A national bank was closed by order of the Comptroller of the
Currency and a receiver appointed. An assessment was made upon the
holders of stock. Overton and Hoffer were among those who were
assessed, and payment not having been made, suit was brought
against them. Service
Page 178 U. S. 422
was made upon H., but not upon O., who was very ill, and who
died without service having been made upon him. He left a will,
under which J. P. O. was duly appointed his executor. The executor
was summoned into the suit by a writ of
scire facias. A
motion was made to set aside the
scire facias and the
attempted service thereof, which motion was granted. The executor
being substituted in the place of the deceased as defendant, the
court decided that it had acquired no jurisdiction over the
deceased, and could acquire none over his executor. Thereupon the
receiver applied to this Court for a writ of mandamus to the Judges
of the Circuit Court of the United States for the Ninth Circuit
commanding them to take jurisdiction and proceed against J. P. O.
as executor of the last will and testament of O., deceased, in the
action brought by the receiver to recover the assessments.
Held:
(1) That mandamus was the proper remedy, and the rule was made
absolute.
(2) That the action of the circuit court in setting aside the
scire facias was here for review.
(3) That
scire facias was the proper mode for bringing
in the executor, and under Rev.Stat. § 955, it gave the court
jurisdiction to render judgment against the estate of the deceased
party in the same manner as if the executor had voluntarily made
himself a party.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a petition for a writ of mandamus to the judges of the
Circuit Court of the United States for the Ninth Circuit and
District of California, which substantially shows as follows:
The Moscow National Bank of Moscow, Idaho, was a corporation
organized under the national banking laws of the United States,
with its place of business at Moscow, Idaho.
The bank, becoming insolvent, was closed by order of the
Comptroller of the Currency of the United States, and taken control
of by that officer.
On January 3, 1898, he appointed petitioner receiver of the
bank's assets.
Page 178 U. S. 423
On June 14, 1897, the Comptroller made an assessment of $100 on
each share of the capital stock of the bank, and ordered the
stockholders to pay the same on or before July 14, 1897. O. P.
Overton and C.A. Hoffer were owners of one hundred shares, and by
the assessment became indebted to petitioner in the sum of $10,000,
with interest from June 14, 1897.
On March 28, 1898, petitioner commenced an action in that court
against said Overton and Hoffer for the said sum of $10,000, and
caused a summons to be issued, directed to them as defendants, and
placed it in the hands of the marshal for service.
Service was made in the usual form by the marshal on Hoffer
personally, in Santa Rosa, in said district.
As to Overton, the marshal made the following return on the 5th
of April, 1898:
"I hereby certify that I was unable to make personal service on
O. P. Overton, as he was very sick, and was not permitted to see
anyone, under instructions of his physicians."
On April 13, 1898, O. P. Overton died without service having
been made upon him.
He made a last will and testament, appointing John P. Overton
executor thereof, which was duly probated, and letters testamentary
were duly issued.
On March 15, 1899, these facts were brought to the notice of the
circuit court, and petitioner moved for and obtained an order
directing that a writ of
scire facias issue to said John
P. Overton, which concluded as follows:
"You are hereby commanded within twenty days after the service
upon you of this writ to appear and become a party to this suit,
according to the provisions of section 955 of the Revised Statutes
of the United States, or show cause why you should not, otherwise
judgment may be taken against the estate of said deceased in like
manner as if you had voluntarily made yourself a party."
The writ was duly served and a motion was noticed for April 17,
1899, for an order setting aside the
scire facias "and the
attempted service thereof."
The ground of the motion was that
"Overton died before the
Page 178 U. S. 424
service upon him of any process, that no process was ever served
upon him herein, and that this action was never pending against
him, and upon such other grounds as to the court may seem
proper."
The motion was granted, and the petitioner allowed an
exception.
On June 12, 1899, upon the suggestion of the death of defendant
O. P. Overton, the court made an order substituting John P. Overton
as executor of the last will and testament of O. P. Overton,
deceased, as defendant, and ordered an alias summons to issue to
him as executor.
The summons was duly served, and on August 11, 1899, he, by his
attorneys, filed and served a notice of motion to set aside the
order of substitution and quash the alias summons on the ground
"that said O. P. Overton died before the service upon him of any
process herein; that said alleged alias summons is not in the form
required by law, and upon such other grounds as to the court may
seem proper."
The matter coming on to be heard on November 20, 1899, and
having been submitted, it was granted on December 4, 1899, and
petitioner was allowed an exception.
The petition for a writ of mandamus alleges that the ground upon
which said court set aside the service of summons was that the
action had abated by the death of O. P. Overton before the service
of process upon him, and prays that a writ of mandamus be issued to
the judges of the circuit court of the United States aforesaid to
take jurisdiction and proceed against John P. Overton as executor
as aforesaid.
A rule to show cause was granted. The return thereto by the
learned judge of the circuit court admits that the allegations of
the petition as to the proceedings had in the circuit court are
true, except that the court
"has not refused to take jurisdiction of the action therein
referred to, but only of the person of John P. Overton, executor of
the last will and testament of O. P. Overton, the deceased
defendant in said action."
And the return alleged that the grounds upon which the court set
aside the service of the alias summons were stated in the opinion
of the court. 98 F. 574.
Page 178 U. S. 425
The basis of the opinion is that the court had acquired no
jurisdiction over the deceased defendant O. P. Overton, and could
acquire none over his executor, John P. Overton.,
1. It is objected that mandamus is not the proper remedy.
Counsel say:
"This is not a case in which the court refuses to entertain
jurisdiction. The action has not been dismissed. It is still
pending in the circuit court, and may, and doubtless will, proceed
to final judgment."
But final judgment against whom? Not against O. P. Overton, for
he is deceased. Not against John P. Overton or the estate he
represents, because he has not been made a party to the action, and
judgment against Hoffer alone may not be all of petitioners'
remedy. If the court's ruling is erroneous, how can it be redressed
by an appeal from the judgment, Overton not being a party to the
action? The court declined to make him a party on the ground that
it had no jurisdiction to do so. If it has jurisdiction, mandamus
is the proper remedy.
In re Grossmayer, 177 U. S.
48. Whether the court had jurisdiction we will proceed
to consider.
2. The return of the rule to show cause is confined to the
action of the circuit court on the alias summons. But its action
for setting aside the writ of
scire facias is also here
for review.
Section 955 of the Revised Statutes of the United States
provides as follows:
"When either of the parties, whether plaintiff or petitioner or
defendant, in any suit in any court of the United States dies
before final judgment, the executor or administrator of such
deceased party may, in case the cause of action survives by law,
prosecute or defend any such suit to final judgment. The defendant
shall answer accordingly, and the court shall hear and determine
the cause, and render judgment for or against the executor or
administrator, as the case may require. And if such executor or
administrator, having been duly served with a
scire facias
from the office of the clerk of the court where the suit is
pending, twenty days beforehand, neglects or refuses to become
party to the suit, the court may render judgment against the estate
of the deceased party in the same manner as
Page 178 U. S. 426
if the executor or administrator had voluntarily made himself
party. The executor or administrator who becomes a party as
aforesaid shall, upon motion to the court, be entitled to a
continuance of the suit until the next term of said court."
It is preliminarily urged against this section that it
"applies only where an action is 'brought in a federal court,
and is based upon same act of Congress, or arises under some rule
of general law recognized in the courts of the Union;' that in such
an action, 'the question of revival will depend upon the statutes
of the United States relating to the subject,' but that otherwise
it depends upon the laws of the state in which it is
commenced."
Martin v. B. & O. Railroad, 151 U.
S. 673;
B. & O. Railroad v. Joy,
173 U. S. 226, are
cited.
In those cases, the controversy was over the survival of the
action; in the pending case, that is not the controversy. It is not
contended that the action does not survive. It is only contended
that personal jurisdiction was not obtained of O. P. Overton before
his death, and that therefore his executor, John P. Overton, could
not be brought into the action either by
scire facias
under section 955, Rev.Stat., or by motion suggesting the death of
his testate and by alias summons.
In
Schreiber v. Sharpless, 110 U. S.
76, cited in
Martin v. B. & O. Railroad,
151 U. S. 673, it
was decided that "whether an action survives depends on the
substance of the cause of action, not on the forms of proceeding to
enforce it." And that a cause of action on a penal statute of the
United States did not survive, even though causes of action on
state penal statutes could be prosecuted after the death of the
offender.
In
Martin v. B. & O. Railroad, however, the action
was for personal injuries, and it was said:
"Whether the administrator has a right of action depends upon
the law of West Virginia, where the action was brought and the
administrator was appointed."
Rev.Stat. § 721;
Henshaw v.
Miller, 17 How. 212.
"he mode of bringing in the representative, if the cause of
action survived, would also be governed by the law of the state,
except so far as Congress has regulated the subject."
It was determined upon consideration that the cause of action
did not survive.
Page 178 U. S. 427
In
B. & O. Railroad v. Joy, the question was
presented in an unique aspect. The action was for personal injuries
which occurred in Indiana, and suit was brought in Ohio. By the
laws of the former state, the action did not survive; by the laws
of the latter, the cause of action did survive. If suit had not
been brought before the death of the person injured, the cause of
action abated in both states.
The cause was removed to the circuit court of the United States,
and it was held that the cause of action survived the death of the
person injured, and could be revived in the name of his personal
representative. We said:
"We think that the right to revive attached, under the local
law, when Hervey [the person injured] brought his action in the
state court. It was a right of substantial value, and became
inseparably connected with the cause of action so far as the laws
of Ohio were concerned."
And it was denied that the right to revive was lost by the
removal of the case to the circuit court of the United States, or
affected by sec. 955, Rev.Stat. We said further:
"Whether a pending action may be revived upon the death of
either party and proceed to judgment depends primarily upon the
laws of the jurisdiction in which the action was commenced. If an
action be brought in a federal court, and is based upon some act of
Congress, or arises under some rule of general law recognized in
the courts of the Union, the question of revivor will depend upon
the statutes of the United States relating to that subject. But if,
at the time an action is brought in a state court, the statutes of
that state allow a revivor of it on the death of the plaintiff
before final judgment -- even where the right to sue is lost when
death occurs before any suit is brought -- then we have a case not
distinctly or necessarily covered by section 955."
By section 955, an executor or administrator of "plaintiff or
petitioner or defendant in any suit in any court of the United
States" may be made a party by "
scire facias served from
the office of the clerk of the court where the suit is
pending."
When can a suit be said to be "in any court of the United
States," or said to be "pending" therein? Is not the answer
inevitable, from the time the suit is commenced? It cannot be
Page 178 U. S. 428
pending until it is commenced, and if it continue until the
death of the "plaintiff or petitioner or defendant," the
requirements of the section seem to be satisfied.
Another inquiry becomes necessary -- when is a suit commenced?
For an answer, we must go to the California statutes. By section
405 of the Code of Civil Procedure, it is provided: "Civil actions
in the courts of this state are commenced by filing a complaint."
By section 406, summons may be issued at any time within a year,
and if necessary to different counties. The defendant may appear,
however at any time within a year. The filing of the complaint,
therefore, is the commencement of the action and the jurisdiction
of the court over the case. The jurisdiction would undoubtedly
continue for a year, and probably afterwards, and a motion to
dismiss would probably be necessary to get rid of the case.
Dupuy v. Shear, 29 Cal. 242;
Reynolds v. Page, 35
Cal. 300.
3. It is said, however, that jurisdiction of the person of O. P.
Overton had not been obtained prior to his death, and this is
undoubtedly true. Service of summons was necessary for that. It was
so decided in
Dupuy v. Shear, 29 Cal. 242, and section 416
of the Code of Civil Procedure provides:
"From the time of the service of the summons and of a copy of
the complaint in a civil action, where service of a copy of the
complaint is required, or of the completion of the publication when
service by publication is ordered, the court is deemed to have
acquired jurisdiction of the parties, and to have control of all
the subsequent proceedings. The voluntary appearance of a defendant
is equivalent to personal service of the summons and copy of the
complaint upon him."
It is claimed that this section precludes jurisdiction of "the
subsequent proceedings" in the action unless the summons was
served, or, to quote counsel,
"the circuit court in this instance lacked 'jurisdiction' and
'control' of the 'proceedings' so far as the defendant Overton was
concerned. It was therefore absolutely powerless by lay its hands
upon the deceased defendant's representative."
The contention is claimed to be supported by the construction of
similar statutes in Oregon and Minnesota made by their courts.
White v. Johnson, 27 Or.
Page 178 U. S. 429
282, and
Auerbach v. Maynard, 26 Minn. 421. The latter
case sustains the contention, and proceeds to the extent of denying
the court any jurisdiction to proceed further in the action.
White v. Johnson does not go so far. It cites and follows
the Minnesota case to the extent of holding
"that the court is without power or authority to take any action
looking to the rendition of a personal judgment merely without
first obtaining jurisdiction through the service of a summons upon
the defendant."
But the court did not decide that it had no control of
subsequent proceedings, but reduced the question to one of
procedure and the necessity of service of the summons before a
personal judgment could be taken. The court admitted that the
statute provided that no action abated upon the death of the party,
and provided that the court might allow the action to be continued
on motion, and that such was the practice in New York and in
California under similar statutes, and then said:
"The statute provides that the court may at any time within one
year after the death of a party, on motion, allow the action to be
continued against the personal representative, but no provision is
made in a case of this kind as to the manner of bringing in the
substituted party. The court could therefore adopt any reasonable
procedure that might seem proper, but the service of a valid
summons could not be dispensed with. Probably the better practice
would have been for the lower court to have required the plaintiff
to file a supplemental complaint in the action showing the death of
defendant and the appointment of an executrix, and thereupon to
issue an alias summons containing the title of the action after
substitution made, and have the same directed to the said Cordelia
Johnson. A service of such a summons, together with a copy of the
complaint, would undoubtedly suffice to require her appearance, in
default of which judgment might have been entered against her. Such
a practice and procedure seems reasonable and well calculated to
effect the desired result in an orderly manner."
The case was reversed and sent back for such other proceedings
as might be deemed advisable.
It is certain that this case is not authority for the contention
that the court had no jurisdiction or control over subsequent
Page 178 U. S. 430
proceedings. It asserted such jurisdiction, and held that in its
exercise "the court could therefore adopt any reasonable procedure
that might seem proper," provided a summons was served.
But even if
White v. Johnson and
Auerbach v.
Maynard concurred in holding that, upon the death of a
defendant, the court could not proceed further in the action, we
should nevertheless be unable to assent to the doctrine. At common
law, all actions abated by the death of parties before judgment,
and to prevent the application and effect of that principle,
section 955, preceded by section 31 of the Judiciary Act of 1789,
was enacted, and provisions like that of section 385 of the Code of
Civil Procedure of California were also enacted. The section is an
follows:
"SEC. 385. An action or proceeding does not abate by the death
or any disability of a party, or by the transfer of any interest
therein, if the cause of action survive or continue. In case of the
death or any disability of a party, the court, on motion, may allow
the action or proceeding to be continued by or against his
representative or successor in interest. In case of any other
transfer of interest, the action or proceeding may be continued in
the name of the original party, or the court may allow the person
to whom the transfer is made to be substituted in the action or
proceeding."
This section does not make distinctions dependent upon the
states of the action or proceeding. The action or proceeding only
needs to exist, and to distinguish its degrees of progress is
certainly to add to the letter of the section.
We are therefore disposed to the construction of a similar
provision in the Code of Montana, made by the Supreme Court of
Montana in
Lavell v. Frost, 16 Mont. 93, not only because
the construction is in consonance with the purpose of the statute,
but accurate as to its letter.
The action was upon a bill of exchange. Frost, the defendant's
intestate, died after the complaint was filed, and the defendant,
his administratrix, was substituted in his stead.
The court said:
"It does not appear whether Frost was served with summons before
his death, but the action was commenced before his death. An action
is commenced by filing a
Page 178 U. S. 431
complaint. (Code Civ.Proc. § 66.) 'An action or defense shall
not abate by the death of a party, but shall survive and be
maintained by his representatives.' (§ 22.) . . . So far as we are
of opinion, there was no error in the case."
The procedure in California in case of the death of the
defendant before service has not been ruled upon, but in case death
occur after service, it was said in
Taylor v. Western Pacific
R. Co., 45 Cal. at 337:
"It has been the uniform practice in this state from its
organization, so far as we are advised, to permit the substitution
to be made, or a suggestion of the death of the former party and
satisfactory proof, on an
ex parte motion, of the
appointment and qualification of the administrator."
The same ruling was made in
Campbell v. West, 93 Cal.
653. And the practice was emphasized by contrast with that in case
of a transfer of interest otherwise than by death. In such case,
the court said, when the proceedings were set in motion by the
plaintiff or the person to whom the transfer is made, or by the
defendant if for any reason he desires to avail himself of such
transfer for any purpose, it must be made by supplemental complaint
or answer.
We see no reason why the representative of a deceased party
should not be brought in by the same procedure, whether the death
of a party occur before or after service, and the language of the
statute so expresses. The court would undoubtedly take care that
ample notice was given, and nothing more can be necessary.
The cases in equity cited by petitioner contain some pertinent
remarks as to when a suit may be considered as having been
commenced, and in what stage of the suit it can be revived against
the representatives of a deceased party. The cases cannot be said
to be inapplicable to the statutes of states which, like
California, have abolished the difference between legal and
equitable forms of action, and which, under one form of action and
the method of procedure of the state, intend to give not less, but
greater, remedial facilities, and, while accommodating the relief
to the circumstances of the case, expedite the relief by freeing it
from the delays and expense of the old procedure,
Page 178 U. S. 432
both in common law and equity, and to obtain the good in both by
a simpler practice.
In
Gordon v. Tyler, 53 Mich. 629, the original
defendants not having been served before their deaths, the court
said, in passing on a motion to set aside the service and dismiss
the bill:
"The basis of this objection is that until a defendant has
appeared, the suit cannot be treated as having actually been
commenced against him, so that if he dies before appearance, it is
as if he had never been in the case, and an original bill is
necessary to reach his representatives. The citation from Daniell's
Chancery Practice seems to favor that idea. But the authorities and
practice have uniformly held that the filing of a bill is the
commencement of suit for most purposes, and we can see no reason
for adopting any exceptional rule in such cases as the present. An
affidavit can always be made in a cause as soon as the bill is
filed, and sometimes becomes necessary to support an order for the
appearance of an absentee. A notice of
lis pendens may
always be filed at once, and it would lead to very serious mischief
if a failure to serve process at once on a defendant could nullify
the effect of such filing. For many purpose, it is not always
important whether a bill is a bill of revivor or an original bill
in the nature of one. But for some purposes, the difference is very
material, and rights may be seriously jeopardized by holding a
failure to get a defendant in before his death equivalent to a
failure to implead him. The evident object of our statute is to
hasten the proceedings by allowing a petition to stand in lieu of a
bill of revivor, and we do not see any good reason for holding that
a suit, if regarded as commenced for any substantial purpose,
should not be regarded as commenced so as to save all rights as
against the estates of a deceased defendant, appearing or not
appearing. No one's rights are injured by so holding, and important
rights may be jeopardized by holding otherwise."
This ruling was reaffirmed in
Stevenson v. Kurtz, 98
Mich. 493.
In Maine, an executor of the deceased defendant may be brought
in by bill of revivor. In declaring the practice, the court said,
in
Hubbard v. Johnson, 77 Me. 139:
"The general
Page 178 U. S. 433
rule in equity is that, strictly speaking, there is no cause in
court as against a defendant until his appearance. 2 Dan.Ch. 5th
ed. 1523. But in this state, since a bill may be inserted in a writ
of attachment (Rev.Stat. c. 77, sec. 11), as this was, and a suit
is commenced when the writ is actually made with intention of
service (Rev.Stat. c. 81, sec. 95), an executor may be brought in
by a revivor, although no service has been made on the testator.
Heard v. March, 12 Cush. 580."
The same ruling was made in Massachusetts in
Heard v.
March, and while there was no opinion of the court, from the
argument of counsel the ruling was apparently based on the same
grounds as in
Hubbard v. Johnson, supra, to-wit, that an
action was commenced on the day of the date of the writ, that being
the process in chancery.
It was said in
Lyle v. Bradford, 7 T. B. Mon. 116:
"That the suing out process has at all times been held the
commencement of an action or suit, and that as to the person
against whom process has been issued, there must necessarily be a
pending suit from the date of the process, so as to abate and
require a revival upon his death."
There is nothing in
Lewis v. Outlaw, 1 Tenn. 140, which
opposes these views. Indeed, it affirms them. The court said:
"Agreeably to the practice in the courts of law in England, all
suits abated by the death of either party; nor could they be
revived by
scire facias." The court then proceeded to say
that the practice of chancery in England was upon the death of
either plaintiff or defendant to file a bill of revivor against the
representatives of the deceased, and, applying this practice to
Kentucky under a statute which provided no abatement should occur
by the death of either the plaintiff or defendant, but might be
"proceeded upon by application of the heirs, executors,
administrators, or assigns of either party," said:
"It seems clear that all revivals, to comport with the
principles of reason and the English practice, should be made by
causing appropriate process to issue so as to make the
representatives of the deceased parties in a legal manner. To
revive a dormant judgment, a
scire facias is necessary. To
revive in chancery the authorities show that a bill must be filed,
and process issued thereon, to
Page 178 U. S. 434
which the representatives may make such answer as the nature of
the case may require."
Hyde v. Leavitt, 2 Tyler 170, cited by respondent's
counsel, must be considered as peculiar to the practice in
Vermont.
The statute of the state was very similar to section 955 of the
Revised Statutes of the United States,
supra, and it was
held, reversing the lower court, that notwithstanding Griffin, the
deceased, had been personally served with the writ, as it was made
returnable June term, 1801, and as Griffin died before session day,
his administrator could not be made a party under the statute. The
ground of the decision seemed to be that the suit could not be
considered as
pending until it was entered in court. The
contrary was held in
Clindenin v. Allen, 4 N.H. 385. The
same contention was made which was made in
Hyde v.
Leavitt. The court decided that,
"as the term '
pending' means nothing more than
'
remaining undecided,' an action may, without doubt, be
considered as pending from the commencement."
And we may say that
Hyde v. Leavitt did not long remain
law in Vermont. At their October sessions, 1804, the general
assembly amended the statute to make the commencement of the suit,
in case of the death of either party, the same as to rights for and
against executors as existed in a suit which was
"
pending," using this word, no doubt, to meet the ruling
of the court.
However, the discussion to the extent we have carried it may not
be necessary. Section 955, Rev.Stat., determines when the
representative of a deceased party may be brought into an action,
and that
scire facias is the procedure whereby he may be
brought in. And it is not confined to a case where a judgment has
been obtained. It is a process of notice to the executor or
administrator to come in, and if he should not come in, gives
jurisdiction to the court to
"render judgment against the estate of the deceased party, in
the same manner as if the executor or administrator had voluntarily
made himself a party."
This is the language of the section. If doubt there can be of
its construction, it is removed by the case of
Green v.
Watkins, 6 Wheat. 260, and
Macker's
Heirs v. Thomas, 7 Wheat. 530.
Page 178 U. S. 435
In
Green v. Watkins, the court, passing on section 31
of the Judiciary Act of 1789, of which sections 955 and 956,
Rev.Stat., are reproductions, pointed out the distinction between
the death of parties before judgment and after judgment, and
said:
"In the former case, all personal actions by the common law
abate, and it required the aid of some statute like that of the
thirty-first section of the Judiciary Act of 1789, c. 20, to enable
the action to be prosecuted by or against the personal
representative of the deceased when the cause of action
survived."
The enactment of the section was to provide against the
abatement of actions which would otherwise abate at common law, and
we cannot confine its remedy to the cases where death occurs after
judgment. In other words, confine its remedy to the cases where the
common law already afforded a remedy.
See also McCoul v.
Lekamp, 2 Wheat. 111, and
Hyde v. Leavitt,
2 Tyler 170.
Except when considering the objection made here to the remedy by
mandamus, we have treated the case as if O. P. Overton, the
deceased party, was the sole defendant, and that the action
necessarily abated unless there was a saving statute. But he was
not the sole defendant, and the action did not abate at common law
if the cause of action survived against the other defendant. We
assume (the record does not enable us to determine absolutely) that
it did, and the reason for bringing in the representatives of the
deceased defendant is the stronger.
We think, therefore, that the circuit court erred in setting
aside the scire facias,
and the rule for mandamus is made
absolute.