50 Ga. App. 476 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1935
1. The pleadings and questions involved in these cases being the same, and the cases being briefed and argued together, they are so determined.
2. A suit, otherwise removable from a State court to the district court of the United States for the proper district under section 71 of the Federal judicial code (U. S. C. A. title 78, § 71), may be so removed when in the suit “there shall be a controversy which is wholly between citizens of different States, and which can be fully determined as between them.” The word “controversy” is to be construed as equivalent to the phrase “matter in controversy.” Old Dominion Oil Co. v. Superior Oil Cor. (Ky.), 283 Fed. 636. “A controversy [is] involved, in the sense of the statute, whenever any property or claim of the parties capable of pecuniary estimation [is] the subject of litigation and [is] presented by the pleadings for judicial determination.” Hilton v. Dickinson, 108 U. S. 165 (2 Sup. Ct. 424, 27 L. ed. 688).
3. While it is the general rule, in determining whether such a separable controversy exists as will authorize a removal, that a cause is not removable “if the defendants are charged with direct or concurrent or concerted wrongful action (Chesapeake &c. R. Co. v. Dixon, 179 U. S. 131, 21 Sup. Ct. 67, 45 L. ed. 121; Gableman v. Peoria &c. R. Co., 179 U.
4. Under the foregoing rules, where a wholesale packer of a meat product and a retail merchant were sued jointly by a purchaser from the latter for injuries received from eating a portion of the product, and the petition, while' alleging that both defendants were negligent in selling the same to the plaintiff, in failing to properly inspect or examine the container before the sale, and in failing to warn him before the sale that the product was poisonous and dangerous for human food, yet alleged separate acts of negligence against the packer in failing to cover the product with sufficient oil to protect the same against decay or becoming poisonous or cankerous, and in placing too much of the product in the container to be properly covered by oil, and separate acts of negligence against the retail merchant in keeping the product for sale and in failing to return it to the manufacturer after seeing and knowing that it was cankered and poisonous, the pleading of the plaintiff showed on its face a separable controversy between the plaintiff and the packer, within the meaning of the Federal statute, and the court erred in denying the petition of the nonresident packer for removal. Particularly is the controversy separable under the express averment that “defendants have injured and damaged plaintiff indrvickially and jointly . . by reason of facts hereinafter set forth.”
Judgment reversed.