17 F. Cas. 1317 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Wisconsin | 1857
This is an action of assumpsit upon book account for goods sold and delivered, commenced by writ of attachment. The defendants pleaded in abatement that a suit for the same debt was brought by these plaintiffs against the defendants in the circuit court for Green county in this state, before this suit was commenced; and that the said former suit was, at the time of commencing this suit, and still is,
By the rule of court, demurrers or special pleas shall be accompanied with a certificate of the attorney or counsellor, that, in his opinion, the demurrer or plea is well founded, otherwise the demurrer or plea may be treated as a nullity. The plea in this ease was not so signed, but it has not been the practice to require a plea in abatement to be so signed. The affidavit required to the plea has been considered all that was necessary. When the- objection was raised at the argument, the attorney for the defendant was allowed to annex the certificate. This was not a proper manner of making the objection; it should have been done by a motion to strike off the plea as a nullity.
The courts of the United States take judicial cognizance of the constitution and laws of the state on the subject of her courts, and we know that a circuit court for a county is a court of general jurisdiction.
The third point is, that the plea does not allege that the former suit was not discontinued before the plea in' abatement was filed. The plea is in the usual form, that the former suit was, at the time of commencing this suit, and still is, pending. This is sufficient. We cannot look out of the record to see how the fact is in regard to the former suit. The plea states that the suit is still pending, which is conceded by the demurrer, and by this we are bound.
The objection that a suit pending in a court of the state is not the subject of a plea in abatement in this court is not tenable. By the eleventh section of the act to establish the judicial courts of the United States (1 Stat. 78) it is provided that the circuit courts shall have original cognisance concurrent with the courts of the several states of all suits of a civil nature at common law or in equity, when the matter in dispute exceeds, exclusive of costs, the sum or value of five hundred dollars. It is too well settled by the courts of the United States to require citation of authority that in all cases when courts have concurrent jurisdiction, the court which first has possession of the subject must determine it conclusively, and has exclusive jurisdiction. In this case, there were two attachments of the defendant’s property, and two writs served on them, and two suits pending against them at the same time. If such a proceeding were sanctioned, it would lead to great oppression, and would be a reproach to the administration of justice. A party has his choice of jurisdictions, but he cannot claim both at the same time. This court has always adhered to the rule not to entertain jurisdiction of a case when we ara informed by a plea in abatement that a prior suit in law or equity for the same subject matter, between the same parties, is pending in a court of the state; and such, I have no doubt, is the rule in every court in the United States. Earl v. Raymond [Case No. 4,243]. This court is not a foreign court to the courts of this state. Williams v. Wilkes, 14 Pa. St. 228. The writ will be quashed.