Choctaw, O. G. R. Co. v. Hendricks

1908 OK 83, 95 P. 970, 21 Okla. 135, 1908 Okla. LEXIS 102
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 13, 1908
DocketNo. 681, Ind. T.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1908 OK 83 (Choctaw, O. G. R. Co. v. Hendricks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Choctaw, O. G. R. Co. v. Hendricks, 1908 OK 83, 95 P. 970, 21 Okla. 135, 1908 Okla. LEXIS 102 (Okla. 1908).

Opinion

Hates, J.

This is an action for damages, instituted by ap-pellee in the United States Court for the Central District of the Indian Territory at South McAlester, against the Choctaw, Oklahoma & Gulf Railroad Company, for the sum of $10,000. The case was tried in that court, and resulted in judgment in favor of appellee in the sum of $2,000. An appeal was taken to the United States Court of Appeals in the Inidan Territory, where the case was pending at the time of the admission of the state into the Union; and it comes to this court under the provisions of the Enabling Act. (Act June 16, 1906, c. 3335, 34 Stat. 276.)

' Appellant has filed its petition for removal of the case to the United States Circuit Court for the Eastern District of Oklahoma, and alleges that at the time of the commencement of the suit appellee was a citizen of the Indian Territory, and continued as such until the admission of the state into the Union, since which time she has been a citizen of the state of Oklahoma; that appellant is and has been at all times a corporation organized under and by virtue of a certain act of Congress- of the United States, approved August 24, 1894 (28 Stat. 502, c. 330); and that its principal place of business is in the city of Philadelphia, and that it has at no time been a citizen or resident -of either the In-dan Territory, the territory of Oklahoma, or the state of Oklahoma. Under the facts alleged in its petition, appellant contends for the right to have this -cause removed to the United States Circuit Court for the Eastern District of this state upon two grounds: First, diversity of citizenship in an action in which the amount in controversy exceeds the sum of $2,000; second, for the reason that appellant is .a federal corporation and the action therefore arises under the laws of the United States. Appellee resists the removal *137 of the cause, and insists that the first ground for removal cannot bo well taken for the reason that, although appellee sought to recover by her suit against appellant the sum of $10,000, the judgment rendered in the trial court in favor of appellee was for only $2,000, and that the amount in controversy in the action on appeal, at this time and at the time the appellant’s petition for removal was filed, is the amount of said judgment, and is not sufficient to entitle appellant to a transfer of the case.

Appellant’s right of removal in this case does not arise under the judiciary act of March 3, 1875, and the amendments thereto, but under the act of Congress of June 16, 1906, and the amendments thereto, commonly known as the Enabling Act of the state of Oklahoma. Herman v. McKinney (C. C.) 43 Fed. 689; Grown Point Min. Co. v. Ontario Min. Co. (C. C.) 74 Fed. 419; McCormick v. Western Union Tel. Co., 79 Fed. 449, 25 C. C. A. 35, 38 L. R. A. 684. Section 16 of the Enabling Act as amended (Act March 4, 1907, c. 2911, 34 Stat. 1286), provides:

“That all civil causes, proceedings, and matters pending in the Supreme or district courts of Oklahoma Territory, or in the United States Court or United States Court of Appeals in the Indian Territory, arising under the Constitution, laws, or treaties of the United States, or affecting ambassadors, ministers, or consuls of the United States, or of any other country or state, or of admiralty or of maritime jurisdiction, or in which the United States may be a party, or between citizens of the same state claiming lands under grants from different states; and all cases where there is a controversy between a citizen of either of said territories prior to admission and a citizen of any state, or between a citizen of any state and a citizen or a subject of any foreign state or country, in which cases of diversity of citizenship there shall be more than two thousand dollars in controversy, exclusive of interest and cost, shall be transferred to the proper ■ United States Circuit or District Court established by this act, for final disposition. * * * ”

Since the admission of the state of Florida into the Union in 1845, it has been the policy of Congress, in admitting a territory into the Union as a state, to provide for the disposition of cases in the courts of such territory by providing that all cases of a fed *138 eral character shall or may be transferred to the federal courts, and all cases of a local character to the state courts. The language of the various acts of Congress by which this has been accomplished in the admission of the states into the Union has not been uniform. In some of the acts the transfer of cases of a federal character to the federal courts was made compulsory; no right of election being left by the provisions of the act to be exercised by the parties to the suit. But the general purpose of all of such acts has been to provide that cases pending in the courts of a territory at the time of its admission into the Union as a 'state might be disposed of in the same manner that they could have been disposed of if the territorjr had been a state at the time of the institution of such suits. The language used in the Enabling Act' of Oklahoma, providing for the removal of cases from the courts of the Indian Territory and the territory of Oklahoma,' in which matters arising under the Constitution and laws of the United 'States or treaties'made are involved, is practically identical' with the language of the judiciary act of March 3, 1875, providing for the removal of cases arising under the Constitution and laws of the United States and treaties made from the state courts to the federal courts, and should therefore, we think, receive the same construction. Under our view of the case, there is no diversity of citizenship in this action, for the reason that appellant is a federal corporation, and not a citizen of any state, and if it has a right to have this action removed, as prayed for in its petition, such right must arise by reason of the matters in controversy under some law of the United States. Scott v. Choctaw, Oklahoma & Gulf R. R. Co. (D. C.) 112 Fed. 180; Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias v. England, 94 Fed. 369, 36 C. C. A. 298. It is therefore unnecessary for us to consider what is the amount in controversy in this action for the reason that the right of removal, under section 16 of the Enabling Act, is affected by the amount in controversy only when there is a diversity of citizenship, and not where the action arises under the Constitution and laws of the United States or treaties made.

*139 It is insisted that appellant’s second alleged ground for removal cannot be well taken, for the reason that appellant is not such a federal corporation as makes a suit against it an action under the laws of the United States, and that same does not appear from the appellee’s complaint filed in the court below. We do not deem it necessary to discuss in detail the character of appellant as a corporation, for the reason that the same has been twice decided in the federal courts. In Scott v. Choctaw, Oklahoma & Gulf R. R. Co. et al., supra,

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Choctaw, O. G. R. Co. v. Hamilton
1908 OK 82 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1908)

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Bluebook (online)
1908 OK 83, 95 P. 970, 21 Okla. 135, 1908 Okla. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/choctaw-o-g-r-co-v-hendricks-okla-1908.