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Louisville and Nashville Railroad Co. v. Mottley

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End date
  
1908

Full case name
  
Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company v. E. L. Mottley and Annie E. Mottley

Citations
  
211 U.S. 149 (more) 29 S. Ct. 42; 53 L. Ed. 126; 1908 U.S. LEXIS 1533

Prior history
  
Appeal from the Circuit Court of the United States for the Western District of Kentucky

Majority
  
Moody, joined by unanimous

Ruling court
  
Supreme Court of the United States

Similar
  
Burnham v Superior Court of, Pennoyer v Neff, World‑Wide Volkswagen Corp v, Burger King Corp v Rudze, International Shoe Co v Washington

Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company v. Mottley, 211 U.S. 149 (1908),[1] was a United States Supreme Court decision that held that under the existing statutory scheme, federal question jurisdiction could not be predicated on a plaintiff's anticipation that the defendant would raise a federal statute as a defense. Instead, such jurisdiction can only arise from a complaint by the plaintiff that the defendant has directly violated some provision of the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States. This reading of the federal question jurisdiction statute is now known as the well-pleaded complaint rule.

Contents

Facts

The Mottleys were a husband and wife who had been injured in a train wreck on September 7, 1871, in Jefferson County, Kentucky. In exchange for releasing the railroad from liability, they were compensated with free passes from the Louisville and Nashville Railroad company, which were to be renewed annually. Several decades later, in 1906, the U.S. Congress banned all free passes in order to prevent them from being used to bribe government officials, and the railroad then refused to renew the Mottleys' passes. The Mottleys sued for specific performance of the rail passes in federal court. They argued that either the federal statute did not apply because they had been issued the passes decades before the law went into effect, or if the law did apply, that it was unconstitutional because it deprived them of their property (the passes). The lower federal courts decided in favor of the Mottleys, and the railroad appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Issue

The Supreme Court, sua sponte, questioned the existence of subject matter jurisdiction, transforming the issue into whether this was a case that could have been brought in federal court in the first place.

Opinion of the Court

The Supreme Court, in an opinion by Justice Moody, dismissed the case for lack of jurisdiction. There was no diversity of citizenship, and no grounds for federal question jurisdiction except that the case 'arose under federal law' which is insufficient to satisfy the federal question requirement. The only way a party can get federal question jurisdiction is if the federal question arises in the plaintiff's well-pleaded complaint.

It is important to note that this holding was an interpretation of jurisdictional statutes rather than of the Constitution's Article III. That is, "arising under" for Article III purposes is broader than the well-pleaded complaint rule. It is well-established that Congress may grant lower federal courts less than the totality of Article III's possible federal question jurisdiction; for example, before 1980, federal question jurisdiction had an amount in controversy requirement, similar to the requirement that still exists in diversity cases. By analogy, jurisdiction premised on diversity of citizenship in Article III is broader than the modern "total diversity" requirement under the jurisdictional statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1332. For example, the Class-Action Fairness Act allows federal jurisdiction based on diversity of citizenship without total diversity; this is based on Article III's broader sweep.

Later developments

Following the dismissal of their case, the Mottleys brought a similar action in Kentucky state court. The state court held for them, and ordered the railroad to issue the passes. The railroad appealed to the Court of Appeals of Kentucky, Kentucky's highest court at the time, and lost. The railroad appealed again to the U.S. Supreme Court, which ruled in favor of the railroad (Louisville & N. R. Co. v. Mottley, 219 U.S. 467 (1911)),[2] thereby handing the Mottleys yet another legal defeat.

References

Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co. v. Mottley Wikipedia