Two causes of action are involved in this appeal. In the first cause of action the following facts are alleged:
The plaintiff opened a current checking account with the defendant, a Russian bank in the city of Petrograd. On September 18, 1918, he had to his credit in the account upwards of 114,000 rubles, and drew a cheek on the bank for 72,000 rubles to the order of *1025 one Heidemann, which was dishonored upon presentation. The' plaintiff paid the amount of the cheek to Heidemann. Thereafter on August 24, 1927, plaintiff brought suit against the defendant for failing to pay the check, and sought recovery in the sum of $37,008, with interest from September 18, 1918,-up on the theory that the value of rubles was 51.4 cents in United States currency. Upon the trial, the jury rendered a verdict in favor of the defendant on the first cause of action.
In the second cause of action the following facts were alleged:
On November 18, 1919, the defendant bank delivered its draft to one Fajans, dii'eeted to its office in Novorossiysk, Russia, wherein it required such office to pay Fajans 100,-000 rubles within four months.. This draft was duly indorsed and delivered to the plaintiff. The office could not be found and the draft was not paid, whereupon Fajans indorsed and delivered it to the plaintiff who sued to recover $51,400, with interest from March 18, 1920, alleging, as upon the first cause of action, that rubles were worth 51.4 cents in United States currency. On the second cause of action the court directed a verdict for the defendant on the ground that no proof had been offered of the value of rubles in 1927.
It appeared that the plaintiff was a citizen of the United States. The citizenship of Fajans was neither alleged nor proved.
Various defenses to each cause of action were raised, but the principal question was whether any proof was made of the value of the rubles in United States currency. Where a debt is due in a foreign country payable in the currency of that country, and suit is brought on it in the United States, the Supreme Court has held the plaintiff should recover what that currency is worth in this country on the day of judgment. Justice Holmes, who laid down the foregoing rule in Deutsche Bank v. Humphrey,
It is therefore necessary to determine the extent of the obligation of the defendant in Russia. The difficulty with the plaintiff’s case is that he failed to establish this and neglected to show that the rubles which the defendant was bound to pay had any value in United States currency at the date of judgment. It is argued that he was precluded from making such proof because the court struck out testimony of his witness Bolotov-sky through whom he attempted to show the value of the ruble. Indeed, the exception which is most relied on was directed to the elimination of Bolotovsky’s testimony. But this exception cannot avail, for, if we take the Bolotovsky testimony at its face value, it does not establish that the rubles which the defendant negleeted to pay were worth anything at the date of judgment. Bolotovsky testified that Romanoff rubles had then practically disappeared, and that Denikin rubles and Kerensky rubles had become worthless. To be sur© he said that, by decrees of the Soviet government in 1922 and 1924, a gold standard was established and that the ruble of the New Soviet currency was worth 53 cents at the time when he testified. But the text of these decrees was not proved, and no attempt was made to show whether they wiped out the preexistent rubles as legal tender or established any ratio of exchange for the old currency. We are asked to hold that obligations originally payable in rubles which had disappeared or become worthless should be liquidated in new Soviet rubles worth 53 cents.
' In Thorington v. Smith,
It is perfectly true that an obligation payable “in terms of the currency of a country takes the risk of currency fluctuations and whether creditor or debtor profits by the change the law takes no account of it.” Deutsche Bank v. Humphrey,
Moreover, if, as the plaintiff once contended at the trial, the indebtedness of the bank might be liquidated either in Romanoff, Denikin, Kerensky, or Soviet rubles, the debt- or had the privilege of paying in currency of the least value. Restatement of the Law of Contracts by American Law Institute, § 335; Williston on Contracts, § 1407; Matter of People (Russian Reinsurance Co.)
The plaintiff greatly relies on the recent decision of the New York Court of Appeals in Matter of People (First Russian Ins. Co.)
In the ease at bar the evidence goes no farther than to indicate that a gold Soviet ruble was of the same value as an Imperial gold ruble coin. There is no proof that the defendant bank was bound to pay its obligations in gold. The old currency in which the drafts were originally payable had become worthless. When the Soviet government established a new currency, it is not shown to have provided by its decrees that old obligations were to be payable in the new currency, ruble for ruble. Indeed, that such was the meaning or effect of the decrees seems inherently unlikely. The plaintiff should have produced the decrees and proved their contracts, if it sought to establish that the claims having a value, nominal at the time, were made payable in a new currency worth 53 cents per ruble. It had the burden of proving the value of the rubles in United States currency at the date of judgment. That burden it has not sustained.
For the foregoing reasons the judgment as to the first cause of action is right.
The judgment upon the second cause of action was rendered without jurisdiction. The lack of jurisdiction was not mentioned in the briefs filed for argument or upon the argument, but has since been called to our attention and discussed in supplemental memoranda. Affidavits submitted with the memoranda are no part of the record and will not be filed, but it may be added that, if they were open to consideration, they could not possibly affect the result of the decision.
The District Court had no jurisdiction over the second cause of action because of the provisions of the statute affeeting suits based on diverse citizenship. After conferring jurisdiction where the matter in controversy exceeds, exclusive of interest and costs, $3,000, and is between citizens of a state and foreign states, citizens, and subjects, the act goes on to provide that: “No district court shall have *1027 cognizance of any suit (except upon foreign bills of exchange) to recover upon any promissory note or other chose in aetion in favor of any assignee, or of any subsequent holder if such instrument be payable to bearer and be not made by any corporation, unless such suit might have been prosecuted in such court to recover upon said note or other chose in aetion if no assignment had been made. * * * ” Title 28, U. S. C., § 41 (28 USCA § 41).
There is no allegation or proof of the citizenship of Fajans in whose favor the draft for 100,000 rubles was made, so that the suit upon the draft could not have been prosecuted by Fajans against the defendant, a Russian corporation. Therefore the plaintiff, an American citizen, could only sue in the District Court in ease the draft is to be regarded as (1) a “foreign bills of exchange,” or (2) as “payable to bearer and * * * made by any corporation.” Turner, Administrator of Stanley, v. Bank of North America,
The draft in question was not a “foreign bill of exchange,” for it was not drawn in one country upon a person in another. This was Blackstone’s definition of a foreign bill of exchange which was adopted by the Supreme Court in Buckner v. Finley,
Nor can the draft be thought to have been made by a corporation and “payable to bearer.” It was made “to the order of * * * Fajans,” and not “to bearer.” The authorities are clear that such an instrument is not within the terms of the statute. New Orleans v. Benjamin,
The remaining questions are whether the second cause of action should be retained because it is coupled with the first over which there is jurisdiction, or whether both should be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction of the suit as a whole, or whether the second cause of aetion should be remanded to the state court and the judgment so far as it relates to the first should be affirmed.
The plaintiff argues that, because the first cause of action was one over which the court had jurisdiction, both causes of aetion should be held in the District Court under the “separable controversy” section of the United States statutes. Title 28, U. S. C., § 71 (28 USCA § 71). But the “separable controversy” section does not apply where, as here, the removing defendant was an alien. The above section only covers eases where the controversy is wholly “between citizens of different states.” King v. Cornell,
The second cause of action is in every fundamental sense a separate suit, and should be remanded to the state court. Pacific Railroad Removal Cases,
It is true that in Tullar
&
Tullar v. Illinois Cent. Ry. Co.,
As a further ground for retaining both causes of aetion, the plaintiff says that it does not lie in the mouth of the defendant, who removed the suit, to objeet to jurisdiction. But jurisdiction cannot be conferred by consent, and where the case which has been removed was one over which a federal eourt could never have had jurisdiction, it must be remanded,, and the suggestion for remand may come from the removing party. Mansfield, C. & L. M. Railway Co. v. Swan,
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment so far as it relates to the first cause of aetion is affirmed, but, so far as it relates to the second cause of aetion, is reversed, with direction to the District Court to remand such second cause of aetion to the Supreme Court of the state of New York.
