This is a suit to quiet title to a mining claim, and, to determine its character for the purpose of jurisdiction, recourse must be had to the allegations of the complaint, and for that purpose inay be summed up as stating that in July, 1928, James A. Long died testate, leaving a will in which he directed that his mining property situate in Idaho be sold for not- less than $15,000, of which $5,000 to be paid to certain legatees, and the remainder to go to T. A. Long. Of the bequests of $5,000, plaintiff was to receive $3,000. The bequests were to be paid after the debts of the testator and expenses of administration were paid. The will was admitted to probate. T. A. Long has assigned his interest in the estate to the plaintiff. The plaintiff is a citizen and resident of the state of California, and all of the defendants are citizens and residents of Idaho, excepting the defendant Warren Creek Dredging Company, who is organized under the laws of Nevada. The amount claimed by the plaintiff in controversy exceeds the value of $3,000, exclusive of interest and costs.
The motions of the defendants to dismiss present the same grounds, excepting the motion of the defendant Warren Creek Dredging Company, which urges that the court has not jurisdiction, for the reason that the plaintiff is a citizen and resident of California, and it is a citizen and resident of Nevada, and therefore a diversity of citizenship does not exist.
The complaint, fairly considered, shows that the amount and value claimed by the plaintiff exceeds $3,000, exclusive of interest and costs, which satisfies the statute as to requisite amount in controversy to give the court jurisdiction; that the alleged title of plaintiff rests upon the will of James A. Long, which is made a part of the complaint, and from it the testator expressed his intention not to give or grant any title in the mining property to any one, but directed that the property be sold and out of the proceeds his debts and expenses of administration be first paid and then the bequests and whatever remained to go to T. A. Long.
The legatees under the will took nothing more than money bequests and not title, to the realty. Therefore, under the statute of the state, they are neither “heirs nor devisees” which confess the right to “maintain an action for the possession of the real estate or for the purpose of quieting title to the same,” upon “heirs or devisees.” Section 15-410,• I. C. A. The statute does not include legatees who take personal property under the will. The interest the plaintiff has under the will is as a legatee for $3,000, and an assignee of a legacy of the remainder, if any, of the proceeds after the sale of the real property. The legacy of the plaintiff of $3,-000 and the assignment of T. A. Long to her of the remainder of the fund after sale of the realty are funds or choses in action, and fall within the principle of law that, where a testator directs" his real property to be sold
As the plaintiff has not acquired title to the real property involved in the present action either in her own right or by the assignment from T. A. Long under the will, she cannot invoke the jurisdiction of the federal court, and her action is also within the provisions of section 24 of the Judicial Code (28 USCA § 41), governing suits by assignees, which denies jurisdiction of the District Courts of the United States when a suit is brought therein “ * * * to recover upon any promissory note or other chose in action in favor of any assignee.”
In respect to the contention of the defendant Warren Creek Dredging Company that as neither it nor the plaintiff are citizens and residents of Idaho, the court has not jurisdiction of it under its objections as to venue, it seems clear under subdivision (a), § 112, title 28 USCA, providing that, “where the jurisdiction is founded only on the fact that the action is between citizens of different States, suit shall be brought only in the district of the residence of either the plaintiff or the defendant,” the contention should be sustained.
The motions to dismiss of the defendants will be sustained.