This suit, as appears by the writ, is a foreign attachment, and -an order is endorsed on the writ to attach'the goods, chattels, rights and credits of the defendant in the hands of certain persons named, which has been done. On the part of the defendant a motion has been made to quash the writ and the proceedings upon it, on tbe ground, that the defendant is a citizen of Massachusetts, against whom this suit cannot be maintained in this court, as it has no jurisdiction in such a case. To support this position the judgment of this court in the case of Hollingsworth v. Adam has been cited. as reported in 2 Dall. [2 U. S.] 396. The defendant, in that case was stated in the writ to be a citizen of the state of Delaware, and an affidavit was produced of the fact that he was so.- Upon this it was alleged that the federal courts had no jurisdiction of the suit. The objection was founded on the 11th section of the judiciary act [1 Stat. 78], which provides that “no person shall be arrested in one district for trial in another, in any civil action before a circuit or district court, — and no civil suit shall be brought before either of the said courts against an inhabitant of the United States, by any original process, in any other district than that whereof he is an inhabitant at the time of serving the writ.” In the case referred to. the court quashed the writ. If the facts of the case now before us were the same with those of Hollingsworth v. Adam, we should not hesitate to follow that decision. But are they so? By the affidavit here produced and filed, the truth of which has not been contradicted, it appears that Horatio Sprague, the defendant, although not denied to be a citizen of the United States, is not now. and for a long time past has not been, an inhabitant of or residing in the United States, but that for a long time, to wit, ten years and more, he has been settled and residing in and an inhabitant of Spain, being there largely engaged in business as a merchant and trader; and that he has not within the time stated, been within the United States, nor has he, to tbe affirmant’s belief, any intention of returning to the United States, and that the said Horatio is now, and for some time past has been, a consul of the United States at Gibraltar, in Spain aforesaid; which is proved by a certificate from the department of state.
The question is whether a defendant in those circumstances is within the provision of the 11th section of the judiciary act, which has been referred to, and entitled to the exemption or privilege thereby to a certain description of persons? Does he bring himself within the terms of that description? He takes his ground on the words of the act, and alleges that he is a citizen of the United States; that this is a suit brought against him by original process, and that he is not an inhabitant of the district in which the suit is brought, nor was he found within it at the time of serving the writ. If the words of the act had been that no suit should be brought against a citizen of the United States in any other district but that whereof he is a citizen, it would be enough for the defendant to show that he is a citizen of the United States, and is not a citizen of Pennsylvania, to bring himself under the protection he claims from this suit, without any further inquiry as to the state to which he does belong, or the place of his actual residence. But the act speaks of inhabitants, not of citizens, in this part of it. It was therefore indispensable for the counsel of the defendant to prove, and such has been his effort, that in the construction of this provision the descriptive term “inhabitant” means and is synonymous with “citizen.” If he has succeeded in this he has made out his case. For this purpose he has cited several adjudged cases. Nothing is more reasonable than that general expressions used by a judge shall be considered in connexion with the particular subject to which they are applied; and as an authority they will seldom be carried beyond the case to be decided. As to Hollingsworth v. Adam, in 2 Dall. [2 U. S.] 396, it cannot be doubted that that was a civil suit by original process, to wit, a foreign attachment brought by a citizen of Pennsylvania against a citizen and inhabitant of tbe state of Delaware, then residing in Delaware. So it appeared on the plaintiff’s writ, and no evidence was offered to contradict or explain it. Such is not the ease before the court. In Read v. Bertrand [Case No. 11,601], the plaintiff, a merchant of New York, entered into a contract in the year 1818 with the defendant to furnish him with an assortment of jewel-lery, which he was to take from place to place in the United States, to sell on commission. After passing through many states, he went to New Orleans, and opened a store there for the sale of the goods. In 1819 he came to Philadelphia to meet the plaintiff concerning their mutual business. He afterwards proceeded to Havana and New Orleans, and came
The case then before that learned and discriminating judge was one in which the plaintiff was a citizen of the United States, resident in New York, and the defendant also a citizen, residing in Pennsylvania, where the contract between them was made; and the question was whether his removal to New Orleans with an intention of making it • his residence was permanent or temporary. If the latter, then his domicil continued in Pennsylvania, and a suit was well brought; ,if otherwise, the suit was not well brought, be.cause neither of the parties was, in any sense, a citizen of the district or state in which it was brought. This was a question of fact which was left to the jury. It is sufficient to remark on this case that no opinion was given, nor was it called for, on the meaning of the term “inhabitant,” in a subsequent part of the 11th section of the act, nor upon this whole clause in it, — relations , with other parts of the section, and to which we are now required to give a construction. An argument, indeed, has been raised upon the general expressions of the judge to bring them to bear on the case; but, however strong the argument may be, we must keep in mind that the3' were intended for the question then under consideration, for the state of facts then in the view of the court, and can be received as a judicial decision no further. In the case cited the removal or change of residence was from one state to another, and the question was of which of the United States he should be judicially considered a citizen, and in such a case the judge says that he was a citizen of the state in which he resides, or has his domicil. It seems to be impossible to give any other meaning to the words of the act, “or the suit is between the citizens of a state where the suit is brought, and a citizen of another state.” This clause will be senseless unless ■some criterion be adopted to fix what shall make a man a citizen of one or another state; of one state in contradistinction to the others; and residence is the only or the most certain and convenient criterion that can be taken. But such a case is different in point of fact from one in which the question -is not which state, as between two of the United States, the defendant is a citizen, but where he has no residence or domicil in any state, having removed to a foreign country; and consequently the criterion of residence in one or the other state cannot be applied to him. How far he may be embraced by the principle is another matter; but this opinion of Judge Washington, as well as another that has been cited, relates entirely to the construction to be given to that part of the 11th section of the act which grants jurisdiction to the federal courts in suits “between a citizen of the state where the suit is .brought, and a citizen of another state,” that is, where both parties are citizens residing in the United States; and he gave no consideration at all to the meaning of that part of the section which we are now called upon to construe.
We will now consider the law as it has a direct bearing on the case before us. The 11th section of the act professes to designate the original cognizance of the circuit courts of the United States, and it is thus broadly given: “Of all suits of a civil nature at common law or in equity, when the matter in .dispute exceeds the sum or value of five hundred dollars, and the United States are plaintiffs or petitioners, or an alien is a .party, .or the suit is between the citizens of the state where the suit is brought, and a citizen of another state.” This is the general grant of jurisdiction, and we find a designation or description of the circumstances which shall •constitute an individual a citizen of one or another state. In a subsequent part of this section certain limitations or exceptions are made to this grant of jurisdiction, the object of which appears to be to prevent the vexatious and oppressive use of it. and to have it exercised with as little injury and inconvenience to the party defendant as possible. It is provided that "no person shall be arrested in one district for trial in another, in any civil suit before a circuit or district court.” Without this, a defendant might have been taken in New Orleans or Maine, and brought for trial in Philadelphia. But further, it is provided that “no civil suit shall be brought before either of the said courts, against an inhabitant of the United States, by any original process in any other district than that whereof he is an inhabitant, or in which he shall be found at the time of serving the writ.” We see here the same intention to prevent oppressive proceed
If, as in the case of Hollingsworth v. Adam [supra], this writ were issued in a direct violation of the plain language of the act of congress, we should not refuse to quash it, but, as this is not the case, however cogent the argument may be that urges us to the same conclusion, we will put the party to his plea. The motion to quash is overruled.
