Whether a state may prevent resort to the federal diversity jurisdiction for enforcement of a right created by the state is the question. The District Court held that it could. 1 We disagree.
The plaintiff, a citizen of California, commenced this action in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia against the City of Newport News, Virginia. She alleged that while driving her automobile on a street in Newport News, she and her vehicle fell into a sewer manhole which the city had wrongfully uncovered and left unguarded. She sought damages for injuries she claimed to have sustained.
Though all of the requisites of the federal diversity jurisdiction are present, the action was dismissed on the basis of a Virginia statute providing that no tort action against a city or other political subdivision of the Commonwealth shall be instituted “except in a court of the Commonwealth established under or pursuant to the Constitution of Virginia and having jurisdiction and venue *713 * * 2 The District Court was of the opinion that the statute did more than control venue of actions commenced in Virginia’s courts, was intended to prevent resort to the federal diversity jurisdiction and was a valid enactment binding upon the District Court.
We agree with the District Judge’s interpretation of the statute. The fact that it was subsequently codified as § 8-42.1 of Chapter 3
3
of Title 8 of Virginia’s code in disregard of the plain direction of the General Assembly that it be codified as § 8-757.1 of chapter 34,
4
cannot alter the clearly expressed intention of the General Assembly. The limitation upon maintenance of the action in any court other than one established under Virginia’s constitution so clearly excludes the courts of the United States that we cannot put any other construction upon it. A United States District Court may be “one of the 'proper courts at the county of Dauphin’ ”
5
or “a court of competent jurisdiction in Travis County, Texas,”
6
but the District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia cannot be said to be “a court of the Commonwealth established under or pursuant to the Constitution of Virginia.” [
We come then to the effectiveness of the statute to achieve its purpose.
The jurisdiction of the United States District Courts is fixed by the Congress, its acts being in implementation of Article 3, Section 2 of the Unítéá States Constitution. The Constitution' provides that the judicial power of the" United States shall extend to eontrover-sies between citizens of different states.. Congress has authorized exercise of that power if the amount in controversy exceeds a specified amount, now $10,000.’ 7 The cases in the diversity jurisdiction involve rights created by a state, rights which are subject to definition, limitation and, frequently, negation by the state. The fact that the substantive right is a creature of the state, however, does not suggest that the state may deny the judicial power the states conferred upon the United States when they ratified the Constitution or thwart its exercise within the limits of congressional authorization. In determining its own jurisdiction, a District Court of the United States must look to the sources of its power and not to acts of states which have no power to enlarge or to contract the federal jurisdiction.
It became axiomatic, therefore* as will be shown presently, that whenever there was a substantive right enforceable in a judicial proceeding in any court of the state, it was enforceable in the courts of the United States if the controversy was between citizens of different states and involved the minimum amount of money.
Newport News, nevertheless, relying on Detroit v. Osborne, 1890,
“ * * * In all cases, where a general right is thus conferred, it can be enforced in any Federal court within the State having jurisdiction of the parties. It cannot be withdrawn from the cognizance of such Federal court by any provision of State legislation that it shall only be enforced in a State court. * * * ” Railway Company v. Whitton’s Administrator, 1871,13 Wall. 270 , 286,80 U.S. 270 , 286,20 L.Ed. 571 .
This and similar questions have been frequently before the Supreme Court of the United States, particularly in the latter part of the last century.
It arose first in a context of state statutes requiring claims against the estates of insolvents and decedents to be proven in the particular court of the state having supervisory jurisdiction over settlement and administration of the estate. The Supreme Court consistently held that the question of debt or no debt was one for judicial determination and that actions to determine that question could be maintained in the courts of the United States when the requisites of the diversity jurisdiction were present. 10 Neither considerations of convenience in the administration of estates nor the restrictions of the state statutes could defeat the jurisdiction conferred upon the courts of the United States by the Constitution and the acts of Congress.
When the controversy was between citizens of different states, the right to remove to a federal court a condemnation proceeding to determine just compensation was upheld notwithstanding the fact that the state’s exercise of its power of eminent domain was an attribute of its sovereignty and despite state statutes providing for such proceedings in designated state courts. 11
*715 A state may exclude a foreign corporation and, generally, it may impose terms upon which it will permit a foreign corporation to do intrastate business within its borders. However, it may not condition the right to do business upon surrender of the foreign corporation’s right to invoke the federal diversity jurisdiction.
The first case presenting this question involved a Wisconsin statute requiring, as a condition of transacting business in that state, a foreign fire insurance company to agree in writing that it would not remove to a federal court any action commenced against it in Wisconsin’s courts. A company which had signed such an agreement undertook the removal of an action against it in violation of its agreement. The Wisconsin court denied the removal petition, but the Supreme Court reversed, holding that neither the statute nor the agreement was an effective deprivation of the company’s right of removal. 12 Subsequently it was held that Iowa could not impose its penalties when a foreign corporation, refusing to sign such an agreement, conducted its business in Iowa without having qualified. 13
For a time the decisions in the Supreme Court were in conflict as to whether a state might revoke the license of a foreign corporation which exercised its right to resort to the federal diversity jurisdiction. In three cases it was held that it could withdraw its permission to do business for that reason, though in each case it was recognized that the state was powerless to prevent the removal of any action commenced in its courts which was removable under federal law. 14 There was in parallel a conflicting line of decisions that a state could not impose such a penalty upon resort to the federal diversity jurisdiction. 15 The conflict was settled in a holding that the state could not revoke its permit because a licensed foreign corporation exercised its right to invoke the federal diversity jurisdiction. 16
The Supreme Court has held ineffective state attempts to limit tort actions to her own courts. Wisconsin sought to limit her wrongful death action, which she could have repealed entirely, to her own courts. The limitation was held not to be binding upon federal courts sitting in Wisconsin, which, when adjudicating a cause of action arising under the Wisconsin statute, should ignore the limitation. 17 The Territory of New Mexico, finding that actions for personal injury and wrongful death arising in New Mexico customarily were being prosecuted in the courts of other states with resulting oppression of the business interests of the territory and derogation of the dignity of her courts, sought to limit enforcement of such rights created by the territory to her own courts. The Supreme Court held that the courts of Texas could enforce the substantive rights *716 subject to the conditions precedent of notice and of time limitations imposed by New Mexico, but without regard to her attempt to restrict the jurisdiction of the courts of other states. 18 Held equally ineffective was a similar attempt by Alabama to restrict to her own courts enforcement of a favorable right of action she created for the benefit of employees sustaining personal injuries because of defects in the employer’s premises or equipment. 19
The same question has arisen in actions against political subdivisions of a state. Statutes requiring actions to collect upon or enforce securities issued by subdivisions of the state be brought in courts of the state have been held ineffective to restrict the federal diversity jurisdiction. 20
From all of these cases it is apparent that a court, in determining its own jurisdiction, must look to the constitution and laws of the sovereignty which created it. The laws of a state cannot enlarge or restrict the jurisdiction of the federal courts or those of any other state. It necessarily follows that whenever a state provides a substantive right and a remedy for its enforcement in a judicial proceeding in any state court, a judicial controversy involving the right may be adjudicated by a United States District Court if it has jurisdiction under the Constitution and laws of the United States. 21
A state enjoying the protection of the Eleventh Amendment to the •Constitution of the United States, of course, may consent to be sued in her own courts without waiving her immunity to suits in the federal courts, 22 but the Eleventh Amendment does not extend to cities. 23
*717
These principles are so firmly established that Judge Parker speaking for this court in Popp v. Archbell, 4 Cir.,
“ * * * it is perfectly clear that the statute was intended to regulate procedure and practice in the courts of the state, see Barrett v. Virginian R. Co.,250 U.S. 473 ,39 S.Ct. 540 ,63 L.Ed. 1092 , and was not intended to limit, as indeed it could not limit, the jurisdiction of courts of the United States. It will be noted that the effect of the statute is merely to limit the venue of any new action brought on the cause of action which has been nonsuited; and, of course, a state venue statute can have no application to courts of the United States. We look to state law to determine the substantive rights of the parties, Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins,304 U.S. 64 ,58 S.Ct. 817 ,82 L.Ed. 1188 ; but, where under state law there is a cause of action of which any state court would have jurisdiction, there is jurisdiction in the appropriate federal district court to entertain it if the requisites of federal jurisdiction are present. Singer Sewing Machine Co. of New Jersey v. Benedict,229 U.S. 481 , 486,33 S.Ct. 942 ,57 L.Ed. 1288 . A statute limiting the right to entertain the suit in the court in which nonsuit was taken no more ousts the jurisdiction of the federal court than does a statute limiting the right to entertain a suit against a municipal corporation to a designated court of the county in ■which the corporation is situate. The case, we think, is one for the application of the ordinary rule that a nonsuit taken without prejudice in a state court does not bar a subsequent suit on the same cause of action in a federal court. Southwestern Greyhound Lines v. Buchanan, 5 Cir.,126 F.2d 179 .”
The District Court recognized that a federal court would not have “followed” such a state statute prior to Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins, 1938,
The Erie doctrine does not extend to matters of jurisdiction or, generally, to matters of procedure. Its basic philosophy is that a federal court exercising its diversity jurisdiction to adjudicate rights created by the state sits as another court of that state and should reach the same result as the state courts would reach in deciding the identical issue. It is conformity in result which is required. A nonresident litigant in resorting to the federal diversity jurisdiction should obtain the same relief a resident litigant asserting the same cause of action would receive in the state courts. This doctrine led to the decisions that a federal court should not award a deficiency judgment in a foreclosure action if the courts of the state in which it sits are prohibited by statute from doing so 26 and that a federal court should not open its doors to a foreign corporation to which the courts of the state were closed because of its having done business in the state without qualifying under the laws of the state. 27
To the extent it may be said that such cases require a federal court to refrain from exercising its jurisdiction, it is a rational development of the Erie doctrine and a requisite one if the result of the litigation in the federal court is to be the same as in the state courts. A nonresident seeking the foreclosure of a North Carolina mortgage should receive in the federal court in that state as much relief, but no more, 'than the resident mortgagee who had no choice but to go into North Carolina’s courts where a deficiency judgment was unobtainable.
It would be quite foreign to the Erie doctrine, however, to apply a state statute in such a way as to deny all relief in a federal court to a nonresident plaintiff on a cause of action which, clearly, the state courts would recognize and enforce. Erie requires that the federal court grant or withhold relief as the state courts would. It does not require relegation of the diversity jurisdiction to the mercies of the legislatures of fifty separate states.
Reversed.
Notes
. Markham v. City of Newport News, D.C.E.D.Va.,
. As enacted in 1958, Acts 1958, c. 520, the statute was entitled and provided in pertinent part:
“An Act to amend the Code of Virginia by inserting in Chapter 34 of Title 8 a section numbered 8-151.1, relating to courts in which claims, suits or proceedings may be asserted, instituted, or maintained against counties, cities, toions, districts, boards, commissions, officers, agencies and other political subdivisions of the Commonwealth and of counties, cities and towns.
“No claim, suit or proceeding for damages based on a tort shall be asserted, instituted or maintained against any county, city, town, district, board, commission, officer acting in his official capacity pursuant to the Constitution and laws of the Commonwealth, agency or other political subdivision of the Commonwealth or of any county, city or town except in a court of the Commonwealth established under or pursuant to the Constitution of Virginia and having jurisdiction and venue of such claim, suit or proceeding. * * * ”
. Chapter 3 is entitled, “Venue.”
. Chapter 34 is entitled, “Recovery of Claims against the State.”
. See Gerr v. Emrick, 3 Cir.,
. See Reagan v. Farmer’s Loan & Trust Company, 1894,
. 28 U.S.C.A. § 1332.
. Code of Virginia, 1950, § 8-653.
. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company v. Sowers, 1909,
. Suydam v. Broadnax, 1840,
. Boom Company v. Patterson, 1878,
. Insurance Company v. Morse, 1874, 20 Walll. 445,
. Barron v. Burnside, 1886,
. Doyle v. Continental Insurance Company, 1876,
. Southern Pacific Company v. Denton, 1892,
. Terral v. Burke Construction Company, 1922,
. Railway Company v. Whitton’s Administrator, 1871,
. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway Company v. Sowers, 1909,
. Tennessee Coal, Iron & Railroad Company v. George, 1914,
. Cowles v. Mercer County, 1868,
. This principle is also illustrated by cases upholding the federal diversity jurisdiction in controversies cognizable in the probate courts of a state if the controversy is judicial in nature, as when the validity of a will is in issue. Payne v. Hook, 1868,
. Smith v. Reeves, 1900,
Contra: Dictum in City Bank Farmers’ Trust Co. v. Schnader, Attorney General of Pennsylvania, 1933,
. Cowles v. Mercer County, 1868,
. Cities Service Oil Co. v. Dunlap, 1939,
. Angel v. Bullington, 1947,
. Angel v. Bullington, 1947,
. Woods v. Interstate Realty Co., 1949,
