Hooper v. Railroad

53 L.R.A. 931, 106 Tenn. 28
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 23, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 53 L.R.A. 931 (Hooper v. Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hooper v. Railroad, 53 L.R.A. 931, 106 Tenn. 28 (Tenn. 1900).

Opinion

McAlister, J.

Suit^ to recover damages for personal injuries, resulting in the death of plaintiff’s intestate. Defendant company pleaded, first, not guilty, and, second, the statute of limitations of one year.

Plaintiff by replication to defendant’s plea of the statute of limitations, avers that within twelve months after the cause of action accrued he brought suit against defendant company in the Circuit Court of Knox County. Thereupon defendant company, upoii the ground of nonresidence, removed said cause to the Circuit Court of the United States at Knoxville, where said cause pended until the September term, 1899, of said Court, when the plaintiff took a voluntary non-suit. Subsequently thereto, and within twelve months after the dismissal of the first suit, plaintiff instituted the present suit in the Circuit Court of Knox County. Defendant company demurred to this replication, assigning for cause:

“1. It doth not appear from said averments for whom the said S. M. Hooper was administrator in the original suit nor for whose benefit said former suit was brought in the Circuit Court of Knox County. Nor does it appear therein when [30]*30said right of action accrued and when said former suit was brought.

“2. Because it doth not appear what disposition was made of said cause after plaintiff’s voluntary nonsuit in the Circuit Court of the United States at Knoxville.

“3. Defendant says the removal of said cause was a removal of all the rights and remedies plaintiff had therein against defendant company, and said cause not having been remanded to this Court, this Court is now without jurisdiction of same.

“4. The defendant says that the running of the statute of limitations was in nowise affected or prevented by said proceedings.”

The Court below sustained the demurrer of defendant to the replication, and held that the suit having been originally brought in that Court and properly removed to the Federal Court, and never having been remanded therefrom, the Circuit Court of Knox County had no jurisdiction to entertain the same, and dismissed the plaintiff’s suit.

The principal question debated at the bar was whether, after suit brought in the State Court and removed to the United States Circuit Court, and 'there dismissed by plaintiff taking a voluntary nonsuit, it can be renewed in the State Court for a less sum than would entitle defendant to again remove same to Federal Court, and, if this is so, would such nonsuit prevent the running of the [31]*31statute of limitations of one year. Sec. 4446, Shannon’s Code, provides, viz.: “If the action is commenced within the time limited, but the judgment or decree is rendered against the complainant upon any ground not concluding his right of action, or where the judgment or decree is rendered in favor of the plaintiff and is arrested or reversed on appeal, the plaintiff or his representatives and privies, as the case may be, may from time to time commence a new action within one year from the reversal or the arrest.” This Act has frequently been held to apply to a voluntary nonsuit by the plaintiff. R. R. v. Pillow, 9 Heis., 248; Iron Co. v. Broyles, 11 Pick., 612.

But it is argued that the removal of a cause from a State Court to the Federal Court thereby deprived the State Court of all further jurisdiction not only of that particular suit, but of the cause of action and subject-matter of that suit. Counsel for defendant company cites in support of his contention Cox v. Railroad, 68 Ga., 446; Railroad v. Fulton, 59 Ohio St., 575 (S. C., 44 L. R. A., 520.) In the latter case the Court said, viz.: “It has been repeatedly decided that, where a case has been properly removed from a State to a Federal Court, the jurisdiction of the former over the case immediately ceases, and it is its duty, in the language of the statute, to proceed no further in the cause. Its jurisdiction in that case ends with the removal.

[32]*32“The Federal Court having acquired jurisdiction of the action by its removal from the State Court, must, on principle and the reason of the statute, retain it for all purposes, for the purpose of determining whether it should be reinstated or recommenced after it had been dismissed by it or stricken from the docket, as well as for its determination on the merits. Its jurisdiction in such case does not merely embrace the suit brought and removed, but any suit thereafter brought on the identical cause of action, after the former suit has been dismissed by it, until the cause of action has been extinguished by a judgment on the merits; the cause of action — the controversy between .the parties — remains subject to the jurisdiction of the Federal Court, and is forever excluded from that of the Court from which it was removed, unless remanded with the consent of the defendant; and there are cases which make this a doubtful proposition, where the cause is a -removable one. No one would claim that after a case has been stricken from its dockets by the Federal Court, the State Court could determine whether it should be reinstated; and, by a parity of reasoning, the State Court cannot pass on the right of the plaintiff to recommence the action after it has been dismissed 'by the Federal Court. In either of these cases the question can only be determined by the Court that had' full and exclusive jurisdiction of ' the case

[33]*33at tbe time. And if there be any remedial rule, statutory or otherwise, by which a case that has been dismissed for failure to prosecute can be reinstated after the time fixed by the statute of limitations has expired, the remedy must be sought in that Court. It is properly a step or proceeding in the same case. If this were not so, it would not only open the way to a violation of the policy of the statute authorizing removals, but be productive of a very inconvenient practice and much abuse. It would enable a party to permit his case to be dismissed by failing to prosecute in the Federal Court, with the purpose of recommencing it in the State Court, and thus compel the defendant to be at the trouble and expense of again causing it to be removed or submit to the jurisdiction of the State Court.

“The view we have taken finds support in the well-considered case of Cox v. Bast Tennessee V. G. R. Co., 68 Ga., 446. It is there held that ‘when a case has been removed from a State Court to the Circuit Court of the United States, the jurisdiction of the former ceases, and after nonsuit in the Federal Court the case cannot be renewed in the State Court within six months, so as to avoid the statute of limitations. Such right is given by statute on a nonsuit in the Courts of that State, a nonsuit not being a decision on the merits.’ Referring to the statute, which reads as follows: ‘If a plaintiff shall be [34]*34nonsuited, or shall discontinue or dismiss his case, and shall recommence within six months, such renewed case shall stand upon the same footing, as to limitations, with the original case, the Court said: ‘To be thus renewed, it must be the same case as to cause of action and parties ; and this is identically the same case in both respects. So that the question is, Can a case which, has been removed to the United States Circuit Court be renewed in the State Court? We think not, because the action of removal, ipso facto, transfers the jurisdiction of the cause to the Circuit Court °of the United States, and divests that of the State Court, citing Kern v. Huidekoper, 103 U. S., 185 (26 L.

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Bluebook (online)
53 L.R.A. 931, 106 Tenn. 28, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hooper-v-railroad-tenn-1900.