Neither the Constitution or the act of Congress regards the
subject of the suit, but the parties. A description of the parties
is therefore indispensable to the exercise of jurisdiction, which
is limited by the law to suits between citizens and foreigners.
This was a writ of error to remove the proceedings on a bill in
equity from the Circuit Court for the District of Georgia, tested
27 November, 1798, returnable on the next. The case, on the bill
and pleadings, was briefly this:
Alexander Willy, an inhabitant of Georgia, being indebted to
Higginson & Greenwood, British merchants, gave them a bond and
mortgage, payable 1 January, 1773. In the year 1778, Willy was
banished from the State of Georgia and his estate confiscated by
law. The mortgaged premises were seized and sold by the
commissioners for forfeited estates to certain purchasers, who
afterwards sold the same to James Houston, and the property
remained in his possession or in the possession of his executors
until 12 September 1796, when it was levied upon, sold, and
conveyed to William Mien by the creditors of Houston, notice of the
mortgage having been given to Mossman, the executor of Houston, to
Mien, the agent for his creditors, and to the marshal, before the
sale. In March, 1797, Higginson, the surviving mortgagee, filed the
present bill to foreclose the equity of redemption, stating himself
to be a subject of Great Britain, but in no part of the proceedings
were the defendants or any of them stated to be citizens of the
United States. The defendants pleaded the confiscation laws of
Georgia in bar and answered
Page 4 U. S. 13
to the merits, but Washington, Justice, overruled the pleas and
decreed, that unless William Mien paid the principal and interest
of the debt before 17 February, 1799, the equity of redemption
should be foreclosed.
Page 4 U. S. 14
By the Court:
The decisions on this subject, govern the present case, and the
11th section of the Judiciary Act can and must receive a
construction consistent with the Constitution. It says, it is true,
in general terms, that the circuit court shall have cognizance of
suits "where an alien is a party," but as the legislative power of
conferring jurisdiction on the federal courts is in this respect
confined to suits between citizens and foreigners, we must so
expound the terms of the law as to meet the case, "where indeed an
alien is one party" but a citizen is the other. Neither the
Constitution nor the act of Congress regards on this point the
subject of the suit, but the parties. A description of the parties
is therefore indispensable to the exercise of jurisdiction. There
is here no such description, and of course
The writ of error must be quashed.