Hayden v. Manning/Opinion of the Court

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750319Hayden v. Manning — Opinion of the CourtSamuel Freeman Miller

United States Supreme Court

106 U.S. 586

Hayden  v.  Manning


This is a case which the circuit court should have dismissed under the fifth section of the act of March 3, 1875, concerning the jurisdiction of the circuit courts of the United States, instead of granting the relief prayed by complainant.

It is charged in the bill that Hayden, the appellee, while acting as the attorney of Rachel Dove and Bethuel Dove, her husband, purchased under execution a valuable tract of land belonging to Rachel; that he had defended the suit for foreclosure of a mortgage on the property for the Doves, in which a decree was rendered under which it was sold. It is set out with sufficient fullness that at this sale he bought the land at less than its value, under circumstances which should subject the title which he acquired to the character of a trust for the benefit of Mrs. Dove. It is not necessary now to inquire into the truth of that allegation, on which the circuit court rendered a decree in favor of Manning, the complainant in the suit, because we are of opinion that Manning had no such interest in the matter as to anable him to sustain a suit in the circuit court of the United States in regard to it. The sale to Hayden was made March 5, 1864, and he received the sheriff's deed April 26th thereafter. On the seventh day of April, 1875, Rachel and Bethuel Dove conveyed the land to Manning, who brought the present suit May 12, 1876.

It appears in evidence that not long after the sheriff's deed was made to him, Hayden took possession of the land, and has retained it ever since, though it is said he obtained the possession unfairly. In April, 1874, Rachel Dove began a suit in the state court of Polk county, where the land was situated, against Hayden to recover these premises, and the court decided against her on demurrer. From this decision she took an appeal to the supreme court of the state, which was dismissed by her, as was the suit in the Polk county circuit court. In April, 1875, and while this suit was pending in some stage of it, the conveyance was made to Manning of the land in question. Manning was the husband of the daughter of the Doves, and resided in California, and had the citizenship necessary to enable him to renew the litigation in the circuit court of the United States. The deed purports to be one of bargain and sale for the consideration of $5,000, but no money was ever paid on it. No note or other obligation was given, nor any mortgage, as security for the debt. It does not appear that Manning ever promised to pay anything for it.

Mrs. Dove's account of the transaction is this:

'My daughter Elizabeth is the wife of Charles Manning, the plaintiff. Manning never has paid me any money on this land, but he was going to. He never gave me his note. I can't say when I saw Manning last. I think eight years ago. Manning wrote first about having the land conveyed to him; said he would take the matter off our hands. I have not the letter with me.'

Mr. Dove says he don't know whether any part of the $5,000 has been paid, either from his own knowledge or from his wife. Manning's deposition was not taken in the case, nor is any word, verbal or in writing, produced as coming from him in regard to this suit. The bill, which is filed in his name, is neither signed nor sworn to by him. Mr. Dove swears that he is the agent and attorney in fact of Manning, and as such he verifies the bill. The defendant, who is called upon to make full and perfect answer, does so under oath, and denies that Manning was in good faith the lawful owner of the land. No bond for costs was given by Manning, or any one for him. Mr. Dove, in swearing to the bill of costs of about $3,00, does not say that plaintiff had paid any part of them, but that they were incurred in the suit. There is no evidence that the deed from Dove and wife to Manning was ever delivered to Manning, or was ever in his possession, and there is no reason to suppose it ever left Oregon, or that he had been in Oregon for years before and after its execution. Undoubtedly, Mrs. Dove and her husband could have given their interest in the property to their daughter, and a conveyance in consideration of natural love and affection might have been good. But this deed was not made to her, nor on any such consideration, but recites a consideration of $5,000 in money, while it clearly appears that no money was paid, none was secured by note or mortgage, and none was promised or intended to be paid. 'Manning wrote to me,' says Mrs. Dove, 'about having the land conveyed to him; said he would take the matter off our hands.' What matter? Manifestly the litigation at that time going on. 'I will sue for you in my name. I can go into a court of the United States, where you can't go,' is what he meant.

There is not a syllable in this record inconsistent with the idea that the deed was made to Manning without his knowledge, recorded in Oregon, and delivered to the lawyers who brought this suit, (the same who brought the suit in the state court,) without his authority and without any communication from in the record by which Manning this suit was a tort, there is no evidence inthe record by which Manning could be connected with it, or with any assertion of claim under the deed. It seems to us that Manning's name is used because he is a citizen of a different state from the defendant, for the sole benefit of Mrs. Dove; that he has no real interest in the controversy, and if cognizant of what is going on, of which there is much doubt, is passively permitting the use of his name for the benefit of the Doves in order to make a simulated case of jurisdiction in the federal court. This is precisely the case provided for in the act of 1875. The 'suit does not really and substantially involve a dispute or controversy properly within the jurisdiction of the circuit court,' because the real controversy is wholly between citizens of the same state. 'The name of Manning, the plaintiff in the suit, has been improperly and collusively used (in the language of this statute) for the purpose of creating a case cognizable under it.' Hawes v. Oakland, 104 U.S. 450; Williams v. Township of Nottawa, 104 U.S. 209; Detroit v. Dean, ante, 560.

The decree of the circuit court is reversed, and the case remanded with direction to dismiss the bill for want of jurisdiction, and without prejudice to any other action in a proper court.

Notes[edit]

This work is in the public domain in the United States because it is a work of the United States federal government (see 17 U.S.C. 105).

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