84 F. 6 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Washington | 1897
(orally). I am very firmly convinced that this plea is sufficient to oust this court of jurisdiction. If this court were authorized to review the decisions of the superior court of King county, and to reverse its judgments for error, or to grant a writ of prohibition against that court, restraining it from proceeding without jurisdiction against the property of a person not before it, nor a party to any proceeding before it, and not within its jurisdiction, I could yield to the argument of plaintiff’s counsel. There would be certainly great merit in the matters that have been urged for my consideration. But this court, in proceedings of this nature, where the right to sue in the federal, court is claimed by the plaintiff on the ground of diversity of citizenship, and perhaps on the ground that his property is being taken without due process of law, in violation of the constitution of the United States, has only concurrent jurisdiction with the courts of the state. It has not exclusive jurisdiction of a case where the jurisdiction is predicated upon the grounds I have stated. There are many instances in which the two courts, having thus concurrent jurisdiction, may he called upon to deal with the same property rights of parties at the same time, and they may, by reason of the differences of the human mind, reach opposite conclusions as to the rights of the parties; and their proceedings, if carried out in the execution of conflicting judgments, might lead to a collision • of forces. But, to avoid that, the decisions have set up certain guideposts, to guide each court in the exercise of its own jurisdiction, so ás to avoid an unseemly conflict between courts having concurrent jurisdiction. Where proceedings have been taken which devest one court of its jurisdiction, and give to another court exclusive juris-did ion, there the court which has acquired exclusive jurisdiction of a matter will proceed to judgment, and to execute its judgment, and issue injunctions and all process necessary, and exercise all flu; power necessary to carry out its decrees, giving the parties their rights, regardless of anything that may be done or attempted in the court which has been entirely stript and devested of its jurisdiction. That may take place where a case has been rightfully removed out of the state court into the federal court. If the state court is disposed to doubt the validity of the removal proceedings, and refuse to give up jurisdiction, and plaintiff sees fit to prosecute his action in the state court, and there is an attempt to deal with the properly by the state court after it has been devested of its jurisdiction, the circuit court has the right then to issue injunctions, and to use all the force that is necessary to protect the rights of the litigants before it. The ultimate determination of any question of that kind between the two courts is by the supreme court of the United Stales, whose writs may run to the courts of the state as well as the federal courts. And so where one court has rendered a judgment, and issued process under which property lias been taken, sold, and the possession transferred to a purchaser, if it did not have jurisdiction of the parties,