The receiver in this case, having voluntarily brought this case
into the circuit court, by whose appointment he held his office,
cannot, after that court has passed upon the matter in controversy,
be heard to object to the power of that court to render judgment
therein.
This was a cause brought to this Court on a certyificate from
the judges of the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Circuit Court of
Appeals of the Eighth Circuit. A statement of the facts and the
questions put will be found in the opinion of the Court.
Page 179 U. S. 207
MR. JUSTICE SHIRAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Edward C. Baggs was, on July 1, 1898, duly appointed receiver of
the Denver City Railroad Company, a corporation of the State of
Colorado, by the Circuit Court of the United States for the
District of Colorado in an action brought in said court by the
Central Trust Company, a corporation of the State of New York.
While Baggs, as such receiver, was managing and operating said
road, one Mary E. Martin, while a passenger on the railroad,
received injuries on account of which she died on August 7, 1898.
Albert G. Martin, Harry D. Martin, and Herman H. Martin brought an
action in the District Court for the County of Arapahoe, State of
Colorado, against Edward C. Baggs, as receiver of the Denver City
Railroad Company, alleging that their mother, Mary E. Martin, had
received fatal injuries by the fault and negligence of certain
persons in the employ of said receiver engaged in operating said
road, and claiming damages, in accordance with the laws of the
State of Colorado, against Edward C. Baggs in his capacity as
receiver. Thereafter, on September 19, 1898, and within due time,
the receiver presented his petition and bond to the District Court
for the County of Arapahoe, praying for the removal of said cause
from said court to the circuit court of the United States for the
District of Colorado on the alleged ground that the said action was
one arising under the laws of the United States, and was ancillary
to said action and proceeding in said Circuit Court of the United
States for the District of Colorado, wherein said Central Trust
Company of New York was complainant and said Denver City Railroad
Company was defendant. This application to remove was granted, and
thereafter a trial of said cause was had in the circuit court of
the United States, and a verdict and judgment were recovered
against the said Edward C. Baggs, as receiver of the Denver City
Railroad Company, in the sum
Page 179 U. S. 208
of $3,000. Thereafter, and in due season, the record in said
cause was duly removed by writ of error to the United States
Circuit Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, where it still
remains, the cause being as yet undecided. Whereupon the following
questions have been certified to us by the judges of the said
circuit court of appeals:
"First. In view of the provisions contained in section 3 of the
Judiciary Act approved March 3, 1887, 25 Stat. 436, permitting
receivers appointed by any court of the United States to be sued in
respect of any act or transaction of his in carrying on the
business connected with such property without the previous leave of
the court in which such receiver is appointed, was it competent for
said Edward C. Baggs, as receiver of the Denver City Railroad
Company, to remove said cause from the district court of Arapahoe
County, wherein he was sued, to the Circuit Court of United States
for the District of Colorado?"
"Second. Did said Circuit Court for the District of Colorado, by
virtue of the aforesaid removal, acquire lawful jurisdiction of
said cause, and power to render the aforesaid judgment
therein?"
It may be, as contended on behalf of the plaintiff in error,
that the mere order of the circuit court of the United States
appointing a receiver for a corporation created by the law of a
state at the suit of a citizen of another state, and where the
jurisdiction of the circuit court depended on the diverse
citizenship of the parties, did not create a federal question under
section 709 of the Revised Statutes, and that, accordingly, the
removal of this cause from the state to the federal court, for the
sole reason that the defendant, seeking the removal, had been so
appointed, was not well founded.
Bausman v. Dixon,
173 U. S. 113.
But, without entering into that subject, or the question of the
scope and effect, as respects jurisdiction, of the Act of March 3,
1887, permitting receivers appointed by any court of the United
States to be sued without the previous leave of the court in which
he had been appointed, we think that, in the present case, the
receiver, having voluntarily brought the cause into the
Page 179 U. S. 209
circuit court by whose appointment he held his office, cannot,
after that court has passed upon the matter in controversy, be
heard to object to the power of that court to render judgment
therein.
We do not mean to be understood to say that mere consent, or
even voluntary action by the parties, can confer jurisdiction upon
a court which would not have possessed it without such consent or
action. But here, the circuit court had, independently of the
citizenship of the parties in the damage suit, jurisdiction over
the railroad and its property in the hands of its receiver. It may
be that its jurisdiction was not, by reason of the Act of March 3,
1887, exclusive of that of other courts in controversies like the
present one. But when the receiver, waiving any right he might have
had to have the cause tried in a state court, brought it before the
court whose officer he was, he cannot successfully dispute its
jurisdiction. The claim was against him as receiver, and, if
successfully asserted, would affect the property of the Denver City
Railroad Company, which was in course of administration by the
circuit court of the United States for the benefit of its
creditors, among whom were the defendants in error. As, then, the
cause of action arose out of the alleged misconduct of the
receiver, or of his agents, for whom he was responsible, and as the
property to be affected was in the exclusive control of the circuit
court, that court plainly had jurisdiction to entertain and
determine the controversy, whether that jurisdiction was invoked by
the parties seeking redress or, as in this case, by the receiver.
Minnesota Co. v. St. Paul
Co., 2 Wall. 609.
We therefore answer the second question put to us by the
judges of the circuit court of appeals in the affirmative, and it
is therefore unnecessary to answer the first question, as the
defendants in error are not raising it, and it is so
ordered.