delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case comes here on certiorari, directed to the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, to resolve questions of public importance growing out of the conflicting claims, of the federal district court and of the Insurance Commis
The case was heard in the state supreme court upon an agreed statement of facts, deemed “necessary to a determination of the question involved in the appeal,” which was filed in the state trial court. It purports to outline the substance of proceedings had in that court and in the federal district court. The question is stated' to be whether the state court, “ in view of the prior pendency of the suit ... in the Federal court, had jurisdiction to enter the decree from which this appeal is taken.” The records of the pleadings and proceedings in those courts are not included in the record and are not before us.
Appellant was organized under the Insurance Company Law of May 17, 1921, P. L. 682. On September 14, 1933, appellant’s officers and directors appeared at a hearing before the Insurance Commissioner at which the president of the company was ordered to return to it assets which he had improperly withdrawn from the company, with consequent serious impairment of its financial condition. On October 14, 1933, a further hearing was held before the Attorney General of the state, at which it appeared that the company was in an unsafe and unsound condition.
On November 17, 1933, a shareholder of the insurance company filed his bill of complaint against the company in the district court for eastern Pennsylvania. At this time negotiations, conducted by the Commissioner with the stockholders of the company, for its rehabilitation were pending. The complaint alleged that the stockholder was a resident of West Virginia; that the requisite jurisdictional amount was involved; that officers of the company had misappropriated and wasted its assets; that
On December 8, 1933, while the suit in the district court was pending, the Attorney General of the state, acting pursuant to § 502 of the Insurance Department Act of May 17, 1921, P. L. 789, filed a suggestion with the Court of Common Pleas of Dauphin County, alleging that .the company was in a financially unsound condition; that the conduct of its business would be detrimental and hazardous to its policyholders, creditors and the public; that certain officers of the company had made illegal investments of the funds of the company and had appropriated to their own use other assets of the company. He prayed for an order, that the defendant show cause why the business of the company should not be closed, its charter vacated, and its assets taken into possession of the Insurance Commissioner for liquidation under his direction, and for an injunction. On the same day the Court of Common Pleas granted the order to show cause and enjoined the company from transacting any business and from disposing of its property until further order of the court. The order to show cause was served upon the company on December 11, 1933.
On December 14, 1933, the company filed an answer in the suit pending before' the federal district court, substantially admitting the alleged withdrawal of assets and illegal investment, and denying the other allegations of the complaint, and alleging the pendency of the proceedings in the Court of Common Pleas.
On the same day the Court of Common Pleas entered a further order restraining the company ,and its officers or agents from transacting any business and from dis
After further proceedings the Court of Common Pleas entered its final decree, March 14, 1934, that the company be dissolved and directing the acting Insurance Commissioner to take possession of and to liquidate the business and property of the casualty company in accordance with the provisions of the state Insurance Department Act. No final hearing has been held and no receiver has been appointed in the suit pending in the district court, but because of the restraining order of that court the company has refused to comply with the demand of the Commissioner for the surrender of its property in conformity with the decree of the state court.
On appeal from the Court of Common Pleas, the state supreme court treated the case as one involving only a conflict of jurisdiction between the state court and the federal court. It viewed the comprehensive statutory scheme of the Commonwealth for liquidating insurance companies by the Insurance Commission as binding on the company and its shareholder. It therefore thought that there could be no controversy between them which would be a proper subject of suit in the federal courts and that this was sufficient to preclude the exercise of jurisdiction of the federal court. It accordingly affirmed the decree.
Section 502 of the Insurance Department Act authorizes the Commissioner to liquidate an insurance company v/hen its condition is such that further transaction of its business will be hazardous; such liquidation is permitted only on an order or decree of the Court of Common Pleas, granted on application of the Attorney General of the state. Upon such application the court is authorized by § 505 to enjoin the company from transacting any business and from disposing of its property, and after a hearing to direct the Insurance Commissioner to take possession of the property and to liquidate it pursuant to the statute. By § § 506, 507, the order of the court vests the Commissioner with the title to the property and supersedes the authority of any receiver appointed by any other state court.
It is plain that the state court, in the absence of the suit pending in the district court, would have acquired jurisdiction to proceed with the cause and to grant the relief sought. But the question now presented is whether its authority to proceed is affected by the pendency of the suit in the district court, which the state supreme court, on the record before it, treated as exercising a conflicting jurisdiction. The federal question, reviewable on appeal, is whether the state court has given proper effect to the
Where the judgment sought is strictly
in personam,
for the recovery of money or for an injunction compelling or restraining action by the defendant, both a state court and a federal court having concurrent jurisdiction may proceed with the litigation, at least until judgment is obtained in one court which may be set up as
res adjudicata
in the other. See
Buck
v.
Colbath, supra,
342;
Kline
v.
Burke Construction Co.,
Where the assertion, of jurisdiction by the two courts is nearly simultaneous, it becomes important, as in the present case, to determine the precise time when the jurisdiction attaches. If the two suits do not have substantially the same purpose, and thus the jurisdiction of the two courts may not be said to be strictly concurrent, and if neither court can act effectively without acquiring possession and control of the property
pendente lite,
the time of acquiring actual possession may perhaps be the decisive factor. Compare
Moran
v.
Sturges, supra,
284;
Harkin
v.
Brundage, supra,
43. But when the two suits have substantially the same purpose and the jurisdiction of the courts is concurrent, that one whose jurisdiction and process are first invoked by the filing of the bill is treated as in constructive possession of the property, and as authorized to proceed with the cause.
Harkin
v.
Brundage, supra,
43-45. Jurisdiction thus attaches upon the filing of the bill of complaint in court, at least where process subsequently issues in due course.
Palmer
v.
Texas, supra,
129;
Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co.
v.
Lake Street Elevated R. Co., supra,
60; compare
Smith Purifier Co.
v.
McGroarty,
In the present case there are outstanding injunctions by both courts restraining any interference with the property in the hands of the insolvent corporation, and neither the Insurance Commissioner nor the district court has
Although the district court has thus acquired jurisdiction, the end sought by the litigation in the state court is the liquidation of a domestic insurance company by a state officer. In the absence of a showing that the interests of creditors and shareholders would not be adequately protected by this procedure, the case was a proper one for the district court, in the exercise of judicial discretion, to relinquish the jurisdiction in favor of the administration by the state officer. See No. 394, Pennsylvania v. Williams, supra.
The authority of the Insurance Commissioner to pro- . ceed with the liquidation under state law, it is true, rests on the decree of the state court entered after the district
Since the district court had first acquired jurisdiction to liquidate the property of the insurance company, and
Reversed.
