Dill v. Ebey, 229 U.S. 199 (1913)

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229 U.S.

199
33 S.Ct. 620
57 L.Ed. 1148

WILLIAM H. DILL, Plff. in Err.,


v.
WILLIAM H. EBEY, Receiver of the Citizens Bank & Trust
Company of Stonewall.
No. 191.
Argued March 17, 1913.
Decided May 26, 1913.

Messrs. Frank B. Burford and John H. Burford for plaintiff in error.


Messrs. Frederic D. Mckenney and Clinton A. Galbraith for defendant in
error.
Mr. Justice Pitney delivered the opinion of the court:

This writ of error brings before us a judgment of the supreme court of the state
of Oklahoma, affirming a judgment rendered by the district court of Okfuskee
county, holding the plaintiff in error liable for the amount of an unpaid
subscription made by him to the capital stock of a bank of which the defendant
in error is the receiver.

The case is brought here under 709, Rev. Stat. (U. S. Comp. Stat. 1901, p.
575), Judicial Code, 237 [36 Stat. at L. 1156, chap. 231, U. S. Comp. Stat.
Supp. 1911, p. 227], and the jurisdictional question is raised.

The action was commenced in the United States court for the western district of
the Indian territory on September 17, 1906, by Ebey, as receiver of the Citizens
Bank & Trust Company, against Dill, the plaintiff in error, and four others, by
the filing of a complaint in equity setting forth that the defendants had
organized the bank and caused it to be incorporated for the purpose of
transacting a general banking and trust business at Stonewall, in the Indian
territory; that the articles of incorporation and certificate required by law were

properly filed, setting forth the objects and purposes of the corporation, and
reciting that the capital stock was $25,000, divided into shares of $25 each, and
that $10,000 thereof had been actually paid in by the subscribers, who were the
defendants, and that they had severally taken certain shares of stock, of which
80 shares, of the par value of $2,000 were issued to Dill; that he had not paid
any part of this par value, or anything of value, for the stock subscribed for by
and issued to him; that defendants organized the bank without any purpose or
intent to pay for its capital stock, except $2,000 paid in by one of the other
defendants, and that this latter sum was paid in with the distinct understanding
that it should be returned, and it was returned, after the corporation became a
going concern; that the bank was and is insolvent, and on the petition of one of
its creditors the plaintiff was appointed by the United States court for the
southern district of the Indian territory, receiver to take charge of all its property
and effects, and administer them for the benefit of its creditors; that the
liabilities, as shown by its books, were $15,179.02; that a great deal of its paper
was worthless, and a very small sum could be realized from the same and the
rest of its assets; that after six months' effort the plaintiff had only been able to
collect on notes $60.50, and to realize on other property the sum of $100; that
all of the capital stock represented as paid, namely, $10,000, and the assets in
the hands of the plaintiff as receiver, would not be sufficient to pay the
creditors; that on a partial presentation of these facts to the judge, an order was
made, directing the plaintiff as receiver to institute proper proceedings against
the defendants as subscribers to the capital stock, to recover the respective
amounts remaining unpaid on said subscription, or for the stock issued to them,
for the benefit of all the creditors of the bank, and that this suit was commenced
in compliance with that order. 'That the plaintiff has no adequate remedy at
law, and unless this court takes jurisdiction of this suit in equity, he will be
driven to a multiplicity of actions in trying to enforce the liability of said
defendants at law, and the funds of said estate will be greatly depleted in paying
the additional costs and expenses necessary in filing and prosecuting such
actions.'
4

November 4, 1907, Dill filed a demurrer to the complaint, upon the following
grounds: (a) That it did not state sufficient facts to authorize a court of equity to
assume jurisdiction; (b) that it showed upon its face that plaintiff had a plain,
adequate, and complete remedy at law; and (c) that defendant was entitled to a
trial by jury under the laws and Constitution of the United States, of which he
would be deprived should the cause be tried in equity. The demurrer was
overruled, and he took an exception.

Thereafter, and on November 16, 1907, by proclamation of the President (35


Stat. at L. 2160), the state of Oklahoma, including the former territory of

Oklahoma and Indian territory, was admitted into the Union by virtue of the
enabling act of June 16, 1906 (34 Stat. at L. 267, chap. 3335). By 20 of this
act (34 Stat. at L. 277), as amended by act of March 4, 1907 (34 Stat. at L.
1287, chap. 2911), it was provided that all causes pending in the district courts
of Oklahoma territory and in the United States courts in the Indian territory at
the time said territories should become a state, not transferred to the United
States circuit or district courts under previous sections, should be 'proceeded
with, held, and determined by the courts of said state, the successors of said
district courts of the territory of Oklahoma, and the United States courts in the
Indian territory; with the right to prosecute appeals or writs of error to the
supreme or appellate court of said state, and also with the same right to
prosecute appeals or writs of error from the final determination in such cases
made by the supreme or appellate court of such state to the Supreme Court of
the United States, as is provided by law for appeals and writs of error from the
supreme or final appellate court of a state to the Supreme Court of the United
States.'
6

Upon statehood, the present action was transferred to the district court of
Okmulgee county, and the defendant Dill, now plaintiff in error, obtained its
transfer from that court to the district court of Okfuskee county. There he
answered upon the merits, admitting the organization and incorporation of the
bank, and that he subscribed for 80 shares of its capital stock, but alleging that
he paid the consideration therefor to the bank at the time, and denying any
indebtedness to the plaintiff on the stock.

If any of the other defendants pleaded to the action, the transcript presented
here does not show it. The cause, however, came on for trial before the court
without a jury, the plaintiff, the defendant Dill, and another defendant named
Malott, appearing respectively in person and by attorney. The issue as between
the plaintiff and Malott was declared to be, whether the latter had in fact
subscribed for 80 shares of the stock of the bank, for the par value of which the
plaintiff sought to hold him liable. The trial court found in favor of the
defendant Malott, and against the defendant Dill, and rendered a decree against
the latter for $2,000, together with interest and costs.

Dill moved for a new trial on several grounds, the only one here significant
being'Error of the court in trying the said cause without submitting the same
to a jury, when the parties thereto had not waived a jury trial.'

This motion having been denied, he appealed to the supreme court of


Oklahoma, renewing there the insistence that the cause of action alleged in the
complaint was cognizable at law, and not in equity, and that under the

Constitution and laws of the United States he was entitled to a trial by jury. The
court overruled this contention, and on rehearing adhered to the same view, so
that the judgment of the district court was affirmed (27 Okla. 584, I.R.A.
(N.S.) , 112 Pac. 973), and the case comes here.
10

It is insisted that whatever rights or immunities under the laws of the United
States had been asserted by defendant in the course of the litigation prior to
statehood were preserved to him after statehood by the clause above quoted
from 20 of the enabling act, together with 1, of the schedule to the state
Constitution (Okla. Comp. Laws 1909, p. 137), the language of which is: 'No
existing rights, actions, suits, proceedings, contracts, or claims shall be affected
by the changes in the forms of government, but all shall continue as if no
change in the forms of government had taken place.'

11

Without passing upon the soundness of this proposition, we may, for present
purposes, assume it to be sound. Blanchard v. Ezell, 25 Okla. 434, 106 Pac.
960; Garnsey v. State, 4 Okla. Crim. Rep. 547, 38 L.R.A.(N.S.) 600, 112 Pac.
24; Pacific Mut. L. Ins. Co. v. Adams, 27 Okla. 496, 112 Pac. 1026; Choctaw
Electric Co. v. Clark, 28 Okla. 399, 114 Pac. 730; St. Louis & S. F. R. Co. v.
Cundlieff, 96 C. C. A. 211, 171 Fed. 319, 322.

12

Next, the insistence is that by his demurrer, filed before statehood, and
specifying, as one of the grounds, that the plaintiff had 'a plain, adequate, and
complete remedy at law,' the defendant clearly asserted a right or immunity
under 723, Rev. Stat. (U. S. Comp. Stat. 1901, p. 583), which declares that
'suits in equity shall not be sustained in either of the courts of the United States
in any case where a plain, adequate, and complete remedy mey be had at law.'
This section, however, by its own terms, applies only to 'courts of the United
States;' and when afterwards a United States court was established in the Indian
territory by the act of March 1, 1889 (chap. 333, 25 Stat. at L. 783), it was by
the 6th section enacted 'that the provisions of chapter eighteen, title thirteen, of
the Revised Statutes of the United States (U. S. Comp. Stat. 1901, p. 680), shall
govern such court, so far as applicable; Provided, That the practice, pleadings,
and forms of proceedings in civil causes shall conform, as near as may be, to
the practice, pleadings, and forms of proceeding existing at the time in like
causes in the courts of record of the state of Arkansas, any rule of court to the
contrary notwithstanding.' Chapter 18 of title 13, Rev. Stat., includes some
sections prescribing the forms of procedure, but not 723. However, the
proviso making the practice, pleadings, and forms of procedure conformable to
those existing in the state of Arkansas must, of course, be given effect.
Moreover, in the act of May 2, 1890, enlarging the jurisdiction of the court
(chap. 182, 26 Stat. at L. 81, 95), it was in 31 enacted that certain provisions

of the Arkansas statutes, as contained in Mansfield's Digest of 1884, should be


extended over and put in force in the Indian territory, among them being
chapter 119, relating to pleadings and prictice. That chapter (Mans. Dig.
4914 etc.) abolishes forms of action; provides that there shall be but one form
of civil action; enacts that the proceedings therein may be of two kinds, at law
or in equity ( 4925); that 'an error of the plaintiff as to the kind of proceedings
adopted shall not cause the abatement or dismissal of the action, but merely a
change into the proper proceedings by an amendment in the pleadings and a
transfer of the action to the proper docket;' and ( 4926) that such error may be
corrected on motion. Sec. 5028 provides that the defendant may demur to the
complaint for want of jurisdiction of the court over the person or the subjectmatter, the plaintiff's want of legal capacity, the pendency of another action, a
defect of parties, plaintiff or defendant, or 'Fifth. That the complaint does not
state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.' Evidently, under this mode
of pleading, the objection that the action is in equity, whereas it ought to be in
law, is not a ground of demurrer. The liberality of the system is illustrated in
Zufall v. United States, 1 Ind. Terr. 638, 643, 43 S. W. 760: Sparks v. Childers,
2 Ind. Terr. 187, 198, 47 S. W. 316; Hampton v. Mayes, 3 Ind. Terr. 65, 72, 53
S. W. 483; Rogers v. Nidiffer, 5 Ind. Terr. 55, 58, 82 S. W. 673. In Indian Land
& T. Co. v. Shoenfelt, 68 C. C. A. 196, 135 Fed. 484, the circuit court of
appeals for the eighth circuit, in an action commenced by bill in equity in the
United States court in the Indian territory, seems to have held that 723, Rev.
Stat., was applicable. But see a later decision by the same court in St. Louis &
S. F. R. Co. v. Cundieff, 96 C. C. A. 211, 171 Fed. 319, 321.
13

Upon this question, we hold that if the demurrer may be deemed an assertion
by the defendant of a right, under 723, Rev. Stat., to have the case determined
in equity, yet that section was so plainly inapplicable to the practice in the
territorial court that no substantial Federal question is raised such as would
warrant a review here under 709, Rev. Stat.

14

It is, however, next insisted that the demurrer amounted also to a demand for a
trial by jury, and an assertion of a right thereto under the Federal Constitution
(extended to the territory by chap. 182, 31, 26 Stat. at L. 96); and that this
right was denied by the subsequent decision of the state court, sustaing the
judgment notwithstanding the demurrer.

15

We deem this untenable, for two reasons; viz., (a) because the demurrer was not
a proper demand for trial by jury; and (b) the right to such a trial, if it existed,
and was properly demanded prior to statehood, was subsequently waived.

16

(a) We have already pointed out that under the Code, as contained in

Mansfield's Digest, the grounds of demurrer are limited, and the contention that
defendant will be deprived of a jury trial is not one of them. Indeed, since a
demurrer has the necessary effect of admitting the facts alleged in the
complaint, a demand for a trial by jury is quite incongruous; for a jury has no
function to perform where the facts are admitted. It is evident that, under the
local practice, the court of the territory was warranted in overruling this ground
of demurrer, and that no question of Federal right is raised by its action in doing
so.
17

(b) As already pointed out, the defendant afterwards answered in the state court,
denying the facts set up in the complaint. But he did not in his answer, nor at
any other time, so far as the record discloses, demand a jury trial until after the
court had found against him on the facts and rendered judgment accordingly.
He did then move for a new trial upon the ground, among others, that there was
error in trying the cause without submitting it to the jury, 'when the parties
thereto had not waived a jury trial.'

18

While it is conceded that under Mansfield's Digest, 5105, and also under
5785 of the State Code (Okla. Comp. Laws 1909), a jury might be waived, it is
insisted that since the case was tried after statehood, and pursuant to the
procedure prescribed by the state law, 5808 (Okla. Comp. Laws 1909)
applied, which prescribes the manner in which trial by jury may be waived;
viz., 'By the consent of the party appearing, when the other party fails to appear
at the trial by himself or attorney. By written consent, in person or by attorney,
filed with the clerk. By oral consent, in open court, entered on the journal.' The
record shows no written consent, nor any entry upon the journal of oral consent.
It does show that the action was in form an action in equity, normally triable
without jury, and it further shows a trial of the issues before the court without a
jury, in which trial the now plaintiff in error participated in person and by
attorney, without taking any exception to the mode of trial.

19

The state courts did not pass upon the question whether, under the local
practice, this amounted to a waiver of a demand for jury trial; both courts
having entertained the view that the cause was properly brought in equity, in
which case there was no right to trial by jury.

20

We deem it clear that in order to entitle himself to a review here under 709,
Rev. Stat., on the ground of a deprivation of the right to trial by jury, plaintiff in
error should have 'specially set up' his alleged right in proper time in the state
court, and should not have relied upon a premature assertion of that right,
contained in a demurrer, where it had no proper place, and not reiterated at any
time when there was an issue of fact to be tried.

21

Writ of error dismissed.

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