7 Ga. App. 528 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1910
The plaintiff in error brought a suit for damages against the railroad company, basing his right of action upon the “employer’s liability act” of April 22, 1908, c. 149 (35 Stat. 65, U. S. Comp. St. Supp. 1909, p. 1171). In his petition he alleged, that while engaged as a fireman on a passenger-train of the defendant, running between Chattanooga, Tennessee, and Griffin, Georgia, and while upon "said train, which was engaged in interstate commerce, he was engaged in interstate commerce, and when about a mile and a half out of Chattanooga, he was injured by certain alleged negligent acts of the engineer in charge of the locomotive attached to said train. In the fourteenth paragraph of the petition he alleged: “Plaintiff brings this suit under the act of Congress approved in April, 1908, entitled cAn act relating to the liability of common carriers by railroads to their employees in certain cases,’ and says that, under said act, he was in the employment of a common carrier engaged in commerce by railroad between the several States, and was at the time of his injuries herein described engaged in interstate commerce, and suffered said in- • juries herein described, in whole or in part, from the negligence of the agents and employees (other than himself) of said defendant carrier.”
The defendant filed a petition for removal to the Federal court,
Exception is taken to the judgment of the city court of Savannah, which removed the cause to the United States circuit court for the southern district of Georgia. The question thus presented for our consideration, therefore, is, was the suit removable from the city court under the act of Congress of March 3, 1887 (34 Stat. 553, c. 373), as amended by the act of August 13, 1888 (35 Stat. 433, e. 866, U. S. Comp. Stat. 1901, p. 508), which provides, that “any suit of a civil nature, at law or in equity, arising under the constitution or laws of the United States . . , of which the circuit courts of the United States are given original jurisdiction by the preceding section, which may now be pending, or which may hereafter be brought, in any State court, may be removed by the defendant or defendants therein to the circuit court of the United States for the proper district”? We are presented at the very threshold of the case with -two conflicting views of the proposition, each supported by much eminent authority. The learned counsel for the defendant in error rely largely upon the decisions of Judge Newman in the cases of Miller v. Illinois Central Railroad Co., 168 Fed. 982, and Nelson v. Southern Railway Co., 172 Fed. 148, in which cases it was ruled that the fact that the cause of action originated under the Federal “employer’s liability act” does
Judgment affirmed.