delivered the opinion-of the court.
This action was brought by the plaintiff in error, who was the plaintiff below, in the Louisville (Kentucky) Law and Equity Court, against the Ohio and Mississippi Railway Company, to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by him, while a passenger upon the road of that company, by reason of the wilful neglect of those by whom it was operated. The company, on the 24th of November, 1884, filed its petition, accompanied by bond in proper form, for the removal of the case, upon the ground of the diverse citizenship of the parties, into the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Kentucky. Thereupon an order was made by the state court that it would proceed no further. The case was docketed and tried in the Circuit Court of the United States, and resulted in a verdict for the defendant, followed by a judgment dismissing the plaintiff’s petition. From that judgment the plaintiff prosecuted a writ of error.
At the argument in this court at the present term, attention
*243
was .called to the fact that the record did not sufficiently show the citizenship of the parties at the commencement of the action, as well as at the time of the application for removal.
Stevens
v. Nichols,
It is conceded that the record does not show affirmatively the citizenship of the parties at the commencement of the action in the state court, and that the judgment, for that reason, must be reversed.
Upon the filing by either party, or by- any one or more of the plaintiffs or defendants,
“entitled
to remove any suit,” mentioned in the first or second sections of the act of March 3, 1875, 18 Stat. 470, of the petition and bond required by its third section, “ it shall
then
be the duty of the state court to accept said- petition and bond, and proceed no further in such suit.” The effect of filing the required petition and bond in a removable case is, as said in
Railroad Co.
v. Mississippi,
, It thus appears that a case is not, in law, removed from the state court, upon the ground that it involves a controversy between citizens of different States, unless, at the time the application for removal is made, the record, upon its face, shows it to be one that is removable.
We
say, upon its face, because “The state court is only at liberty to inquire whether, on the face of the record, a case has been made which requires it to proceed no further; ” and “ all issues of fact made upon the ■petition for removal must be tried in the Circuit Court.”
Stone
v.
South
Carolina,
All this is made entirely clear by the express requirement of the act of 1875, that the Circuit Court shall remand “ to the court from which it was removed ” any cause brought from that court, whenever it appears that it is not one of which the Federal court can properly take cognizance.
Cameron
v.
Hodges,
This question was before us at the present term in Stevens v. Nichols, above cited, which was brought in a state court, and tried in a Circuit Court of the United States as one involving a controversy between citizens of different States, and, therefore, removable from the state court. But as the record did not show that it was a removable case, the judgment was reversed, with directions to send the case back to the state court. It is proper to say that the question was there fully considered,' although it was not deemed necessary to state the reasons for the conclusion then reached. The present motion, bringing that question distinctly before us, seemed to require that the reason's for our conclusion be stated with fulness, especially because inadvertent language in some previous cases is interpreted as announcing different views from those now expressed.
The motion to modify the order of reversal heretofore made is denied.
