154 US 558 Burbank v. Bigelow

154 U.S. 558

14 S.Ct. 1163

19 L.Ed. 51

BURBANK
v.
BIGELOW.

No. 36.

January 11, 1869.

Mr. Justice MILLER delivered the opinion of the court.

1

The case of Breedlove v. Nickolet, 7 Pet. 413, disposes of the only question raised by the record in the present case.

2

That was an action in the circuit court of the United States for the district of Louisiana, brought by Nickolet and Siggs as partners, in which, after issue taken on pleas in bar of the action, the defendants, on the day set for trial, filed a plea averring that Musson and others were also partners with plaintiffs, and citizens of Louisiana. The plea was stricken out by order of the court on the ground that it came too late. This court held that such action was within the discretion of the circuit court, and would not be revised.

3

In the case before us the defendant below (plaintiff in error) filed his peremptory exception after the case was at issue, and on the day that it was set for trial before a jury, praying that the suit should be dismissed because T. S. Burbank, a partner with plaintiff in the transaction which is the foundation of this suit, was not made a plaintiff in the case. The court overruled this exception on the ground that it came too late. We were at first inclined to distinguish the two cases under the idea that the plea in the first case rested on the citizenship of the partners not joined in the suit, who, if joined, would have defeated the jurisdiction of the court. But it is expressly said in the opinion that 'the plea is to be considered as if the averment that Musson and others were citizens of Louisiana had not been contained in it.'

4

The point ruled in that case is identical with the one presented here, and that decision must govern this.

5

The objection that the matter of plaintiff's demand is one of equitable cognizance in the federal courts cannot prevail. No such objection was raised in the court below at any stage of the proceedings, and it cannot be permitted to a defendant to go to trial before a jury on the facts of a case involving fraud, and let it proceed to judgment on the verdict without any attempt to assert the equitable character of the suit, and then raise that question for the first time in this court.

6

As the record raises no other question for our consideration, the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.

7

C. Cushing and W. W. Boyce, for plaintiff in error.

8

Thomas J. Durant, for defendant in error.