68 F. 19 | 7th Cir. | 1895
The affirmative answer by the supreme court to the question we submitted to them (155 U. S. 156, 15 Sup. Ct. 42) establishes the liability of the appellants. The only question remaining to be considered arises upon the objection taken by the answer that the controversy between the parties is within the cognizance of the courts of common law only, an.d not of the courts of equity; and that, therefore, a court of equity is without jurisdiction to entertain the suit. The principal contract was between the bridge company and the Columbus, Chicago & Indiana Central Railway Company (for brevity called the Indiana Central Company) and three other railway companies, by which the Bridge Company granted to the four railway companies in perpetuity the right to use its bridge over the Mississippi river upon payment of certain specified tolls. The Indiana Central Company’s line of railroad did not reach within 200 miles of the Mississippi river, but the railroads of the several railway companies parties to the contract, with the railroads of the Pittsburgh Company and the Pennsylvania Company, appellants, and with the bridge of the appellee company, formed a continuous line of transportation from Philadelphia to Des Moines, Iowa. By the bridge contract the three railway companies which immediately connected with the bridge at the river agreed to keep books of account which should exhibit the number of passengers and the number of tons of freight trans
The judiciary act of 1789 provided that “suits in equity shall not be sustained in either of the courts of the United States in a case where a plain, adequate and complete remedy may be had at law.” 1 Stat. 82; Rev. St. § 723. This provision has been held to be merely declaratory, making no alteration whatever in the rules of equity upon the subject of legal remedy. Boyce’s Ex’rs v. Grundy, 3 Pet 210, 215; Wehrman v. Conklin, 155 U. S. 314, 15 Sup. Ct. 129. The adequate remedy at law which is the test of equitable jurisdiction in the federal courts is that which existed at the adoption of the judiciary act. Thus it was said by Judge Story in Pratt v. Northam, 5 Mason, 95, 105, Fed. Cas. No. 11,376:
“It has been often decided by the supreme court that the equity jurisdiction of the courts of the United States is not limited or restrained by the local remedies in the different states; that it is the same in all the states, and is the same which is exercised in the land of our ancestors, from whose jurisprudence our own is derived.”
“When the judiciary act speaks of a plain, adequate, and complete remedy at law, it refers to tlie common law, not to the statutes of the states. Robinson v. Campbell, 3 Wheat. 212; Bodley v. Taylor, 5 Cranch, 191; U. S. v. Howland, 4 Wheat. 109; Boyle v. Zacharie, 6 Pet. 648. The equity jurisdiction of the courts of the United States is the same in all the states.”
Mr. Justice Woods, while circuit judge, declared (Kimball v. Mobile Co., 3 Woods, 555, 565, Fed. Cas. No. 7,774):
“Iso law of Alabama providing another forum or another method of procedure could deprive the complainants of their right under the constitution and laws of the United States, or circumscribe the jurisdiction of the equity courts of the United States. Bennett v. Butterworth, 11 How. 669; Thompson v. Railroad Co., 6 Wall. 134; Case of Broderick’s Will, 21 Wall. 503; Noyes v. Willard, 1 Woods, 187, Fed. Cas. No. 10,374; Benjamin v. Cavaroc, 2 Woods, 168, Fed. Cas. No. 1,300.”
In Payne v. Hook, 7 Wall. 425, it was insisted that a federal court of chancery sitting in Missouri would not enforce demands against an administrator or executor when the court of the state invested with general chancery powers could not enforce similar demands, and that the complainant should be remanded for redress to the local court of probate. The court, however, overruled the objection, declaring at page 430:
“We have-repeatedly held ‘that the jurisdiction of the courts of the United States over controversies between citizens of different states cannot be impaired by the laws of the states which prescribe the mode of redress in other courts, or which regulate the distribution of their judicial power.’ If local remedies are sometimes modified to suit the changes in Ihe laws of the states and the practice of their courts, it is not so with equity. The equity jurisdiction conferred on the federal courts is the same that the high court of chancery in England possesses, is subject to no other limitation or restraint by state legislation, and is uniform throughout the different states of the Union.”
In McConihay v. Wright, 121 U. S. 205, 7 Sup. Ct. 940, the equity jurisdiction of the federal court was challenged because a remedy at law was afforded by the statute of West Virginia. But the court overruled the plea, asserting:
“Admitting this to be so, it nevertheless cannot have the effect to oust tlu> jurisdiction in equity of the courts of the United States as previously established. That jurisdiction, as has often been decided, is vested as a. part of the judicial power of rhe United States in its courts by the constitution and acts of congress in execution thereof. Without the assent of congress, that jurisdiction cannot be impaired or diminished by the statutes of the several states regulating the practice of their own courts. Bills quia timet, such as the present, belong to the ancient jurisdiction in equity, and no change in state legislation giving in like cases a remedy by action at law, can, of itself, curtail the jurisdiction in equity of the courts of the United States. The adequate remedy at law, which is the test of equitable jurisdiction in these courts, is that which existed when the judiciary act of 1789 was adopted, unless subsequently changed by act of congress.”
“By the settled rule of this court the grantee is not directly liable to the mortgagee at law or in equity, and the only remedy of the mortgagee against the grantee is by bill in equity in the right of the mortgagor and grantor, by virtue of the right in equity of a creditor to avail himself of any security which his debtor holds from a third person for the payment of the debt.”
It is true that the court in the course of the opinion observed that "the question whether the remédy of the mortgagee against the grantee is at law and in his own right, or in equity and in the right of the mortgagor only, is — as was adjudged in Willard v. Wood [infra], above cited — to be determined by the law of the place where the suit is brought.” But that was not said as controlling the form of action in the federal court. The lex fori was there ascertained and asserted to determine the contract relation existing between the grantee and the mortgagee as affecting a subsequent agreement of the mortgagor with the grantee without the assent of the grantor. The case does not assume to decide that the remedy at law' afforded by the law of the state would preclude a resort to a remedy in equity in the federal court if such remedy was appropriate. Nor does the case of Willard v. Wood, 135 U. S. 309, 10 Sup. Ct. 831, therein referred to, in any way conflict with the established doctrine of the federal courts. In that case the administrator of the assignee of the mortgage brought an action at law in the District of Columbia against the executrix of a purchaser of the equity of redemption to recover the mortgage debt remaining unsatisfied after foreclosure and sale of the mortgaged premises. The mortgaged premises w'ere situated in, and the debt contracted in, the state of New York. It. was insisted that, as by the law' of that state the suit could be maintained either at law or in equity, the plaintiff had his election of remedy in the District of Columbia, where the suit was brought. The court held that the form of the remedy, whether at law or in equity, was governed by the lex fori, — the law of the District of Columbia, — and could only be in equity. The case is far from asserting that local law can control the form of remedy in the federal courts. It may well be that, if -the law of a state in which the federal court is located and where suit is brought permits an action at law where the remedy was formerly in equity only, the federal court will entertain jurisdiction at law of such a suit upon the ground that the remedy so afforded is concurrent; but we fail in. search of authority to the effect that such remedy excludes the ancient jurisdiction of equity. It was said by Lord Eldon in Eyre v. Everett, 2 Russ. 381:
“This court will not allow itself to be ousted of any part of its original jurisdiction because a court of law happens to fall in love with the same or a similar jurisdiction.”