Shane v. Butte Electric Ry. Co.

150 F. 801, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4560
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Montana
DecidedNovember 12, 1906
DocketNo. 312
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 150 F. 801 (Shane v. Butte Electric Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Montana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shane v. Butte Electric Ry. Co., 150 F. 801, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4560 (circtdmt 1906).

Opinion

HUNT, District Judge.

Plaintiff is a citizen of the state of Montana. The defendant Butte Electric Railway Company is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the state of West Virginia. Defendant Alfred Jackson is a citizen of Montana. The action was brought in the district court of the second judicial district of the state of Montana, to recover damages alleged to be due by the defendants to the plaintiff for injuries which he charges were done to him by the negligence of the defendants at Butte. It appears from the plaintiff’s complaint that the defendant Butte Electric Railway Company operates an electric railway at Butte, and that about August 20, 1905, plaintiff became a passenger upon a car of the defendant company; that the defendant Jackson was the motorman, and, it is alleged, with the defendant company, was jointly running and operating the car upon which plaintiff was riding; that the car collided with a freight car of the Butte, Anaconda & Pacific Railway Company at a crossing upon one of the streets in Butte; .that the crossing was a dangerous place, and that through the negligence and carelessness of the defendants, the collision occurred, the car was wrecked, and plaintiff was seriously injured.

The defendant Butte Electric Railway Company filed a demurrer in the state court. The demurrer was general and special. The defendant Butte Electric Railway Company also filed a petition for the removal of the case to the Circuit Court of the United States, alleging that the suit involved a controversy wholly between citizens of different states, which could be fully determined between.them; that is, a controversy between the petitioner, a citizen of West Virginia, and plaintiff, who was a citizen of Montana. The petitioner set forth the nature of plaintiff’s complaint, and averred that the action against the petitioner was one founded upon contract of hire for the transportation by a common carrier of passengers, while, if there was any duty owing from the defendant Jackson to the plaintiff, it arose out of the obligation of one person not to injure another negligently, and was not founded upon contract, but arose out of a tort, and that the cause of action against the carrier affected the petitioner alone, while the cause of action against the motorman Jackson affected him alone. Petitioner further set forth that there was a fraudulent and improper, joinder of the defendant Jackson, a citizen of Montana, with the petitioner, for the sole purpose of defeating the jurisdiction of the United States Court, and preventing the removal of the cause. Petitioner alleged that defendant Jackson, although made a party, had not been served with process, and no effort had been made to serve him. Petitioner [803]*803then set up that plaintiff must have known, and did know, that the railway company was not operating the car jointly with the motorman Jackson, and that the motorman had nothing whatever to do with accepting plaintiff as a passenger; and that at the time of the collision Jackson was not engaged in operating the car jointly with the petitioner, and that the motorman Jackson did not participate in receiving the fare from the plaintiff for his transportation; but that notwithstanding these facts, plaintiff had falsely stated that the defendants had permitted him to become a passenger, and had received his fare, whereas the petitioner had collected the fare through the conductor, and not the motorman. The petitioner avers that the defendants did not accept plaintiff as a passenger, and were not bound to deliver him safely at liis destination; and that the allegations made by plaintiff were untrue, and known by him to be untrue, and that they were falsely made for the sole and express purpose of defeating the jurisdiction of the United States Circuit Court. Petitioner then avers that the fraudulent motive of the plaintiff is apparent, in that the motorman Jackson, made a defendant, is entirely without responsibility financially, and that plaintiff does not expect to pursue his remedy, if any he has, against Jackson, and only makes him a party, without expectation of recovery from him, for the fraudulent purpose solely of preventing a removal to the United States Circuit Court. Petitioner gave the necessary bond, and thereafter an order of removal was made by the judge of the state court. After the cause was removed to this court, plaintiff moved to remand, upon the ground that the federal court is without jurisdiction; that there is no separable controversy existing between plaintiff and either of the defendants, and that the cause of action stated is a joint one against both defendants; and that no fraud on the part of plaintiff in commencing the action against both of the defendants is shown.

Plaintiff also filed two affidavits — one made by John J. McHatton, Esq., his counsel, who swears that he consulted with the plaintiff and prepared the complaint, and determined the matter and manner of bringing suit, and the allegations to be contained in the complaint. He denies all the allegations alleging fraudulent or improper joinder of the defendant Jackson for the purpose of defeating the jurisdiction of the federal court, and avers that the action was brought in good faith against both defendants, because there is a good joint cause of action against both, and that defendants are both liable to plaintiff for the injuries sustained, and that affiant believed he could properly join the two defendants under the allegations of the complaint. Affiant says that he directed that summons should be served upon both defendants, and he alleges that he believes that defendant Jackson is responsible for negligence with the defendant company, and that he acted in conjunction with the defendant company; and that in law and in fact Jackson and the defendant company were jointly operating the car; and that the allegations of the complaint are each and all true and legally properly stated, tie avers that he brought the action in good faith with the intention of prosecuting it to judgment against both defendants, as he has a right to do, and as he intends to do. There is also an affidavit filed by John G. Brown, an [804]*804assistant in the’office'of Mr. McHatton, counsel for plaintiff, in which affidavit Mr. Brown says that he placed the summons in the hands of the sheriff of Silver Bow county, with directions to serve the same upon both defendants, and that the order has not been revoked.

When the motion to remand to the state court came on for hearing in this court, the defendant Butte Electric Railway Company resisted the same, and its counsel asked leave to amend the petition for removal by inserting therein that the defendant Alfred Jackson was at the time of the beginning of the suit, and ever since has been, and still is, a resident and citizen of the state of Minnesota. Plaintiff objects to such proposed amendment, and contends that this court has no authority to allow it, for these reasons: That the defendant Butte Electric Railway Company did not ask the removal of the cause from the state court on any ground, except that'there was a separable controversy between itself and plaintiff; and, further, that the amendment proposed is a matter of substance, which was not contained in the petition for removal, and was not a ground relied upon in the petition filed in the state court.

In proceeding.with the investigation of this case, studying the point raised that the federal court is without jurisdiction, I find it becomes necessaiy for me to determine whether the state court ought ever to have ordered a removal at all; that is, whether this was not an instance of where a pure question of law only was presented to the state court.

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Bluebook (online)
150 F. 801, 1906 U.S. App. LEXIS 4560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shane-v-butte-electric-ry-co-circtdmt-1906.