138 Ky. 615 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1910
Opinion of the Court by
Comm issioner — Affirming.
This suit was brought on March 18, 1907, in the Mason circuit court by Eliza B. Clinger, as administratrix of George M. Clinger, deceased, against the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company of Kentucky, Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company and Shannon Hall, to recover damages for the death of her husband, which she charged was due to the joint negligence of the three defendants. On April 1, 1907, appellee Chesapeake '& Ohio Railway. Company presented to that court its petition for removal of the suit to the United States Circuit Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky, accompanied by proper bond. On September 3, 1907, the Mason circuit court approved the bond and ordered the action removed. On September 23, 1907, a transcript of the record was filed in the United States court and the case placed upon its docket. On October 21, 1907, appellant appeared in the United States court and moved to remand the case to the Mason circuit court. On November 14, 1907, and while that motion was pending, appellant filed in the federal court an answer to the petition for removal. The motion to remand pended in the federal court until March 27, 1908, on which date it was overruled. To this order appellant excepted. On April 6, 1908, appellant filed in the federal court her motion to reconsider the order overruling her motion to remand the case to the state court. This motion the court took under advisement. In the meantime, appellant took an appeal to this court from the judgment of the Mason circuit court ordering’ the case removed. The judgment of' the Mason .circuit court was reversed. The
In the case of Cheasapeake & Ohio Railway Co. v. Emma R. McCabe, Administratrix, supra, the Supreme Court of the United States, after quoting certain provisions of the removal act, said: “In View of these provisions of the statute, and the decisions of this court construing the same, we think it was the intention of Congress to confer upon the Circuit Court of the United States a right to determine the
It is insisted by counsel for appellant that the doctrine announced in the above case does not apply in the case under consideration, for the reason that in the McCabe case there was a final judgment; whereas, in the case before us, the action of the court in taking jurisdiction was not final, but was such as
It being conceded, then, that the judgment of the federal court to the effect that it had jurisdiction is conclusive upon the parties and must be recognized by the state court, what, then, was the effect of the action of appellant in dismissing without prejudice her suit in the federal court? This is not a case where a party dismisses an action that has been removed to the federal court and then brings a new action in the state court. It is a case where it is attempted to proceed in the state court in the identical action which has been dismissed in the federal court. When a party (dismisses an action without prejudice, it necessarily means that he does so without prejudice to a future action — not without prejudice to the same action. When, therefore, it was made to appear to the state court that the federal court had held that it had jurisdiction, and that appellant had thereupon dismissed the action in the federal court, the state courts properly held that this was a bar to any further proceedings in the state court in the same ease, Were the rule otherwise, it would be an easy matter to defeat the jurisdiction of the federal court. In every case removed to the federal court, and of which that court had assumed jurisdiction, the party contesting the removal
As to the constitutionality of the removal act, we deem it only necessary to say that, while we have been unable to find any decisions where the question was directly considered, any number of cases can be found where rights have been predicated upon the removal act and have been upheld by the federal court. Indeed, the very question raised by appellant was necessarily .determined in the case of Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad Co. v. Emma R. McCabe, Administratrix, supra. There the court held that Congress had conferred upon federal courts the power to determine whether or not a case was removable. In upholding the right thus conferred by Congress, the court must of necessity' have upheld the power by which that right was conferred.
Judgment affirmed.