Tierney v. Helvetia Swiss Fire Insurance

126 A.D. 446, 110 N.Y.S. 613, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3376
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 1, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 126 A.D. 446 (Tierney v. Helvetia Swiss Fire Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tierney v. Helvetia Swiss Fire Insurance, 126 A.D. 446, 110 N.Y.S. 613, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3376 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Rich, J.:

7 \ This appeal is from an order vacating a judgment entered upon default of the defendant in answering, in an action brought to recover the aggregate amount of fourteen separate judgments recov[447]*447ered against the defendant by different plaintiffs in the United States Circuit Court for the northern District of California and thereafter assigned to the plaintiff, a resident of the State of H ew York. The record discloses the following facts: The action was commenced on September 25, 1907, in the Supreme Court of Kings county by the service of the summons and complaint upon the Superintendent of Insurance, as the agent of the defendant — a fire insurance company incorporated under the laws of Switzerland —under the provisions of section 30 of the Insurance Law (Laws of 1892, chap. 690). Before defendant’s time to answer had expired, and on October ninth following the service, upon petition of the defendant appearing specially for that purpose, an ex parte order was obtained for removal to the Circuit Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Hew York, on the ground that the action was between a citizen0of the United States residing in the Eastern District of Hew York and an alien. Ho stay of proceedings was contained in such order. Upon the receipt of this order plaintiff’s attorneys informed the attorneys for defendant that as soon as the record was filed they purposed to move the Circuit Court to remand the case, whereupon the defendant, appearing specially for that purpose, procured an order requiring the plaintiff to show cause at Special Term why the order of removal should not be vacated and set aside and defendant’s time to answer extended seven days. This motion was denied. In the petition upon which the order of removal was procured and in the memorandum submitted by the defendant to the court in support of its motion to vacate and set such order aside, it is admitted that “The petition contained an allegation showing the citizenship of the plaintiff, the alleged assignee of said judgments, but the formal allegation of the citizenship of the respective assignors, to whose rights the plaintiff claims to have succeeded, seems to have been inadvertently omitted from said petition.” “ It has since been discovered that while the petition contained the necessary allegations as to the citizenship of the plaintiff and the defendant, a similar necessary allegation as to the citizenship of the plaintiff’s assignors was inadvertently omitted. This omitted allegation is a material one and one necessary to support a removal. * * * We regret to say that the petition for removal was clearly insufficient in that it omitted the allegation as [448]*448to the citizenship of the plaintiff’s assignors and, therefore, this court had no jurisdiction to make the ex parte order. (Murphy v. Payette Alluvial Gold Co., 98 Fed. Rep. 321.) ” On October 31, 1907, the plaintiff entered judgment against the defendant, then in default, and issued execution to the sheriff of Kings county which was returned unsatisfied, and on November second following the plaintiff commenced a judgment creditor’s action against the defendant and the Central Trust Company, in whose possession there is a fund held in trust for the defendant, and by so doing acquired a lien pending the determination of the action. It appears without contradiction that the defendant has applied to the Superintendent of Insurance for permission to withdraw said fund from said trust company upon the ground that it had settled with all of its policyholders in the United States within which it intended to do no further business, and that it intended to convey said fund to Switzerland, and that the application was undecided on November 20, 1907. The record of removal was filed by the defendant in the Circuit Court on November 6, 1907, and an answer interposed on November eleventh, immediately after which the plaintiff moved to remand the case to the State Supreme Court for lack of jurisdiction, and the defendant moved for leave to amend its j>etition for ■removal. In the meantime, and on November eighteenth the defendant procured a show cause order returnable at Special Term requiring the plaintiff to show cause why the judgment entered by it on October 31, 1907, should not be vacated and set aside “ as unauthorized and improper under the law and the practice of this court; or, if it shall be determined that the said judgment was properly entered as upon the defendant’s default, then that said judgment be vacated and set aside and the defendant allowred to appear and answer the complaint,” upon the hearing of which the judgment was vacated absolutely and as matter of right, nune pro tune as of the date and time at which it was entered, and the clerk of Kings county was directed to cancel the same of record. On February 3, 1908, plaintiff’s motion in the United States Circuit Court to remand was granted and the defendant’s motion to amend its petition denied, and such decision was later, on March fifth, confirmed on rehearing.

Upon these facts I think it is clear that the Supreme Court was [449]*449never divested of the jurisdiction it acquired by the commencement of this action which has at all times been pending therein. The ex parte order of removal was inoperative and void by reason of the omission to state in the petition upon which it was based the jurisdictional facts necessary to vest jurisdiction in the Federal court.

In Insurance Company v. Pechner (95 U. S. 183) the Supreme Court of this State had rendered judgment after an attempted removal. (See Pechner v. Phœnix Ins. Co., 65 N. Y. 195.) The United States Supreme Court, reviewing the decision, ■ expressly held that if the removal petition was not sufficient to oust the jurisdiction of the State court, there was no reason why that court might not proceed with the case. To the same effect is Cooke v. State National Bank of Boston (1 Lans. 494; affd., 52 N. Y. 96). Hr. Justice Ingraham, writing for the General Term, says: “ It is unnecessary here to decide whether an order of the State court is necessary for such removal. It is very clear, if the statute is not in all respects complied with, no removal takes place, either with or without such order.”

In Powers v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co. (169 U. S. 92) it is said that if the jurisdictional facts are not made to appear upon the record of the State court it is not authorized to surrender its jurisdiction, and in Fife v. Whittell (102 Fed. Rep. 531) that when the required jurisdictional facts do not appear in the removal proceedings notwithstanding the proceedings for removal may have brought the papers in the case to the Circuit Court ” the State court retains jurisdiction of the cause.

In Murphy v. Payette Alluvial Gold Co. (98 Fed. Rep. 321), a case quite similar in its facts to the case at bar — the record failing to show citizenship of the plaintiff’s assignors — the court says : There can be no doubt that upon the record, together with the petition which was filed in the State court, no cause for removal was presented, and that the jurisdiction of the State court could not be thereby devested.”

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Bluebook (online)
126 A.D. 446, 110 N.Y.S. 613, 1908 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tierney-v-helvetia-swiss-fire-insurance-nyappdiv-1908.