53 P. 107 | Idaho | 1898
— The plaintiff filed its petition for a writ of review. This court made an order that defendants show cause,' at the regular term of this court held at Lewiston on the eighteenth day of April, 1898, why a writ of review should not issue.. To said petition and order to show cause the defendants filed their response. The petitioner alleges: That it is a corporation
On the hearing of the order to show cause why the writ demanded in this proceeding should not issue, the attorneys for the petitioner agreed and admitted in open court that the allegations of fact made in the petition which are denied by the answer of the respondents are not true, and that the affirmative allegations of fact in said answer are true. The petitioner based its right to the writ demanded upon a question of law, contending that the filing of the written request in the state district court for a transfer of the cause to the United States circuit court, followed as it was by an order transferring it to said circuit court, devested the state court of jurisdiction, and that the order made by the United States circuir court remanding the cause back to the state district court was void, the said circuit court having no jurisdiction to make such order. We regard the conclusion irresistible that the writ demanded must be denied, for the following reasons, to wit:
1. The United States circuit court, to which the cause was removed, was the forum to decide whether the cause was properly transferred to said court or not. That court, having decided that the cause was improperly transferred to it, made an order remanding the cause back to the state court. Such order was binding upon both parties, and comity required the state court to treat said order as valid and binding. It would have been an unwarranted act of discourtesy, as well as flagrant disrespect, for the state court to have held that the circuit court of the United States had no jurisdiction to make the order remanding the cause back to the state court. That the circuit
2. After the judgment in the district court in the first judicial district of Idaho in and for Kootenai county, the petitioner brought the cause on appeal into this court upon a record absolutely silent as to the filing of the request for a transfer to the United States circuit court, and silent as to the fact that an order had been made transferring the cause. The transcript was voluminous, and devolved much work upon this court. The petitioner, as appellant, brought the respondent into this court on said appeal at much expense to said respondent. The petitioner on said appeal did not question the jurisdiction of the state district court, but voluntarily sought a final deermination by this court of the matters in controversy in said cause. We think that after the lapse of more than six years from the making of the order by the United States circuit court remanding the cause back to the state district court, and after the petitioner has voluntarily sought the jurisdiction of this court for the purpose of determining the correctness of the judgment against it in the trial court, on a record which is absolutely silent as to any question of want of jurisdiction in the state courts, the petitioner is, by every sound rule of law and principle of equity, estopped from now questioning the jurisdiction of the state courts. The course pursued by the petitioner in said cause and in this proceeding is neither fair to the trial court, to this court, nor to the respondents. The writ demanded is denied, with costs to the defendants.