It is alleged in the declaration that the plaintiff Klosters Aktie Bolag, is a corporation duly created, established, and organized by and under the laws of the Kingdom of Sweden, a foreign state, and á citizen and subject of said foreign state, and that the defendant is a corporation and. a citizen 'of Rhode Island. These allegations are quite sufficient to give the Circuit Court jurisdiction. To this declaration the defendant pleaded the general issue, and gave notice of a claim of recoupment; and the' cause came oh for trial upon the merits. The case, therefore, does not stand at all like one where a jurisdictional question is raised upon motion or upon pleadings in limine, when jurisdiction must clearly appear upon the record. During the course of the trial, and after the plaintiff had rested its case, the point was taken by the defendant that the plaintiff had not shown either the fact of incorporation or foreign citizenship. The plaintiff contended that jurisdictional proofs were waived by pleading to the merits; but, without deciding the question of waiver, the court opened the case, and the plaintiff introduced a paper of which the following is a copy:
(Translation.)
It is hereby certified that tbe Royal Patent and Registry Office bas on tbe 6tb day of September, 1807, granted- registration of tbe Klosters Aktie Bolag and that in tbe register of Joint Stock Companies on tbe lltb day of September, 1905 is filed, that tbe Board of Directors with domicile at Klosters Brukin the parish of Husby in tbe government of Kopperberg consists of Mr. Carl Hartin Samuel Nisser, Manufacturer, at Stjernsund in tbe parish aforesaid, Mr. Har-ald Punch', Engineer, and Mr. Arvid Gustaf Mikael Hermarck, Manager, both at Stockholm, with Mr. Carl Wilhplm Nisser, Manufacturer, also at Stockholm as substitute, that tbe firm of tbe Company is signed by any and each of the members of tbe Board of Directors and that up to this date no other entry .concerning the Board of Directors of the Company has been filed in tbe register of Joint Stock Companies.
Stockholm tbe 17tb of April, 1906.
Ex Officio. [Signed] E. E. Bjorkman.
The defendant then proceeded by the introduction of evidence. After both parties had rested their case, the defendant took the point that the paper failed to prove the plaintiff to be a corporation, but did prove it to be a joint stock company in the nature of a partnership, and therefore did not sustain the allegation of jurisdictional facts.
This is not a Case upon removal from the state court, but one instituted 'originally in the Circuit Court; nor is it a case where the plaintiff failed to sufficiently allege jurisdictional -facts.
We do not deem it necessary to inquire or decide how far the authorities, which' 'hold that pleading to the merits is a waiver of the ne*969cessity of the plaintiff’s proving the existence of the corporation, tend to sustain the proposition that pleading to the merits is a waiver of a defective allegation of jurisdictional facts, because this case, in our view, does not stand at all upon that ground.
The federal courts being courts of special and limited powers, jurisdictional questions disclosed by the record are always open; and, if it turns out that the parties and the court have inadvertently overlooked, points in the record which are fatal to the jurisdiction, the case may and ordinarily will be dismissed, either with or without motion. Still, while the parties cannot confer jurisdiction by consent, where the jurisdictional facts are properly alleged, and thus properly appear upon the record, and the parties upon pleadings which go to the merits, proceed to trial, arid particularly where the jurisdictional facts are not subsequently put in issue by the defendant or seriously denied, the case ordinarily/will not be dismissed for want of jurisdiction, and this is especially so where the proofs do not create a legal certainty that the controversy involved is not within the jurisdiction. Barry v. Edmunds, 116 U. S. 550, 6 Sup. Ct. 501, 29 L. Ed. 729. See, also, Gubbins v. Laughtenschlager (C. C.) 75 Fed. 615; Railroad Company v. Quigley, 21 How. 202, 16 L. Ed. 73; Conard v. Atlantic Insurance Company, 1 Pet. 386, 7 L. Ed. 189; Evans v. Gee, 11 Pet. 80, 9 L. Ed. 639; Wickliff v. Owings, 17 How. 47, 15 L. Ed. 44; Deputron v. Young, 134 U. S. 241, 250, 10 Sup. Ct. 539, 33 L. Ed. 923; Wetmore v. Rymer, 169 U. S. 115, 18 Sup. Ct. 293, 42 L. Ed. 682; Blackburn v. Mining Company, 175 U. S. 571, 574, 20 Sup. Ct. 222, 44 L. Ed. 276.
The certificate of organization in Sweden was not strictly a part of the record of the Circuit Court. Upon the record the jurisdictional facts appear. The certificate is a part of the evidence in the case, and, if we were to assume that the issue in respect to the jurisdictional fact alleged in the declaration was open for proofs aliunde after the case was put upon trial upon the general issue and without any plea to the jurisdiction, we should have to hold that the articles of association, unexplained by evidence or by the law of the foreign country, did not create a legal certainty that the plaintiff was a joint stock company in the nature of a partnership rather than a corporation, as alleged in the record. The registration was granted by the Royal Patent and Registry Office, and the company apparently has a board of directors, which would indicate that it was in the nature of a corporation. The fact that registration was had in the registry of joint stock companies does not make it at all certain that the association was a joint stock company in the nature of a partnership rather than a corporation.
Entertaining the contention of the defendant, as to the effect of the certificate as a piece of evidence, so far as to see that it does not clearly disclose facts fatal to the jurisdiction, we need not consider or decide the general question, immaterial here, whether a jurisdictional allegation of fact, properly appearing in the record, can be opened at the end of a jury trial upon the general issue, in a case where, at such a stage of a trial, aliunde evidence clearly establishes facts fatal to the jurisdiction..
The line of cases beginning with Everhart v. College, 120 U. S. 223, 7 Sup. Ct. 555, 30 L. Ed. 623, which, upon reversal, permit the Circuit *970Court to allow amendment of the allegation of citizenship according to the .fact, are cases 'where the record itself did not show jurisdiction, and thus'do not apply to a situation like'the one in question here.
The remaining question relates to the nierits of the case, where the point is raised that-the title to the property had not passed through a necessary delivery. The contract was a contract of sale of S50 tons of Swedish charcoal iron ex ship, including custom house -charges, etc.
Without' regard to the question whether' the title passed upon delivery of the release, we think it quite clear, upon 'the conceded facts, that unloading the entire cargo of iron in question'vty?on the wharf, which was. completed a considerable time before the lossy was a suffi-ident delivery to pass the title; and the defendant, without any objection as to the 'quantity or quality, having given orders to itsy teamsters to remove the iron, and having so far accepted the delivery' as to remove it in part, it is too late to stand upon the position that the title had not passed. The duties having been paid, we do not think th^ fact that the custom house weighing was incomplete would control the status of the title as between the parties. \
Judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed, and the defendant in error recovers costs in this court. \