40 Ind. 173 | Ind. | 1872
On the 24th day of September, 1858, at La Porte, Indiana, David G. Rose made his promissory note, by which he promised to pay, sixty days after date, to the order of Samuel Burson, six thousand dollars, at the Park Bank, New York. The note was indorsed by Burson to Walker, who indorsed it to Early, and he indorsed it to the bank. The bank, it is alleged, was a body politic and corporate by and under the laws of the State of New York, doing business in the city of New York. It is further alleged, by amendment of the complaint, that since the commencement of this action, the said bank became a corporation, under the banking law of Congress, as The National Park Bank of New York, and as such succeeded to the right of action. Burson having departed this life, at La Porte, on the 8th day of October, 1858, intestate, and the appellants having been, by the common pleas of La Porte county, appointed, on the 8th day of October, 1858, administrators of his estate, the Park Bank filed a claim against the administrators, based upon said promissory note, in the said common pleas court, on the 18th day of June, 1859. The complaint alleges the non-payment of the note, and the circumstances which are claimed to amount to notice to the administrators of its dishonor. After various amendments to the complaint, and after issues had been formed, there was a trial by jury, in October, 1868, and the jury failed to agree. In May, 1871, on motion of the plaintiff, upon petition, affidavit, and bond filed in form as required by the act of Congress, the court ordered that the cause be removed into the next circuit court of the United States to be held in the district of Indiana, and ordered the clerk to make out and deliver to the plaintiff) or its attorney, copies of all process, pleadings, depositions, etc., properly certified. From this order the defendants appealed to this court. Several errors
The appellee has submitted a motion to dismiss the appeal, on the ground that there is no final judgment in the common pleas, from which an appeal can be taken. This and also the other questions in the case are of exceeding interest and delicacy. While we feel it to be our duty, as it is our inclination, to concede to the courts of the government of the United States the jurisdiction and powers to which they are justly entitled, we are in duty bound to claim for the courts exercising authority under the state government the full measure of jurisdiction and authority which pertain or belong to them. An appeal lies to this court from all .final judgments, and also from certain interlocutory judgments, of the common pleas. 2 G. & H. 269, sec. 550, and page 277, sec. 576. It is made the imperative duty of this court to inquire into and correct the errors of the inferior courts of the State, from which appeals are taken to it, when properly presented. When, as in this case, an order has been made by one of such courts transferring a cause to the courts of the United States, courts of another and distinct government, or when such an order has been properly applied for and improperly refused, it would seem to be the duty of this court, on an appeal properly taken to it, to decide upon the correctness of such ruling. If the ruling is found to have been erroneous, it should be reversed. If it be found to have been correct, it would be the duty of this court to remand the cause to the inferior court, with instructions to carry out the order.
But was the order or judgment of the common pleas final in such sense as to authorize an appeal to this court? The order put an end to the cause, so far as the state courts are concerned, if it shall be allowed to remain in force and be carried out. If the party opposing such order cannot appeal ' at that stage of the case, he can never appeal to this court. It is our opinion that such an Order or judgment is
It is true that the act of Congress provides that when the application has been made in the proper manner for the removal, the state court shall proceed no further in the cause. But this does not settle the question. The question is not, shall the subordinate state court proceed no further? but may the party who has thus been prevented from having the cause tried in' the court in which the suit was
We come, then, to the question, whether the action of the court in transferring the case was correct or not. It is insisted by counsel for the appellants, first, that the cause could not properly be transferred after the trial was had by the jury, although they failed to agree upon a verdict, and
The act in question, that of March 2d, 1867, authorizes the transfer in cases wherein there is a controversy between a citizen of the state in which the suit is brought and a citizen of another state, and the matter in dispute exceeds the sum of five hundred dollars, exclusive of costs; and provides that such citizen of another state, whether he be plaintiff or defendant, if he will make and file in such state court an affidavit, stating that he has reason to and does believe that, from prejudice or local influence, he will not be able to obtain justice in such state court, may, at any time before .the final hearing or trial of the suit, file a petition in such state court for the removal of the suit into the next circuit court of the United States to be held in the district where the suit is pending, and offer good and sufficient surety for his entering in such court, on the first day of its session, copies of all process, pleadings, etc., and it shall thereupon be the duty of such state court to accept the surety and proceed no further in the suit, etc.
The act of July 27th, 1866, authorized the transfer “at any time before trial or final hearing,” the words “ final hearing” referring, perhaps, to chancery causes. The language of the act of March 2d, 1867, as we have seen, is, “at any time before the final hearing or trial.” Counsel for the appellants contends that the transposition of the words does not require or justify any change in the construction, and that as the cause was once tried, after that it was too late to have it removed to the United States court. They insist that the word “final” is used to qualify the word “hearing,” which immediately follows it, and not the word “ trial.”
In the case of Akerly v. Vilas, supra, it was said, in discussing this statute: “What was its intent? I think it will not be claimed that the word ‘final,’ as used in this pro
It is further said in that case: “It seems clear, therefore, that whenever in any state court there has been a trial in an action at law, or a final hearing in an action in equity, the result of which was an adjudication which, ugon the principles governing judicial decisions, would be final between the parties as to any portion of the merits of the action, the case has passed beyond the stage where it was within either the letter or the spirit of this law.”
In The Home Insurance Co. v. Dunn, supra, the Supreme Court of Ohio follow the case in the Supreme Court of Wisconsin, from which we have quoted, with reference to the construction of the act, and say: “The terms, it seems to us, were intended to embrace actions at law and suits in equity, the word ‘trial’ having reference to an action at law, and the words ‘final hearing’ to a suit in equity; and that by ‘the final hearing or trial of the suit,’ is meant a hearing or trial upon the merits, such as results in a final judgment in an action at law, and a final decree in a suit in equity.”
It remains to inquire whether there was a trial, in this sense, of the case under consideration. The jury, after hearing the evidence and argument and retiring to their room, were unable to agree, and being discharged, the case stood for trial as it did before the jury was impanelled. According to the case of Akerly v. Vilas, the trial must have resulted in “an adjudication which, upon the principles governing judicial decisions, would be final between the parties,” etc. And according to the case of The Home Insurance Co. v. Dunn, it must have been such a trial “as results in .a final judgment in an action at law, and a final decree in .a suit in
We do not decide that the court would be required to Hear and grant such an application during • the progress of the trial-'of the cause. What we do decide is, that after a trial which has resulted in a disagreement of the jury, and at any time before the commencement of another trial, the application may be made and granted at the instance of either party.
In The Home Life Insurance Company v. Dunn, supra, it was decided that the removal of a cause could not be applied for and granted after a trial and appeal taken to a higher court or a new trial granted.
In Hadley v. Dunlap, 10 Ohio St. 1, it was held that the improper refusal of such an application did not affect the jurisdiction of the court so as to render its judgment in the case void.
We come, lastly, to the question as to tlie constitutionality of that part of the act which authorizes a plaintiff to have a cause removed from the state to the United States Court. In Whiton v. The Chicago, etc., Railway Company, 25 Wis. 424, this precise point was made, and it was held, the Chief Justice dissenting, that that feature of the act of Congress was unconstitutional and void. The argument in brief is this: The constitution of the United States confers upon the courts of the United States jurisdiction in certain pases. Congress has power to enact all laws which are necessary to enable the courts of the United States to acquire and exercise this jurisdiction. But it is not necessary that Congress should enact a law to enable a plaintiff to withdraw his action from the state court. He had his choice to sue, in the first instancé, in the United States court, or in the state court, and having voluntarily commenced his action in the state court, he has waived or abandoned the right to have the cause adjudicated by the courts of the United States. The
Judge Story, in his work on constitutional law, sec. 1243, in discussing the powers of Congress, says: “Whenever, therefore, a question arises concerning the constitutionality of a particular power, the first question is, whether the power be expressed in the constitution. If.it be, the question is decided. If it be not expressed, the next inquiry must be, whether it is properly an incident to an express power, and necessary to its execution. If it be, then it may be exercised by Congress. If not, Congress cannot exercise it.”
But, notwithstanding this reasoning, we feel compelled to decide in this case that the feature of the act of Congress in question is constitutional.
It appears that in the case of Whiton v. The Chicago, etc., Railway Company, supra, the local state court granted the petition, and ordered the removal of the action to the federal court, but directed a stay of proceedings upon its order to enable the defendant to appeal from it to the Supreme Court of the state, and provided that in case such appeal should
“Third, as to the alleged invalidity of the act of March' 2d, 1867, under which the removal from the state court was made. The counsel for the defendant, while confining his special objection to this act, questions the soundness of the reasoning of Mr. Justice Story, by which any legislation for the removal of causes from a state court to a federal court is maintained. We- may doubt, with counsel, whether such removal, befoxe issue or trial, can properly be called an exercise of appellate jurisdiction. It may, we think, moreproperly be regarded as an indirect mode by which the federal court acquires original jurisdiction of the causes. But it is not material whether the reasoning of the distinguished jurist in this particular is correct or otherwise. The validity of such legislation has been uniformly recognized by this court since the passage of the judiciary act of 1789.
“The judicial power of the United States extends by the constitution to controversies between citizens of different states, as well as to cases arising under the constitution,
“ When the jurisdiction of the federal court depended upon the citizenship of the parties, thé case could not be withdi-awn from the state courts after suit commenced until the passage of the act of 1867, except upon the application of the defendant. The provision of the constitution extending the judicial power of the United States to controversies between citizens of different states had its existence in the impression that state attachments and state prejudices might affect injuriously the regular administration of justice in the state courts. The protection intended against these influences to non-residents of a state was originally supposed to have been sufficiently secured by giving to the plaintiff, in the first instance, an election of courts before suit brought; and where the suit was commenced in a state court, a like election to the defendant afterward. The time at which the nonresident party should be allowed thus to make his election was evidently a mere matter of legislative discretion, a simple question of expediency. If Congress has subsequently become satisfied, that where a plaintiff discovers, after suit brought in a state court, that the prejudice and local influence, against which the constitution intended to guard, are such as are likely to prevent him from obtaining justice, he ought to be permitted to remove his case into a national court, it is not perceived that any constitutional objection exists to its authorizing the removal, and, of course, to prescribing the conditions upon which the removal shall be allowed. It follows, from the views we have expressed, that the objection to the jurisdiction of this action by the circuit court, upon the grounds advanced by the defendant, cannot be maintained.” 13 Wal. 270.
While we feel constrained to follow this ruling, and hold that the feature of the law in question is constitutional, with the utmost deference to the opinion of that high tribunal, we venture to suggest that when it is said, in the opinion, “if Congress has subsequently become satisfied that where a plaintiff discovers, after suit brought in a state court, that the prejudice and local influence, against which the constitution intended to guard, are such as are likely to prevent him from obtaining justice, he ought to be permitted to remove his cause into a national court,” etc., a case is supposed which is wholly different from that which is provided for in the act. The act of Congress does not provide for those cases only where the plaintiff shall discover, “after suit brought,” that there are prejudice and local influence, etc. 'If the act were confined to such cases, there might be little reason for its enactment. But the act does not require the plaintiff to show, in his petition, that he has discovered the existence of such prejudice and influence since the bringing of the action, and there is no such statement in the petition in this case. The plaintiff may, under the act of Congress, have the cause removed upon stating the existence of such prejudice or local influence, although he knew of the existence thereof as well when he commenced the action as he does when he makes the application.
But following the ruling in this case, we hold that the part of the act in question is constitutional, and that the court of common pleas committed no error in ordering the removal of the cause.
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.