94 S.E. 694 | N.C. | 1917
The facts relevant to the question presented, and the judgment of his Honor thereon denying the motion, are as follows:
1. That the summons in the above-entitled cause was duly issued on 25 January 1917, as appears by the endorsement thereon, and was served upon the defendant company on 26th January and on the defendant W. R. Smith on the same date.
2. That under the rules of court, the next term of the Superior Court of Jackson County convened on 19 February 1917, and was the return term of said summons and the term in which pleadings were by law required to be filed unless time therefore was granted by the court; that the said Superior Court for Jackson County did convene on 19 February 1917, and was in session for almost two weeks.
3. That on 27 February 1917, the following entry was made by the clerk upon his docket, and I take it that it was made by leave of the court or at the direction of the court, to wit: "Upon calling summons docket, the usual order was made allowing plaintiffs and defendants to file pleadings in all cases where no special order has been made." Some of the members of the Jackson County bar construes this order to mean thirty days to file complaint and thirty days thereafter to answer, and others of the bar contend that it means until the next term to file pleadings.
4. That plaintiff filed his complaint in this cause on 17 April 1917, and the defendants filed an answer thereto on 16 May 1917; that the counsel for the defendant attended the said Superior Court, which convened in Jackson County on 19 February 1917.
5. That when the order was made as set out in the third finding of facts, as appears of record, neither the defendant nor its counsel objected or excepted to said order; that some time after the adjournment of the said term of court the defendant's counsel requested the plaintiff's counsel to furnish the defendant with a copy of the complaint *55 filed in the cause, which was done, and the defendant filed an answer thereto at the time above stated.
6. That the defendant filed its petition and bond in due form, asking a removal of the cause to the District Court of the United States on 15 May 1917.
Upon the foregoing findings of fact by the court, the court is of the opinion that the defendant is not entitled to have its cause removed as petitioned for, and the court so holds and adjudges, (51) and defendant's motion to remove is hereby denied.
It was agreed that the petition for removal contained the necessary allegations of fraudulent joinder, and that the only question for the determination of the court was as to whether or not petition was filed in due time. If it was, then an order was to be made removing the case to the Federal Court; and if it was not, then the case was to be retained.
Defendants excepted and appealed. The Federal statute as to a defendant's right to remove a cause for diversity of citizenship (Fed. Judicial Code, sec. 29) requires that such motion shall be made at or before the time for answering expires as fixed by the laws of the State or by rule of the State courts "in which said suit is instituted and pending."
This term "rule of court" appearing in the statute has reference to a standing rule having the force of law (Mecke v. Mineral Co.,
In the case of Hyde v. R. R.,
Speaking to this distinction, Associate Justice Walker, delivering the opinion in the Hyde case, said: "At no stage of the case has the *56 defendant been in fault. It has done all that it could to save its rights. The law does not require the performance of the impossible. The extension of time was duly objected to and the defendant can lose nothing by the adverse ruling of the Court allowing it," etc.
On the present record the defendant, as stated, having acquiesced in the order extending the time to plead, has been properly held to have waived his right of removal and the judgment denying his application must be
Affirmed.
Cited: Powell v. Assurance Society,
(52)