Harris v. Delaware, L. & W. R. Co.

18 F. 833, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 1993
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 18 F. 833 (Harris v. Delaware, L. & W. R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Delaware, L. & W. R. Co., 18 F. 833, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 1993 (uscirct 1884).

Opinion

Nixon, J.

This action was originally brought in the circuit court for the county of Warren, in the state of New Jersey. After the filing of the declaration and before any plea or demurrer, the defendant corporation presented to the state court a petition for the removal of the cause into this court, under the act of March 3, 1875. The petition was accompanied with a bond which was duly approved by the state court, and an order for the removal entered in the minutes. The record was filed in this court on the first day of the present term, and the counsel of the plaintiff forthwith gave notice of a motion to remand on the ground of the insufficiency of the bond. The defect complained of ±s that the bond was not executed to the plaintiff in the suit, but to one Augustus Laubach, a stranger to the record, and whose name nowhere appears in the proceedings other than in the penalty of the bond. An explanation was made on the' argument that there was another suit pending in the Warren circuit court against the same defendant, in which Augustus Laubach was plaintiff, and the clerk, in drawing the bond, confounded the names of the parties. The defendant meets the motion to remand by a counter-motion that he be allowed to amend by the substitution of a new bond.

The case presents for consideration the question whothor there is power in this court to retain the cause, and allow the correction of such a mistake and error in the bond, or whether the Jack of a sufficient bond deprives the court of jurisdiction over the proceedings. It involves the construction of the third section of the removal act of 1875, the moaning of which, in this respect, has never received any authoritative adjudication by the supreme court. The views of the different circuit courts are conflicting. There is a number of cases which hold that the requirements of the act are jurisdictional prerequisites, and unless complied with, the cause, whose removal is attempted, remains in the state court. See Burdick v. Hale, 7 Biss. 96; Torrey v. Grant Locomotive Works, 14 Blatchf. 269; McMurdy v. [834]*834Life Ins. Co. 4 Weekly Notes Cas. 18; Webber v. Bishop, 13 Fed. Rep. 49; Field, Fed. Courts, 156, 167.

In Burdick v. Hale, supra, there was a motion to remand the cause to the state courts, on the ground that the bond, although penal in form, had no sum written in the blank left for the penalty to be inserted. The learned judge (Gresham) held that the defect was not curable by amendment in the federal court. He asserted that “the federal courts have no power to dispense with, modify, or change any of the provisions of the statutes authorizing the removal of causes from one jurisdiction to the other. Unless the requirements of the act, which are jurisdictional prerequisites, are substantially complied with, the power of the state court remains undisturbed. If in this case the requirements of the statute have been substantially complied with, the state court has lost jurisdiction over the suit, and no amendment of the bond is necessary to complete the jurisdiction of this court. If, on the other hand, the requirements of the act have not been complied with the suit is still in the state court, and there is nothing in this court to amend.”

Judge Blatohford seems to have taken the same view in Torrey v. Grant Locomotive Works, supra, where the defect was in the condition of the bond, which contained no provision for the payment of costs as required by the act of March 3, 1875. He held that the filing of a bond complying with all the requirements of the statute was a condition precedent to the removal of the cause, quoting and following the judges of this circuit in the Eastern Pennsylvania district in the case of McMurdy v. Life Ins. Co., supra. These decisions were quoted and relied upon by Judge Coxe in the circuit court for the Northern district of New York, in Webber v. Bishop, supra. The question was not raised in that case on any motion to remand, but the learned judge said that was not necessary for the action of the court, as the question was one of jurisdiction, and the defendant was at all times allowed to take advantage of the defect.

Field, in his recent treatise on the Jurisdiction of the Federal Courts, discussing the subject of the removal of causes, says in section 178, (page 156 :) “There is no right to a removal until a good petition and sufficient surety are filed in the state court. Those are the conditions precedent to the right of removal,” etc. And again, in section 190, (page 167:) “If the bond is manifestly defective, as where no sum for the penalty is inserted, this would be ground for remanding the cause to the state court, from which it came."

But, on the other hand, other judges have held that the jurisdiction of the federal courts is in nowise dependent upon the instrumentalities which congress may happen to devise to facilitate the removal of a cause from one court to the other; that the subject-matter of the controversy, the citizenship of the parties, and questions arising under the constitution and laws of the United States determine jurisdiction; and that when the record of the case discloses the existence! [835]*835of either of these, the federal court has authority to retain the suit, and power, by proper proceedings, to cure all defects that may exist in the petition or bond which are filed to procure the removal; that copies of these constitute a part of the record and are of the nature of pleadings, and fairly come within the provisions of sections 948 and 954 of the Revised Statutes in regard to amendments.

It is conceded that tiro state courts may refuse to grant an order to remove a cause if the applicant has not strictly complied with the requirements of the act of congress respecting removals. And so the federal court may decline to hold the suit when any defects appear in the use of the methods prescribed to effectuate the removal. But this does not quite reach the question. Are such defects, when discovered, so fatal that there is no power in the court to authorize the party in default to remedy them? In other words, is a citizen to be deprived of his constitutional right to have his case tried in a federal court when he stands ready to do all that the law requires of him in order to have the controversy transferred thither ? Although the point has not been adjudicated by the supreme court, there are two or three cases where hints are dropped and suggestions made which indicate what its decision will be when it arises. Thus, in Gold Washing & Water Co. v. Keyes, 96 U. S. 201, where the question was whether the petition filed for the removal of the cause disclosed that the construction of a law of the United States was involved in the controversy, the supreme court affirmed the judgment of the circuit court remanding the cause to the state court, and, in its opinion, said:

“It is well settled that in the courts of the United States the special facts necessary for jurisdiction must, in some form, appear in the record of every suit, and that the right of removal from the state courts to the United States courts is statutory. A suit commenced in a state court must remain there until cause is shown under some act of congress for its transfer. The record in the stale court, which includes the petition for removal, should be in such a condition when the removal takes place as to show jurisdiction in the court to which it goes, If it is not, and the omission is not afterwards supplied, the suit must be remanded.

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Bluebook (online)
18 F. 833, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 1993, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-delaware-l-w-r-co-uscirct-1884.