This appeal is submitted upon an agreed ' statement pursuant to Rule 76, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U. S.C.A. following section 723c. The question presented is whether the court erred in holding that orders of dismissal for lack of jurisdiction on the ground of im~proper venue entered in a prior suit on *333 the same cause of action and in the same court require dismissal of the present suit as against the appellees on the principle of res judicata.
The facts are briefly as follows: In 1938 the plaintiff, as receiver of United States Electric Power Corporation, incorporated in Maryland, brought suit in the district court for the southern district of New York against the directors of said corporation and others, charging a conspiracy to use the corporate assets for their private profit. Among the defendants named in that suit were A. C. Allyn & Co., Inc., a Delaware corporation, and First Boston Corporation, a Massachusetts corporation. As neither of the corporations nor the plaintiff was a citizen or resident of New York, they respectively moved to vacate service of summons and to dismiss the complaint as to them for lack of jurisdiction on the ground of improper venue. These motions were granted. The plaintiff took no appeal from the orders of dismissal. Thereafter he instituted similar suits based upon the same transactions against First Boston Corporation and A. C. Allyn & Co., Inc., in the federal district courts of Massachusetts and Delaware, respectively. These cases are at issue and awaiting trial. After the decision of the Supreme Court in Neirbo Co. v. Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corp.,
The appellant concedes, as he necessarily must on the authorities, that a decision in favor of jurisdiction is res judicata and invulnerable to collateral attack, even though the ground on which the decision was rested has subsequently been overruled. See United States v. Moser,
The other cases relied upon by the appellant are readily distinguishable. It will suffice to refer to Smith v. McNeal,
Orders affirmed.
