12 F. 1 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1882
The record shows that in accordance ■ with a joint resolution of the sixteenth legislature, passed the nineteenth of February, 1879, directing a suit to be brought for the purpose of
The grounds relied on in argument in support of the motion to remand may be resolved into two :
(1) Because tlie defendant Jenny Lewis is a citizen of Texas, and a necessary party to the suit. (2) Because this court has no jurisdiction of a case wherein a sovereign state of this Union is the plaintiff, even though the defendants are aliens, and the case is attempted to be brought here by removal from the state court.
The Texas statute, in reference to the action of trespass to try title, provides in article 4789, Eev. St.:
“ When such actions shall be, commenced against a tenant in possession the landlord may enter himself as the defendant, or he may be made a party on the motion of such tenant, and he shall be entitled to make the same defence as if the suit had been originally commenced against him.”
The defendant Jenny Lewis, upon her landlords becoming defendants, fully disclaimed all interest and any title in the land in suit, and asks the judgment of the court. Whether, for certain purposes of the action, the plaintiff had the right to have this disclaiming defendant, who was the actual occupier of the premises, retained as a defendant, it seems clear to my mind that within the meaning of the acts of congress on the subject of removal of causes from the state courts, Jenny Lewis was a mere nominal party, whose presence as a defendant on the record could not defeat the right of the real defendants to the controversy to have the same heard and determined by this court. This, I think, is clearly embraced in the actions and opinions of Judges Duval, Wood, and Pardee, in the cases 1,811, 1,812, and 1,813. Greene v. Klinger, in the circuit court for western district of Texas, at Austin, 10 Fed. Rep. 689.
In Prentiss v. Brennan, 2 Blatchf. 164, Judge Nelson carefully ,limits his language to “individual parties,” a limitation which it is plain to my mind must be implied in each of the other cases cited.
State v. Brailsford, 2 Dallas, 402, shows that Judge Iredell, on the circuit, refused to let the state intervene, holding, as shown in his opinion, that “whenever a state is a party the supreme court has exclusive jurisdiction of the suit. ” Mr. Justice Wilson expresses a different view, and the other judges announce no opinion on that question.
In State v. Trustees of University, 5 N. B. R. 466, Judge Brooks refused to entertain a suit by the state against its own citizens, taking exception on his own motion to the jurisdiction, without the suggestion of counsel or benefit of argument thereon, and his view, strongly expressed, is that where the jurisdiction depends upon the character of the parties and not the character of the subject in controversy, any attempt upon the part of congress to vest jurisdiction of causes in which a state is a party in the circuit court would be ineffectual.
In Wisconsin v. Duluth, 2 Dill. 406, Mr. Justice Miller dismissed the plaintiff’s bill, (Dillon, C. J., concurring,) holding expressly that a state cannot bring an action or suit in the circuit court of the United States against a citizen or citizens of another state. His opinion in that case shows that it was carefully considered, and, though he suggests the limited opportunity which the exigency of the case gave for investigation, the cast of the opinion clearly shows that he then had present before his mind the rulings and the reason-ings of all the reported cases bearing upon the question. He alludes to the view that had been advanced, that the constitution having given the supreme court original jurisdiction, that' court could not exercise, also, appellate jurisdiction, and that, therefore, if the circuit court could exercise jurisdiction in such cases, no appeal or writ
Does it follow from the proposition that neither the constitution nor any apt of congress authorizes a state to sue in the circuit court, that where a suit is properly brought, in a state court having unquestioned jurisdiction, by a state against an alien, the alien cannot, under section 639, Eev. St., remove the cause to the circuit court ? :
The language of this section is very broad: “Any suit commenced in any state court * * * may be removed * * * in the cases and in the manner stated in this section: First, when the suit is against an alien.” This is certainly a suit brought in a state court. There can be no question as to the jurisdiction of the state court to enforce {he rightful claims of the state against persons or real property within her bounds. This case now stands as though it had originally been brought against the alien defendants; but at the institution of the suit the only defendant then disclosed, and, for all that appears, the only adverse claimant then known to the plaintiff, was a citizen of Texas, of which parties only the state courts could entertain jurisdiction. It subsequently appeared (as Chief Justice Marshall announced might often occur) that the real parties to the controversy were such as brought the case within the judiciary power of the United States. A party clearly entitled to have his rights passed upon by the courts of the United States, finds himself sued in a state court in a controversy involving values of large amount. A statute of the United States, expressed in terms apparently broad enough to comprehend his case, directs the steps by which he can
The language of the act is surely broad enough to include this case, unless the true construction and import of section 2, art. 8, of the constitution withholds from the legislature the power to vest jurisdiction in the circuit courts, (dependent upon the character of the parties,) in cases “in which a state shall be a party. ” In my judgment this is not held by the case of Wisconsin v. Duluth or Prentiss v. Brennan; and the reasoning of Chief Justice Marshall in Cohens v. Virginia, 6 Wheat. 264, and in Osborn v. Bank, of U. S. 9 Wheat. 738, is certainly not inconsistent with the view that congress could vest such jurisdiction in the circuit courts. The language used by him in his opinions in those cases, and the language used by Mr. Justice McLean and Chief Justice Taney in the opinions they delivered in the case of Pennsylvania v. Wheeling Bridge Co. 18 How. 520, indicates that those eminent judges, and perhaps the whole court as then constituted, were of opinion that the giving the supreme court original jurisdiction, in cases “in which a state shall be party,”' did not so vest in that court exclusive jurisdiction in such cases as to withhold from congress the power to vest in the circuit court a concurrent jurisdiction in such cases.
It is conceded, being well settled by those cases and many subsequent ones, that cases where the subject-matter of the controversy would give the federal judiciary jurisdiction, may originate in other courts and be removed to the circuit court or taken by appeal or writ of error to the supreme court, although a state shall be party. And this was the phase of the question judicially pressing upon the mind of the judges in those early cases. They appear to consider the provision giving the supreme court original jurisdiction in cases in which a state shall be party, to have been adopted out of regard for the dignity of the party. At the time of the adoption of this provision of the constitution it had not been deemed necessary or expedient to exempt the states from being sued by citizens of another state, or by citizens or subjects of foreign states. Now, out of regard to the dignity of a state, she is exempt from being sued in the United States courts, and on account of her dignity she is permitted to bring an original suit in the supremo court of the United States, w'hen she has a case to which the judiciary power of the United States extends. But when, disregarding or waiving this privilege, she voluntarily comes into
Here, as this suit now stands, the state, of Tesas has brought a suit in a state court, wherein the amount in dispute, exclusive of costs, greatly exceeds the sum of value of $500, against alien defendants. It does not appear that the subject-matter of the suit falls within the judiciary power of the United States, hence there can be 10 removal by writ of error after trial to the supreme court. There is no statute providing for removal before trial of any suit from a state court to the supreme court of the United States. If congress can provide for the removal of such cases to the circuit court, the provision is ample. If congress cannot so provide, here is a case between a state and a subject of a foreign state, (to which the judiciary power, by express terms, extends,) wherein the subject of a foreign state cannot invoke the protecting aegis of the judiciary power of the United States. And if that power was extended to controversies between a state and the citizens thereof, and subjects of a foreign state, to give to the subjects of friendly foreign powers an assurance they might not be able otherwise to entertain, of receiving impartial justice in the judicial determination of any controversy which might be urged against them by one of our states or the citizens thereof, surely this case brings these defendants within the mischief intended to be guarded against. Here the state on her own behalf, and that, too, as actual trustee of a sacred fund, dedicated to a purpose which enlists the most noble pride and warmest affection of our whole people, and also on behalf of individual citizens, numerous, perhaps, and influential residents of McLen-nan county, where the suit is brought, who have purchased lands from the state involved in the same questions sought to be settled by this suit, brings this suit in her own courts against these alien defendants. In the absence of constitutional or statutory provisions reaching the case, its features, as I have grouped them, would address a constituent or legislative assembly rather than a court of justice. But courts of justice, in the discharge of their duty to declare the true import and construction of constitutional and statutory provisions, do derive abundant aid from the consideration of all the material features of the case actually made before them; and it is this which gives to judicial decisions a weight of authority not accorded to any merely, speculative reasoning of the most eminent judges. From a careful consideration of the terms of the constitution, and of the acts■ of congress bearing on the questions, and a full
NOTE.
NOMINAL PARTIES. The non-joinder of nominal or unnecessary parties will not defeat the right to a removal.
Wood v. Davis, 18 How. 467; Ward v. Arredondo. 1 Paine, 410; Arapahoe Co.v. Kansas P. R. Co. 4 Dill. 277; Edgerfcon v. Gilpin, 3 Woods, 277; Fisk v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co. 53 Barb. 472; Mayor, etc., v. Cummins, 47 Ga. 321; Calloway v. Ore Knob Co. 74 N. C. 200.
Livingston v. Gibson. 4 Johns. Ch. 94; James v. Thurston, 6 R. I. 428.
Hatch v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co. 6 Blatchf. 105; Ex parte Girard, 3 Wall. Jr. 263; Hadley v. Dunlap, 10 Ohio St. 1; Livingston v. Gibbons, 4 Johns. Ch. 94, contra; Wilson v. Blodget. 4 McLean, 363.
Cooke v. Seligman, 7 Fed. Rep. 263.
Akerly v. Vilas, 2 Biss. 110. See Sands v. Smith, 1 Dill. 290.
Barney v. Latham, 2 Morr. Trans. 638.
Cohens v. Virginia, 6 Wheat. 264.
Greene v. Klinger, 10 Fed. Rep. 689.
Calloway v. Ore Knob Co. 74 N. U. 200.
Hatch v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co. 6 Blatchf. 105.
Pond v. Sibley, 7 Fed. Rep. 129; Nat. Bank of Lyndon v. Wells Riv. Manuf’g Co. 7 Fed. Rep. 750.
Nat. Bank of Lyndon v. Wells Riv. Mamif’g Co. 7 Fed. Rep. 750; Pond v. Sibley, Id. 129.
Fisk v. Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co. 6 Blatchf. 105.
Danville Bk. & T. Co. v. Parks, 88 Ill. 170.
Town of Aroma v. Auditor, 2 Fed. Rep. 33.