delivered the opinion of the court.
If the decree of the Circuit Court of Appeals was made final by the act of March' 3, 1891, c. 517, 26 Stat. 826, this appeal must be dismissed; and it was so made final if the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court depended entirely on diverse citizenship.
The Circuit Courts of the United States have original jurisdiction of suits of a civil nature, at law or in equity, by reason of the citizenship of the parties, in cases between citizens of different States, or between citizens of a State and aliens; and, by reason of the cause of action, “in cases arising under the Constitution or laws of the United States, or treaties made or which shall be made under their authority,” as for instance suits arising under the patent or copyright laws of the United States.
Press Publishing Company
v. Monroe,
Diversity of citizenship confers jurisdiction, irrespective of the cause of action. But if the cause of action arises under *577 the Constitution, or laws, or treaties, of the United States, then the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court may be maintained irrespective of citizenship.
The Circuit Court undoubtedly had jurisdiction of this suit on the ground of diversity of citizenship, not only because that fact existed in respect of complainant and defendants, but because the suit was ancillary to those in which the receiver was appointed. When an action or suit is commenced by a receiver, appointed by a Circuit Court, to accomplish the ends sought and directed by the suit in which the appointment was made, such action or suit is- regarded as ancillary so far as the jurisdiction'of the Circuit Court as a court of the United States is concerned; and we have repeatedly held that' jurisdiction of these subordinate actions or suits is to be attributed to the jurisdiction on which the main suit rested; and hence that where jurisdiction of the main Suit is. predicated on diversity of citizenship, and the decree therein is, therefore, made final, in the Circuit Court of Appeals, the judgments and decrees in the ancillary litigation are also final.
Rouse
v. Letcher,
The suits in which this receiver was appointed were in the *578 nature of creditors’ bills alleging an indebtedness due from the Atlantic Company; the insolvency of that company; that certain corporations had in their possession assets of the Atlantic Company; and praying for the appointment of a receiver; the marshalling of assets; the winding up of the Atlantic Company, and the application of its assets to .the payment of its debts. The only ground of Federal jurisdiction set up in the bills was diversity of citizenship, and if the decrees therein had been passed on by the Circuit Court of Appeals, the decision of that court would have been final under the statute. And as this suit was in effect - merely in collection of alleged assets of the Atlantic Company, it must be regarded as auxiliary,, and the same finality attaches to the decree of the Circuit Court of Appeals, therein.
And this is true although another ground of jurisdiction might be'developed in the course of the proceedings, as it must appear at the outset that the suit is one of that character of which the Circuit Court could properly take cognizance at the time its jurisdiction is invoked.
Colorado Central Mining Co.
v.
Tur
ck,
Some further observations may be usefully added, although what has been said necessarily disposes of the motion.
The receiver based his right of recovery on the alleged seizure by one of the defendant companies of certain rights of way, and grading done thereon by the Atlantic Company under two specified contracts, which seizure and appropriation were alleged to have been fraudulently and forcibly made; and it was averred that appellee, the Louisville, New Albany and Chicago Railroad Company, acquired title thereto and possession thereof through its consolidation with another of the defendant companies, which had acquired its title and possession through the foreclosure of a mortgage given by the company which had made the seizure. The bill nowhere •asserted a right under the Constitution or laws of the United States, but proceeded on common law rights of action. ¥e cannot accept the suggestion that the mere order of a Federal *579 court, sitting in chancery, appointing a receiver on a creditor’s bill, not only enables the .receiver to invoke Federal jurisdiction,"but to do this independently of the ground of jurisdiction of the suit in which the order was entered, and thereby affect the finality of decrees in the Circuit Court of Appeals in proceedings taken by him. The validity of the order of appointment of the receiver in this instance depended on the jurisdiction of the court that entered it, and that jurisdiction, as we have seen, depended exclusively upon the diverse citizenship of the parties to the suits in which the appointment; was made.
The order,as such, created.no liability against defendants, nor did it tend in any degree to establish the receiver’s right to a money decree, nor to any other remedy prayed for in the amended bill. The liability of defendants arose under-general law, and was neither created nor arose under the Constitution or laws of the United States.
In
Bausman
v.
Dixon,
We agree with counsel for appellee that
Provident Savings Society
v.
Ford,
In
Cooke
v.
Avery,
Appeal dismissed.
