Deere, Wells & Co. v. Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry. Co.

85 F. 876, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2927
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 17, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 85 F. 876 (Deere, Wells & Co. v. Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deere, Wells & Co. v. Chicago, M. & St. P. Ry. Co., 85 F. 876, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2927 (circtsdia 1898).

Opinion

SHIRAS, District Judge.

The question presented by the motion to remand grows out of the following facts: The Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Company for years past lias owned and operated a line of railway across the state of Iowa, and terminating at Council Bluffs. In December, 1895, Slack Peterson was a section foreman in the employ of the railway company, having charge over that portion of the right of way which is within the corporate limits of the city of Council Bluffs; and on the 15th day of December, 1895, for the purpose of freeing the right of way from an accumulation of dry grass and weeds, he set fire to the same on the right of way, and the fire thus started spread from the right of way to the adjoining premises, occupied by the plaintiff company, and burned the warehouse and contents situated thereon. The plaintiff company brought suit in this court against the railway company to recover the damages caused by the destruction of the warehouse and its contents, which case came on for trial at the March term, 1897; and after the evidence had been substantially completed the plaintiff dismissed the action, and on the same day brought an action for the recovery of the damages caused by the burning of the warehouse and contents, in the district court of Pottawattamie; county, Iowa, against Slack Peterson and the railway company; and thereupon the railway company in, due season filed a petition for the removal of the case into the federal court, averring therein that the plaintiff company was when the suit was brought, and continued to be, a corporation created under the laws of (he state of Iowa,; that the defendant railway company was, and continued to be, a corporation created under the laws of the state of Wisconsin; that Slack Peterson was, and continued to be, a citizen of the state of Iowa; that the amount in controversy, exclusive; of interest and costs, exceeded the sum of $2,000, the damages claimed being in the sum of $130,000. The petition for removal, after reciting the facts above stated as grounds for the removal of the case, contained the averments following:

“That on the same day plaintiff dismissed said case in the said United States court, to wit, the 18th day of Starch, 1897; and within a few hours after such dismissal said plaintiff instituted the present suit in the district court of the state of Iowa, in and for Pottawattamie county, against this defendant, and also joining as a party defendant in this action Slack Peterson, this defendant’s section foreman. Your petitioner further respectfully shows and represents that the plaintiff has fraudulently and improperly joined the said Slack Peterson as a co-defendant with your petitioner; that said Slack Peterson was at the time of the alleged happening of the acts complained of in plaintiff’s petition, to wit, the 13th day of December, 1897), ever since has been, and is now, a section foreman of this defendant; that said Slack Peterson was at said time, and is now, an agent of this defendant in charge of five employes of the defendant Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Company, called ‘section men,’ and employed to look after and care for the tracks and right of way of this defendant in the city of Council Bluff's, Iowa; that said Slack Peterson at the present time discharged, and for many years past has discharged, the ordinary duties of a. section foreman on a railway, such as leveling up the tracks of this defendant, taking out old ties and putting in new ones, mowing the grass and weeds [878]*878on this defendant’s right of "way, and, at the proper times and places, burning off the same, and all such duties incident to the care of defendant’s right of way; that said Slack Peterson is a man of no means or estate whatever, out of which any judgment against him could be' collected, and was at the time of the commencement of this suit, and for many years prior thereto, earning only the sum of sixty-five dollars a month, and plaintiff never made any demand or claim against said Peterson for its alleged damages, as shown by his affidavit hereto attached, marked ‘Exhibit B’; that all of the above facts, were well known to the plaintiff and its representatives at the time it instituted this suit; that the plaintiff has improperly and fraudulently joined said Slack Peterson as a party defendant with your petitioner in this case for the sole and express purpose of defeating the jurisdiction of the United States court for the Southern district of Iowa, Western division, and with the sole, improper, and fraudulent purpose and intent of preventing this defendant from removing this case to said United States circuit court, as shown by the matters and things hereinbefore stated and alleged. And your petitioner, as a further ground of removal of this case to the said circuit court of the United States, as hereinafter prayed, shows to the court that the acts or charges of negligence and the alleged want of due care and prudence upon which the plaintiff bases its cause of action against the defendants in this suit are not the joint acts or omissions of your petitioner and the defendant Slack Peterson; that the said cause of action, as appears from the petition of the plaintiff filed herein, dees not arise out of, and is not connected with, the failure of the defendants herein to perform any joint duty or to observe any joint obligation imposed upon them by law, or which they may have owed to the plaintiff herein; that no unity of interest or concert of action is charged against the defendants by the plaintiff, and none existed, in respect to the acts or omissions and the matters and things complained of and charged in said petition as the basis and ground of the plaintiff’s alleged cause of action, but that all of' the acts and omissions of each of said defendants, as charged in the plaintiff’s petition, are the separate and several acts and omissions of the defendant so charged, and not their joint acts or omissions. Your petitioner further shows and represents that it is not jointly liable, if liable at all, with its said section foreman, Slack Peterson, but is liable severally only, if liable at all, for the acts complained of in plaintiff’s petition; that your petitioner, if liable at all, is made so by the alleged negligence and wrongful acts of the said section foreman, Slack Peterson, while acting as this defendant’s agent and servant, and that your petitioner had no share in the negligent or wrongful acts alleged to have been committed and complained of in plaintiff’s petition, except through said section foreman, Slack Peterson, while acting as your petitioner’s agent, and that, if your petitioner is liable at all in this case1 for the alleged negligent or wrongful acts of the said Slack Peterson, it is solely on account of the relationship of master and servant existing between this defendant and the said Slack Peterson, and not because of any concert of action as between this defendant and the said Slack Peterson with respect to the alleged negligent acts or omissions alleged in plaintiff’s petition.”

It thus appears that the defendant Slack Peterson is a citizen of the same state with the plaintiff company, and the question is whether the facts recited in the petition for removal show a ground upon which the right of removal can he lawfully based. There is no question that the state court had jurisdiction over the case, and to deprive it of this jurisdiction it must appear that this court can rightfully, under the existing statutes, take the jurisdiction to the exclusion of the state court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 F. 876, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2927, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deere-wells-co-v-chicago-m-st-p-ry-co-circtsdia-1898.