created, and,in which its principal place of business is situated, so far as that it can sue and be sued in the Federal courts. This court has repeatedly held that a corporation was a citizen of the State
The twelfth section of the Judiciary’Act of 1789 provides that if a suit be commenced in any State court by a citizen-of the State in which the suit is commenced, against a citizen of another State, where the matter in dispute exceeds $500, and the defendant at the time of entering his appearance shall file a petition for the removal of the cause for trial into the next Circuit Court of the United States, and shall offer good bail for his proceedings therein, “it shall be the duty of the State court to accept such security and proceed no farther in the cause.”
This applies to all the citizens of another State, whether corporations, partnerships, or individuals. It confers an unqualified and unrestrained right to have the case transferred to the Federal courts upon giving the security required. In the case recently decided in this court, of Insurance Company v. Dunn,
The statute of Wisconsin, however, provides as to a.certain class of citizens of other States, to wit, foreign corporations, that they shall not exercise that right, and prohibits them from transacting their business within that State, unless they first enter into an agreement in writing that they will not claim or exercise that right.
The Home Insurance Company is a citizen of New York, within this provision of the Constitution. As such citizen of another State, it sought to exercise this right to remove to a Federad tribunal a suit commenced against itself in the State court of Wisconsin, where the amount involved exceeded the sum of $500. This right was denied to it by the
We are not able to distinguish this agreement and this requisition, in principle, from a similar one made in the case of an individual citizen of New York. A corporation has the same right to .the protection of the laws as a natural citizen, and the same right to appeal to all the courts of the country. The rights of an individual are not superior in this respect to that of a corporation.
The State of Wisconsin can regulate its own corporations and the affairs of it's own citizens, in subordination, however, to the Constitution of the United States. The requirement of an agreement like this from their own corporations would be brutum. fulmen, because they possess no such right under the Constitution of the United States. A foreign citizen, whether natural or corporate, in this respect possesses a right not pertaining to'one of her own citizens. There must necessarily be a difference between the status of the two in this respect.
We do not .consider the question whether the State of Wisconsin can entirely exclude such corporations from its limits, nor what reasonable terms they may impose as a condition of their transacting business within the State. . These questions have been before the court in other cases, but they do not arise here. In Paul v. Virginia,
In eaeh-of these cases, the general language of the learned justice is to be expounded with reference to the subject be-, fore him. They lay down principles in general terms which are to be understood only with reference to the facts in hand., Thus, the case iii which the, opinion was delivered by Mr. Justice Fie.kl was one involving the construction of that clause of the United States Constitution which declares that’ “the citizens of each State shall be entitled to all the privileges and immunities of citizens in the several States,” and. of'that clause regulating commerce among the States, not of the one now before us. It involved the question whether fhe State might require a foreign insurance company to. take a license for the transaction of its business, giving security' for the payment of its debts, and decided that taking insurance risks was not á transaction of commerce, within the meaning of the two clauses of th.e Constitution cited. It had no reference to the clause giving to citizens of other States the right of litigation in the United States courts, ánd certainly liad no-bearing upon the right of corporations to resott to those courts, or the power of the State to limit and restrict such resort.
It was not intended to impair the force of the language used by Mr. Justice Curtis in the La Fayette Insurance Company v. French,
None of the cases so much as intimate that conditions may be imposed' which are repugnant to the Constitution and laws of the'United States, or inconsistent with those ■ rules, of public law which secure the jurisdiction and authority of each State from encroachment by others.
The. .case of the Bank of Columbia v. Okely,
We a,re -not able to discover in this case any countenance for 'the statute of Wisconsin which we are considering.
On this branch of the case.the conclusion is this:
1st. The Constitution of the United States secures to citizens of another State than that in .which suit is brought an absolute right to remove their cases, into, the Federal court, upon compliance-with the terms of the act of 1789.
2,d. The statute of Wisconsin is an obstruction to this right, is repugnant.to the Constitution of. the United States and the laws in pursuance thereof, and is illegal and void.
3d. The agreement of the insurance company derives no support from an unconstitutional statute and is void, as it would be had no such statute bte'en passed.
We áre of Opinion, forthe reasons’ given, that the Winnebago/County Court erred in proceeding in tbe .case after the filing the petition and the giving the security required by the,- act of 1789T and that all .subsequent proceedings in the State court are illegal and should be vacated. The judgment itUthat co.urt, and. the judgment in the Supreme Court.of Wisconsin, should be reversed, and the prayer of the petition for removal should be granted..
Ordered accordingly.
Notes
18 New York, 128.
Nute v. Hamilton Insurance Co.,
Kill v. Hollester,
8 Term, 139.
Section 670.
54 Maine, 70.
Art. 3, § 2.
Railway Co. v. Whitton, 13 Wallace, 286; Payne v. Hook, 7 Id. 427; The Moses Taylor. 4 Id. 411, and cases cited.
Express Co. v. Kountze, 8 Wallace, 342; Cowles v. Mercer Co., 7 Id. 118; Railway v. Whitton, 13 Id. 275; Ohio and Mississippi Railroad Co., v. Wheeler,
19 Wallace, 214.
8 Wallace, 168.
10 Wallace, 410.
Concurrence Opinion
with whom concurred Mr. Justice DAVIS, dissenting.
I cannot concur in the. judgment wüich has just been announced. A State has the right to exclude, foreign insurance'companies from the transaction of business within its jurisdiction. Such is the settled law in this court.
This insurance company accepted, this condition, and was thus enabled to make the contract sued upon. Having received the benefits of its renunciation the revocation comes too late.
The State court had jurisdiction to try the question of citizenship upon the petition to transfer. Upon the facts I think it was authorized to find that the company was, for all the purposes of that action, a citizen of Wisconsin, and-refuse the order of removal.
Paul v. Virginia,8 Wallace, 181; Ducat v. Chicago, 10 Id. 410; Bank of Augusta v. Earle,
