Bundick v. New York, P. &. N. R.

17 F.2d 487, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1675
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedDecember 24, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 17 F.2d 487 (Bundick v. New York, P. &. N. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bundick v. New York, P. &. N. R., 17 F.2d 487, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1675 (E.D. Va. 1926).

Opinion

GRONER, District Judge.

The above-named plaintiffs, who are citizens of Virginia, instituted an action at law in the circuit court for Aeeomae county, Va., against the New York, Philadelphia & Norfolk Railroad Company, a Virginia corporation, returnable to the first July rules, 1925, of that court. In due time the defendant filed in said court a petition for removal, alleging that the matter in dispute exceeded $3,000 and arose under a law of the United States. With the petition was filed, as an exhibit, a copy of the record in the suit of East Coast Potato Distributors against the same defendant, recently pending in the Circuit Court of Appeals of this circuit, and, in addition, five affidavits. The purpose of the exhibit and affidavits was to show that the plaintiffs in their déclaration had purposely avoided giving the full, true, and correct facte in connection with the transactions out of which the action grew, and had deliberately and purposely failed to state that the railroad cars requested, but not furnished within a reasonable time, were intended for shipment in interstate commerce, and failed to give the destination of the intended shipments, and-had generally, in framing their declaration, endeavored to allege a cause of action other than in interstate commerce, for the sole purpose of wrongfully attempting to avoid the removal of the case to the federal court.

[488]*488The petition also set out what are claimed to be the true facts in connection with the situation, viz.: That the action was in all respects similar to that of the East Coast Potato Distributors against this defendant, above mentioned, and that because in that ease the motion to remand was unsuccessful, and the verdict and judgment were against the plaintiffs, the declaration in this case had been written so as to eliminate those allegations relating to interstate commerce, with the fraudulent design and intent mentioned above, and for the express purpose of enabling the plaintiffs to obtain from jurors drawn from a rural community a verdict different from that obtained in the action of East Coast Potato Distributors.

Admittedly the cause of action shown by plaintiffs’ pleadings does not present a ease .arising under the laws of the United States. The declaration sets out that the defendant owned and operated as a common carrier a railroad between Cape Charles, in the county of Northampton, to and beyond Mekamie Park, in the county of Aeeomae, state of Virginia; that the plaintiffs were engaged in growing, buying, and selling Irish pota-toes at Mekamie Park; that they had on hand and ready for shipment on certain dates mentioned various quantities of Irish potatoes, and on said dates requested defendant to furnish them cars; that defendant, in the exercise of reasonable care, should have furnished the ears, but, in disregard of its duty, failed to do so, as a result of which they had left on their hands various quantities of potatoes, which they were thereby unable to sell; that the custom of the plaintiffs was to sell their potatoes f. o. b. ears, Mekamie Park, and that by reason of the breach of duty on the part of defendant in failing to furnish them ears, they were unable to obtain the prices, f. o. b. cars at Mekamie Park, prevailing at the time the cars were demanded, and were compelled to sell their potatoes, f. o. b. ears, at prices prevailing when the cars were furnished at a later date, and as a result sustained a loss of $50,000.

It will; of course, be seen that the question to be determined is whether a ease involving a jurisdictional matter may be removed from a state court into a District Court of the United 'States, as one arising under the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States, unless that appears by plaintiff’s statement of his own claim, and, if it does not so appear, whether this may be supplied by the petition for removal, coupled with an allegation of fraud- upon the federal courts jurisdiction.

There has been no traverse of the facts stated in the petition for removal, or in the affidavits filed in support thereof. These facts may therefore, if they may be considered at all, be taken as true, and likewise, for the purposes of the motion, it may be assumed that the pleadings of the plaintiff were purposely drawn in the way in which they were, with the design and purpose of defeating removal to the federal court. Under sueh circumstances, ordinarily, it would seem that the language used by the Circuit Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit, in Boatmen’s Bank v. Fritzlen, 135 F. 650, 657, would be applicable. There the court said:

“Justice is proverbially blind, but a court cannot, and ought not to, fail to see the patent facts which a record discloses, or to perceive the unavoidable deduction it compels; and, where the only rational inference from the pleadings and the record is that an improper party or a sham cause of action has been injected into a suit, for the sole purpose of defeating the jurisdiction of the federal court over the real controversy, pleading and evidence to that effect aliunde are neither indispensable nor necessary, and the Constitution and the acts of Congress vest in the court the power, and impose upon it the duty, to find from the record alone the attempted fraud, and to prevent its perpetration.”

The Supreme Court has applied this rule ■ in a large number of cases of attempted removal on account of diversity of citizenship, or because of the misjoinder of parties, and has held in sueh cases that the allegations of the declaration are not conclusive, but that the petition' and proof in support thereof may be examined and considered in determining the actual state of the controversy between the parties. See Powers v. Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co., 169 U. S. 92, 18 S Ct. 264, 42 L. Ed. 673, and eases cited; Wecker v. National Enameling Co., 204 U. S. 176, 27 S. Ct. 184, 51 L. Ed. 430, 9 Ann. Cas. 757. It has also been held by the Supreme Court that,a ease begun in a state court may be removed to the federal court, where the complaint alleged the defendant to be a private corporation under the laws of a state, when as a matter of fact it was a corporation created by aet of Congress, and that the fact in sueh ease might be shown by petition. Texas & Pacific Railway Co. v. Cody, 166 U. S. 606, 17 S. Ct. 703, 41 L. Ed. 1132. But no case has been cited, and [489]*489I assume none can be cited, in which the Supreme Court has held that, in the ease of removal on the ground that the controversy involves a law of the United States, this fact may be shown by the petition for removal, or, apparently, that in such a ease anything else than the plaintiff’s own statement of his case may be considered.

In the case of Chappell v. Waterworth, 155 U. S. 102, 15 S. Ct. 34, 39 L. Ed. 85, an action of ejectment was brought in a state court to recover possession of a parcel of land, and was removed into the federal court on the ground that the defendant was in possession of the land by appointment of the proper executive power of the United States, for and on behalf of the United States as the keeper of a lighthouse, over which land the United States had complete and exclusive jurisdiction by an act of the Legislature of the state in whieh the land lay.

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17 F.2d 487, 1926 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bundick-v-new-york-p-n-r-vaed-1926.