Where the marshal, by virtue of mesne process issuing out of the
Circuit Court of the United States for the District of
Massachusetts, attached certain railroad cars which were afterwards
taken out of his hands by the Sheriff of Middlesex County under a
replevin brought by the mortgagees of the railroad company, the
proceeding of the sheriff was entirely irregular.
Page 65 U. S. 451
I. The suit upon the replevin was instituted and carried on to
judgment in the court below under a misapprehension of the settled
course of decision in this Court in respect to the case of
conflicting processes and authorities between the federal and state
courts.
II. Also in respect to the appropriate remedy of the mortgagees
of the railroad cars for the grievances complained of.
I. In the case of
Taylor v.
Carryl, 20 How. 583, the majority of the Court were
of opinion that, according to the course of decision in the case of
conflicting authorities under a state and federal process, and in
order to avoid unseemly collision between them, the question as to
which authority should for the time prevail did not depend upon the
rights of the respective parties to the property seized, whether
the one was paramount to the other, but upon the question which
jurisdiction had first attached by the seizure and custody of the
property under its process.
This principle is equally applicable to the case of property
attached under mesne process for the purpose of awaiting the final
judgment, as in the case of property seized in admiralty, and the
proceedings
in rem.
The distinction examined which is alleged to exist between a
proceeding in admiralty and process issuing from a common law
court.
Whether the railroad cars which were seized were or were not the
property of the railroad company was a question for the United
States court which had issued the process to determine.
Cases and authorities examined which are supposed to conflict
with this principle.
II. Although both parties to the replevin were citizens of
Massachusetts, yet the plaintiffs were not remediless in the
federal courts. They could have fled a bill on the equity side of
the court from which the process of attachment issued, which bill
would not have been an original suit, but supplementary merely to
the original suit out of which it had arisen. It would therefore
have been within the jurisdiction of the court, and the proper
remedy to have been pursued.
Cases cited to illustrate this.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 65 U. S. 453
MR. JUSTICE NELSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The case was this:
Selden F. White, of the State of New Hampshire, in 1856
instituted a suit in the Circuit Court of the United States for the
District of Massachusetts against the Vermont & Massachusetts
Railroad Company, a corporation under the laws of Massachusetts, to
recover certain demands claimed against the defendants. The suit
was commenced in the usual way by process of attachment and
summons. Freeman, the marshal and plaintiff in error, to whom the
processes were delivered attached a number of railroad cars which,
according to the practice of the court, were seized and held as a
security for the satisfaction of the demand in suit in case a
judgment was recovered. After the seizure, and while the cars were
in the custody of the marshal, they were taken out of his
possession by the Sheriff of the County of Middlesex under a writ
of replevin in favor of Howe and others, the defendants in error,
issued from a state court. The plaintiffs in the replevin suit were
mortgagees of the Vermont & Massachusetts Railroad Company,
including the cars in question, in trust for the bondholders, to
secure the payment of a large sum of money which remained due and
unpaid.
The defendant, Freeman, in the replevin suit, set up by way of
defense the authority by which he held the property under the
circuit court of the United States, which was overruled by the
court below, and judgment rendered for the plaintiffs. The case is
now before us on a writ of error.
I. The suit in this case has been instituted and carried on
Page 65 U. S. 454
to judgment in the court below under a misapprehension of the
settled course of decision in this Court in respect to the case of
conflicting processes and authorities between the federal and state
courts, and also in respect to the appropriate remedy of the
plaintiffs for the grievances complained of.
As it respects the effect to be given to the processes of the
courts, whether state or federal, the subject was so fully and
satisfactorily examined in the case of
Taylor v. Carryl,
the last of the series on the subject, we need only refer to it, as
all the previous cases will there be found.
61 U. S. 20 How.
583.
The main point there decided was that the property seized by the
sheriff, under the process of attachment from the state court, and
while in the custody of the officer, could not be seized or taken
from him by a process from the district court of the United States,
and that the attempt to seize it by the marshal, by a notice or
otherwise, was a nullity, and gave the court no jurisdiction over
it inasmuch as to give jurisdiction to the district court in a
proceeding
in rem, there must be a valid seizure and an
actual control of the
res under the process.
In order to avoid the effect of this case, it has been assumed
that the question was not one of conflict between the state and
federal authorities, but a question merely upon the relative powers
of a court of admiralty and a court of common law in the case of an
admitted maritime lien. But no such question was discussed by MR.
JUSTICE CAMPBELL, who delivered the opinion of the majority of the
Court, except to show that the process of the district court in
admiralty was entitled to no precedence over the process of any
other court, dealing with property that was, in common, subject to
the jurisdiction of each. On the contrary, he observed at the close
of the opinion that the view taken of the case rendered it
unnecessary
"to consider any question relative to the respective liens of
the attaching creditors, and of the seamen for wages, or as to the
effect of the sale of the property as chargeable, or as perishable,
upon them."
The minority of the Court took a different view of the question
supposed to be involved in the case. It is succinctly
Page 65 U. S. 455
stated by THE CHIEF JUSTICE at the commencement of his
dissenting opinion. He observes:
"The opinion of the Court treats this controversy as a conflict
between the jurisdiction and rights of a state court and the
jurisdiction and rights of a court of the United States, as a
conflict between sovereignties, both acting by their own officers
within the sphere of their acknowledged powers. In my judgment,
this is a mistaken view of the question presented by the record. It
is not a question between the relative powers of a state and the
United States, acting through their judicial tribunals, but merely
upon the relative powers and duties of a court of admiralty and a
court of common law in the case of an admitted maritime lien,"
and hence the conclusion was arrived at that the power of the
admiralty was paramount. The majority of the Court was of opinion
that, according to the course of decision in the case of
conflicting authorities under a state and federal process, and in
order to avoid unseemly collision between them, the question as to
which authority should, for the time, prevail did not depend upon
the rights of the respective parties to the property seized,
whether the one was paramount to the other, but upon the question
which jurisdiction had first attached by the seizure and custody of
the property under its process.
Another distinction is attempted by the defendants in error. It
is admitted that in the case of a proceeding
in rem, the
property seized and in the custody of the officer is protected from
any interference by state process. But it is claimed that the
process of attachment issued by a common law court stands upon a
different footing, and the reasons assigned for the distinction are
that in the one case the property seized is the subject of legal
inquiry in the court, the matter to be tried and adjudicated upon,
and which, in the language of the counsel, lies at the foundation
of the jurisdiction of the court, but that in the other the
property seized -- namely, under the attachment -- is not the
subject matter to be tried, like the property which is the subject
of a libel
in rem, as the process is simply for the
recovery of a debt, without any lien or charge upon the property
except that resulting from the
Page 65 U. S. 456
attachment to secure the debt, and that the question of lien
upon the property is a collateral one which the federal court could
not hear and decide in the action before it, and further that the
question of liability of the railroad company was upon certain
bonds, the trial and judgment upon which would not be affected by
the possession or want of possession of the property seized by the
marshal.
The idea which seems to prevail in the mind of the learned
counsel on the part of the defendant in error is that there is
something peculiar and extraordinary in a proceeding
in
rem in admiralty, and in the lien upon which it is founded,
that invests them with a power far above the proceedings or liens
at common law, or by statute, and that while the seizure of the
property in the one case by the marshal protects it from all
interference by state process, in the other no such protection
exists.
The court is not aware of any such distinction. In the case of a
proceeding
in rem in admiralty, the lien or charge which
gives the right to seize the property results from the principles
of the maritime law. In the proceeding by attachment in a court of
common law, the lien results from statute or common law, and in
both cases, unless the party instituting the proceedings sustains
his demand to secure which the lien is claimed, the property is
discharged. In both, the property is held contingently, dependent
upon the result of the litigation. In the admiralty, in the case of
collision, upon a bill of lading, or charter party, for salvage
&c., the main questions litigated are not the questions of
lien, but fault or not in the collision, the fulfillment or not of
the contract in the bill of lading, or charter party, or the right
to salvage.
The same observations are alike applicable to all cases of
attachment in courts of common law, where the lien is given by
statute.
It is true, in a proceeding
in rem, any person claiming
an interest in the property paramount to that of the libellant may
intervene by way of defense for the protection of his interest; but
the same is equally true in the case of a proceeding by
Page 65 U. S. 457
attachment in a court of common law, as will be shown in another
branch of this opinion.
Some stress has also been placed upon the idea that the forcible
dispossession of the marshal of the property under the attachment
would not affect the jurisdiction of the court or interrupt the
proceedings in the suit, but the same is equally true as respects
the proceedings
in rem in the admiralty. The forcible
dispossession of the marshal of the property once seized would not
affect the jurisdiction or prevent a decree in the case.
Another and main ground relied on by the defendants in error is
that the process in the present instance was directed against the
property of the railroad company, and conferred no authority upon
the marshal to take the property of the plaintiffs in the replevin
suit. But this involves a question of right and title to the
property under the federal process, and which it belongs to the
federal, not the state courts, to determine. This is now admitted,
for though a point is made in the brief by the counsel for the
defendant in error that this Court had no jurisdiction of the case,
it was given up on the argument. And in the condition of the
present case. more than this is involved, for the property having
been seized under the process of attachment, and in the custody of
the marshal, and the right to hold it being a question belonging to
the federal court, under whose process it was seized, to determine,
there was no authority, as we have seen, under the process of the
state court, to interfere with it. We agree with MR. JUSTICE GRIER
in
Peck v.
Jenniss, 7 How. 624-625:
"It is a doctrine of law too long established to require
citation of authorities that where a court has jurisdiction, it has
a right to decide every question which occurs in the cause, and
whether its decision be correct or otherwise, its judgment, till
reversed, is regarded as binding in every court, and that where the
jurisdiction of a court, and the right of a plaintiff to prosecute
his suit in it, have once attached, that right cannot be arrested
or taken away by proceedings in another court. . . . Neither can
one take the property from the custody of the other by replevin or
any other process, for this would
Page 65 U. S. 458
produce a conflict extremely embarrassing to the administration
of justice."
The case of
Slocum v.
Mayberry, 2 Wheat. 2, has been referred to as
holding a different doctrine from that maintained by the plaintiff
in error in the present case.
We have examined the case attentively, and are satisfied that
this is a misapprehension. There was no interference there with
goods seized under the process of a federal court and in the
custody of the marshal, nor any attempt to draw questions involved
in a suit instituted in a federal court into a state court for
decision. It is quite apparent from the opinion of the Court, if
this had been the question before it, what would have been its
decision.
Chief justice Marshall observed:
"Any intervention of a state authority which, by taking the
thing seized out of the possession of the officer of the United
States, might obstruct the exercise of this jurisdiction, would
unquestionably be a violation of the act, and the federal court
having cognizance of the seizure, might enforce a redelivery of the
thing by attachment or other summary process against the parties
who should divest such a possession. The party supposing himself
aggrieved by a seizure cannot, because he considers it tortious,
replevy the property out of the custody of the seizing officers or
of the court having cognizance of the cause."
The reason why the replevin of the cargo in the state court was
maintained was that the vessel only was seized by the officer, and
not the cargo, and the latter was not, therefore, within the
protection of the principle announced.
Reference was made also, on the argument in the present case, to
an opinion expressed by Chancellor Kent in his Commentaries, vol.
1, 410, as follows:
"If the officer of the United States who seizes, or the court
which awards the process to seize, has jurisdiction of the subject
matter, then the inquiry into the validity of the seizure belongs
exclusively to the federal courts. But if there be no jurisdiction
in the instance in which it is asserted, as if a marshal of the
United States, under an execution in favor of the United States
against A should seize the person or property of B, then the
Page 65 U. S. 459
state courts have jurisdiction to protect the person and the
property so illegally invaded."
The error into which the learned chancellor fell from not being
practically familiar with the jurisdiction of the federal courts
arose from not appreciating for the moment the effect of
transferring from the jurisdiction of the federal court to that of
the state the decision of the question in the example given, for it
is quite clear, upon the principle stated, the jurisdiction of the
former, and the validity and effect of its process, would not be
what the federal, but state court, might determine. No doubt, if
the federal court had no jurisdiction of the case, the process
would be invalid and the seizure of the property illegal, for which
the aggrieved party is entitled to his remedy. But the question is
which tribunal, the federal or state, possesses the power to
determine the question of jurisdiction or validity of the process?
The effect of the principle stated by the chancellor, if admitted,
would be most deep and extensive in its operation upon the
jurisdiction of the federal court, as a moment's consideration will
show. It would draw after it into the state courts not only all
questions of the liability of property seized upon mesne and final
process issued under the authority of the federal courts, including
the admiralty, for this Court can be no exception, for the purposes
for which it was seized, but also the arrests upon mesne, and
imprisonment upon final, process of the person in both civil and
criminal cases, for in every case the question of jurisdiction
could be made, and until the power was assumed by the state court
and the question of jurisdiction of the federal court was heard and
determined by it, it could not be known whether in the given case
it existed or not. We need scarcely remark that no government could
maintain the administration or execution of its laws, civil or
criminal, if the jurisdiction of its judicial tribunals were
subject to the determination of another. But we shall not pursue
this branch of the case further. We regard the question as settled
at least as early as
9 U. S. 5 Cranch
115,
United States v. Peters, familiarly known as the
Olmstead Case, and which is historical, that it belongs to
the federal courts to determine the question of their own
jurisdiction,
Page 65 U. S. 460
the ultimate arbiter, the supreme judicial tribunal of the
nation, and which has been recently reaffirmed, after the most
careful and deliberate consideration, in the opinion of the present
CHIEF JUSTICE in the case of
United States v.
Booth, 21 How. 506
II. Another misapprehension under which the counsel for the
defendant in error labors and in which the court below fell was in
respect to the appropriate remedy of the plaintiffs in the replevin
suit for the grievance complained of. It was supposed that they
were utterly remediless in the federal courts, inasmuch as both
parties were citizens of Massachusetts. But those familiar with the
practice of the federal courts have found no difficulty in applying
a remedy, and one much more effectual than the replevin and more
consistent with the order and harmony of judicial proceedings, as
may be seen by reference to the following cases:
64 U. S. 23 How.
117,
Pennock v. Coe; 37 U. S. Tide Water
Canal, company, decided this term; 12 Pet. 164;
33
U. S. 8 Pet. 1;
9
U. S. 5 Cranch 288.
The principle is that a bill filed on the equity side of the
court to restrain or regulate judgments or suits at law in the same
court, and thereby prevent injustice, or an inequitable advantage
under mesne or final process, is not an original suit, but
ancillary and dependent, supplementary merely to the original suit
out of which it had arisen, and is maintained without reference to
the citizenship or residence of the parties.
The case in
33 U. S. 8 Pet. 1,
which was among the first that came before the Court, deserves
perhaps a word of explanation. It would seem from a remark in the
opinion that the power of the court upon the bill was limited to a
case between the parties to the original suit. This was probably
not intended, as any party may file the bill whose interests are
affected by the suit at law.
In the case of
Pennock v. Coe, the bill was filed by
the mortgagee of the railroad company in trust for the bondholders,
answering to the position of the plaintiffs in the replevin suit in
the case before us.
Gue v. Tide Water Canal company,
decided at this term, is an instructive case upon this
Page 65 U. S. 461
subject, in which THE CHIEF JUSTICE suggests the difficulties of
a court of law dealing with this description of property with a
proper regard to the rights of all concerned.
In that case, the bill was filed on the equity side of the
Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Maryland to
restrain a sale of the defendant's property on execution. Gue, the
judgment creditor, was a resident of Pennsylvania.
We shall not look into the questions raised upon the mortgage,
whether executed by the proper authority, or if it was, whether it
covered after-acquired property, as not material to the case before
us. The latter question was fully examined in this Court in the
case above referred to of
Pennock v. Coe.
Neither shall we inquire into the questions raised under the
attachment laws of Massachusetts, as they are unimportant in our
view of the case.
Upon the whole, after the fullest consideration of the case and
utmost respect for the learning and ability of the court below, we
are constrained to differ from it, and
Reverse the judgment.