85 F. 827 | 9th Cir. | 1898
The United States brought a suit in equity against the American Lumber Company and the Central Trust Company to declare null and void certain patents issued by the United States for lands in California, the title to which is vested in the American Lumber Company, subject to the lien of a trust deed to the Central Trust Company, securing bonds of the former company to the amount of |300,000. The defendants pleaded in bar of the suit that by an act of congress approved March 3, 1891 (26 Stat. 1093, § 8), it is pro
“To the Clerk of Said Court — Sir: Please issue two originals and two copies of subpoena ad respondendum herein, for service upon respondents, returnable March 2, 1896; one original and copy being necessary for service upon, and for marshal to make return of service upon, the respondent American Lumber Co., in Chicago, and the other original and copy of subpoena ad respondendum being necessary for marshal to serve upon, and to make return of service upon, the respondent Central Trust Co., in New York.”
Both of the subpoenas so issued were sent as soon as issued, the one to the United States marshal for the Northern district of Illinois, and the other to the United States marshal for the Southern district of New York. The marshal for the Northern district of Illinois returned the subpoena with the indorsement that the defendants were not found within his district. A subpoena was again issued February 18, 1896, and was sent to said marshal, and was thereafter returned with the indorsement that on February 24, 1896, it had been served upon the secretary of the' American Lumber Company, in that district. The marshal for the Southern district of New York served the subpoena on the Central Trust Company, in New York, on February 11, 1896. On March 5, 1896, and two days after the expiration of the five-years period of limitation for the commencement of the suit, an order was entered in the suit, reciting that it appeared from the affidavit of Benjamin F. Bergen, solicitor for the complainant, that the defendants were foreign corporations, having no officer or representative or agent, nor any office or place of business, within the state of California, and that the defendants could not be found in said state, and had not voluntarily appeared in the suit, and requiring them to appear on April 6, 1896. A copy of this order was served on the American Lumber Company March 9, 1896, and on the Central Trust Company March 16, 1896. On June 22, 1896, the service of this order was quashed upon the motion of the defendants; and on June 26, 1896, another order was thereupon entered, containing recitals similar to those of the first order, and directing the defendants to appear on August 3, 1896. It was upon the service of this last order that the defendants appeared and filed the pleas of the statute of limitations above set forth. Upon the hearing before the circuit court, the pleas were sustained, and the bill was dismissed. The case upon appeal to this court presents the single question whether or not, upon the record above set forth, the suit was begun within five years after March 3, 1891.
The origin of the English chancery' practice is involved in some obscurity, but from the earliest treatises upon the subject it appears that the jurisdiction of the court of chancery was invoked formerly, as now, by filing a petition or bill setting forth the complainant’s grounds for relief, and praying that a writ of subpoena issue. Upon 1he petition so presented, the chancellor determined whether a cause was made for the issuance of the writ. He had the power to grant or to withhold the writ. If the writ was granted, the suit was begun; otherwise, there was no suit. The issuance of the writ was the commencement of the suit. In Harg. Law Tracts, 321, 425, may be found treatises on the writ of subpoena, in which the suit in chancery is designated a suit' by subpoena. In course of time the practice was modified so that the signature of counsel for the complainant was taken as sufficient authority for the issuance of the writ, and it was no longer necessary for the chancellor to pass upon the case made in the petition. It was held that the suit was pending from the teste of the subpcena. Pigott v. Nower, 3 Swanst. 534. Such, in brief, was the English chancery practice at the time of its adoption as the rule of procedure in the courts of the United States. And while it is true that, in cases where the suit was instituted on behalf of the crown, the matter of complaint was presented to the court by way of information instead of by' petition or bill, it was only in form that the information differed from a bill; and it appears lhat from the filing of the information the subsequent procedure was substantially the same as in other suits. Mitf. Ch. Pl. 7, 22, 119; Attorney General v. Vernon, 1 Vern. 277, 370. The present suit on behalf of the United States might, no doubt, have followed the procedure of the English courts upon information (1 Barb. Ch. Prac. 34); but no warrant would be found from that fact for departing from the ordinary course of a suit in equity. Our equity rule No. 7 follows the English statute (4 Anne, c. 16, § 22) in providing that “no process of subpoena shall issue from the clerk’s office in any suit in equity until ihe hill is filed in the office.” liule 5 provides that while all motions for ihe issuance of mesne process in the clerk’s office shall be grantable. of course, by the clerk of the court, “the same may he suspended or altered or rescinded by any judge of the court upon special cause shown.” In the frame oí the bill there is still insetted the prayer that the writ of subpoena may issue; but, under equity rule 24, signature of counsel is “an affirmation, upon bis part that, upon the instructions given to him and the case laid before him, there is good ground for ihe suit in the manner in which it is
In the case of Hayden v. Bucklin, 9 Paige, 512, Chancellor Walworth thus stated the law:
“At the present day the filing of a bill, and taking out a subpcena thereon, ■and making a bona fide attempt to serve it without delay, may be considered as the commencement of the suit for the purpose of preventing the operation of the statute of limitations,'if the suit is1 afterwards prosecuted with due and reasonable diligence.”
The language of the opinion so quoted is adopted as an authoritative formulation of the law in Busw. Lim. § 365, and in Ang. Lim. § 330.
In Fitch v. Smith, 10 Paige, 9, the chancellor again declared the rule:
“It is true, in common parlance we use the expression ‘filing of the bill’ to ■denote the commencement of a suit in chancery, instead of referring to the issuing and service of subpoena, or the making of a bona fide attempt to serve it ■after the bill has been filed, which is the actual commencement of the suit in this court.”
In Pindell v. Maydwell, 7 B. Mon. 314, the supreme court of Kentucky said:
“In bringing a suit in chancery, the first step taken by the complainant is to file his petition or bill; and hence writers on this subject frequently speak in general terms of this act as the commencement of the suit. But, so far as it relates to the defendant, the suing out process against him is the commencement of the suit, preferring the bill being only preparatory to this being done.”
Counsel for the appellant rely upon the language of the court so quoted, and upon similar expressions of other courts, to sustain the doctrine that suing out process is beginning the suit, and contend that the present suit was begun on February 3, 1896, for the reason that process was sued out upon that date. They argue that it does not follow from the fact that the defendants were nonresidents of the state of California, and were corporations created under the laws of other states, that they might not have been found within the Northern district of California for the purpose of service of .the writ, and that there is nothing in the bill to indicate that the defendants had not agents or officers within the district upon whom such service might have been had. In short, they contend that process was sued out in good faith, and that, therefore, the suit was begun.
This leads us to inquire what is meant by the term "suing out process.” From the authorities it appears that suing out process in equity is the same in meaning as suing out process in an action ,at law. It means that, .upon the filing of a bill, a writ of subpoena is filled out by the clerk, and is delivered for service. Blain v. Blain, 45 Vt. 538; Day v. Lamb, 7 Vt. 426; Mason v. Cheney, 47 N. H. 24; Hardy v. Corlis, 21 N. H. 356; Updike v. Ten Broeck, 32 N. J. Law, 105; Bur-
It is argued that the court should gonstrue liberally, in favor of the United States, a self-imposed statute of limitations, and the case of U. S. v. American Bell Tel. Co., 159 U. S. 548, 16 Sup. Ct. 69, is cited. The doctrine of that case, and of the precedents on which it is sustained, is confined in its application to cases in which uncertainty exists as to the intention of the legislature to impose the limitation. In the present case no doubt is suggested by the language of the statute, and there is no room for construction. It is clear that congress has said that all suits by the United States to vacate patents shall be brought within the period limited by the act. The only question we are called upon to decide is whether this suit has been begun within that period. In determining at what point in the proceedings a suit shall be deemed to be commenced, we have no warrant for holding that the rule applicable to a suit on behalf of the United States shall differ from that applicable to other cases. When the United States, through its congress, has said that suits in its favor shall be brought only within a stated period, we have no criterion for determining whether a given suit was commenced within that period, except to apply the rules and principles applicable to all suitors. The decree of the circuit court will be affirmed.