delivered the opinion of the court.
The petitioner is in custody for contempt, he having violated a preliminary. injunction issued by the Circuit Court of the United States. He brings this petition on the ground that the -Circuit Court had no jurisdiction, and that therefore its decree might be disobeyed.
The jurisdiction of the Circuit Court over the cause depends on the'allegations of the bill upon which the injunction was granted. That bill' was brought by the Southern Railway Company against the petitioner. It alleges that Simon brought *147 a suit against the railway in Louisiana surreptitiously and without its knowledge, and that, on 'the suggestion that the railway was. a foreign corporation doing business in the State without having named an agent to.receive service, he served the citation upon the Assistant Secretary' of State, whereas the railway was not a corporation 'doing -business in the State, and the service was void. The suit proceeded to judgment for. a fraudulently .exaggerated sum, while the railway had no knowledge of the proceedings until after the judgmént was rendered. As soon as it heard of it it began this shit; in effect • to prevent the enforcement of the judgment, because unconscionable and fraudulently obtained upon a cause of action to which it has a good defense if allowed to present the same..
The bill further alleges that Simon will attempt to collect the fraudulent judgment by fieri facias, and prays as specific relief an injunction against' his further proceeding under the same, but the general- scope and purpose of the bill is what we have stated. A -preliminary injunction was issued, after a hearing on affidavits, on June 30, 1905, and Simon appears to have obeyed the order for over two years. • A demurrer to the bill was overruled in December, 1906, and a plea to the jurisdiction, filed in February, 1907, was overruled in the following May. Simon answered in August and issue was joined in the same month. The contempt seems to have occurred in November. It consisted in obtaining a' writ of fieri faciás and directing a levy and the service of garnishment process to collect the judgment. It was admitted at the argument that this method was adopted in order to obtain a summary disposition of the cause by'this court instead of awaiting the result of a trial in the regular way. ■ The punishment was a small fine, and the imprisonment was ordered only until the fine was paid.
The facts stated seem to us enough to dispose of this case. The usual rule is that a prisoner cannot anticipate i the regular course of proceedings having for their-end to determine whether he shall be held or released, by alleging want of jurisdiction and petitioning for a
habeas carpus. United States
v.
Sing
Tuck,
*148
This is not a suit
coram non judice
and wholly void by reason of Rev. Stat. § 720, forbidding United States courts to stay by injunction proceedings in any state court. The- Circuit Court had jurisdiction of the cause. That must be assumed at this stage; and finally unless we overrule the strong intimations in
Marshall v. Holmes,
It is argued that the bill does, not disclose facts that warrant going behind the judgment, but contains only vague allegations of fraud. But it alleges facts that show a total want of jurisdiction in the state court, and implies at least that fjhe *149 fictitious service was made with deliberate fraud. Its general nature and purpose are clear. Enough is alleged to amend by, if amendment is necessary, and to give jurisdiction to the Circuit Court. As we cannot pronounce the whole proceeding void, we have nothing to do with the sufficiency of the pleading or the question, whether the bill would be good or bad on demurrer., There was at least color of right for the preliminary order and it will be time enough to discuss the merits if the case comes here again after final decree. .
Buie discharged.
Petition for habeas corpus denied.
