12 F. 803 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1882
The motion to remand this action to the state court presents the question whether this cause could have been tried at the January term of the court of common pleas for the city and county of Now York, within the moaning of that clause of the removal act of March 3, 1875, which requires the petition for removal to have been filed “before or at the term at which said cause could first be tried.” If the cause could have been tried at that term the petition was filed too late, and the motion to remand must prevail.
Issue had been joined by the service of an answer to the plaintiff’s complaint, which answer did not require a replication. Thereupon
It was obviously the intention of the removal act to preclude a party from resorting to the expedient of a removal in order to deprive his adversary of the opportunity to try the cause, and the decisions in construction.of the act are to the effect that a party loses his right to remove if he permits the term to pass at which he could have placed the cause'in a position to be tried upon the merits if he.had conformed to the rule of practice of the state court. When there is an issue which, by the practice of the court, can be brought to trial, the cause is triable; and if noticed for trial the court can entertain it, and it matters not whether the parties are otherwise ready for trial or not, or whether the court will see fit to entertain the trial or not. Gurnee v. County of Brunswick, 1 Hughes, 270; Ames v. Colorado R. Co. 4 Dill. 261; Scott v. Clinton, etc., R. Co. 6 Biss. 529.
In Knowlton v. Congress & Empire Spring Co. 13 Blatchf. 170, it was held that where either party could notice the cause for trial at a term, that term mast be considered the term at which the cause could be first tried; and in Forrest v. Edwin Forrest Home, 17 Blatchf. 522, Judge Blatchford held that the defendant lost his right 'to remove when, the cause being at issue and triable on the merits, he might have noticed it for trial. Other decisions intimate a severer rule, and hold that if the cause could have been triable if the party seeking to remove had used due diligence in progressing the cause, the term at which it could have been ready for trial is the term intended by the -act.
The modon to remand is granted.