287 F. 173 | W.D. Tex. | 1923
J. M. Riddle, the defendant in this case, on the 10th day of September, 1921, filed suit in the Forty-First district court of the state of Texas, against the El Paso & Southwestern Company, El Paso & Southwestern Railroad Company, the El Paso & Northeastern Railroad Company, and the El Paso & Southwestern Railroad Company of Texas, complainants herein, and hereinafter re.ferred to as the railroad companies, to recover of them damages in the sum of $6,150, alleged to have grown out of a shipment of cattle over complainants’ lines of railway. The case being removable, the railroad companies duly presented to the state court petition and bond for removal, which was granted, and on November 26, 1921, filed transcript in this court, and on December 24, 1921, filed their answer, which consists only of a general denial. No motion has been máde to remand,, and no further proceedings of a material character have been taken in the case, and it is now pending, numbered 765 at law, on the docket of this court.
After the removal of said case to this court, Riddle on December 16, 1922, filed suit in the Sixty-Fifth district ■ court, of El Paso, Tex., against the same railroad companies upon the same cause of action, but claimed a less amount of damages, to wit, only $2,999, a sum without the jurisdiction of this court. This suit in equity was filed on January 25, 1923, by the railroad companies, praying for an injunction restraining Riddle from further prosecuting the last-named case in the state court. The bill of complaint was presented to me in chambers on the 25th day of January, 1923, and, upon hearing, an order was made citing Riddle to appear on February 3, 1923, and show cause, if any he had, why a preliminary injunction should not be issued against him as.prayed for, and a temporary restraining order was issued to operate meanwhile.
On January 30, 1923, Riddle filed his motion in said cause No. 765 at law in this court, announcing that he would no longer prosecute said . case, and prayed that same be .dismissed without prejudice, at his costs, and in his answer to the bill of complaint he pleads that injunc
“At any time before tbe jury have retired, the plaintiff may take a nonsuit, but be shall not thereby prejudice the right of an adverse party to be heard on his claim for affirmative relief; when the case is tried by the judge such nonsuit may be taken at any time before the decision is announced.” Vernon’s Sayles’ Civil Stats. 1914, art. 1955.
“It is only when the defendant by a counterclaim seeks some ‘affirmative relief’ that the right of the plaintiff to discontinue the entire cause is forbidden. Obviously, the defendant only seeks such affirmative relief when by his own pleadings he prays for some specific recovery that cannot be given to him under pleadings that are strictly defensive and that serve only to compel the plaintiff to prove his own cause of action. * * * If the defendant is doing no more than resisting the plaintiff’s recovery, the statutes recognize the right of the plaintiff for his own protection to dismiss the suit.”
The case here sought to be dismissed belongs to this latter class, for the answer of the railroad companies goes only to a denial of the allegations on which Riddle bases his action. They ask for no affirmative relief of any kind.
“for the purpose of wrongfully depriving these plaintiffs of the right secured thereby by virtue of the removal of said cause to this court, and for the purpose of wrongfully depriving this court of jurisdiction of skid cause.”
Where the question has arisen, the courts have said that a plaintiff may waive a part of his recovery to which according to the averments of his complaint he is entitled, and thus avoid a removal. And especially is this true in the absence of any showing that there is an attempt to defraud the federal court of its jurisdiction. To charge that it was wrongfully done falls short of charging that it was fraudulently done. Collins v. Twin Falls North Side Land & Water Co. (D. C.) 204 Fed. 134; Barber v. Boston & M. Ry. Co. (C. C.) 145 Fed. 52; Swann v. M. R. F. Life Ass’n (C. C.) 116 Fed. 232.
Putting out of view the prior removal proceedings, and considering the suit sought to be enjoined only by the averments of the petition therein, it is exclusively within the jurisdiction .of ithe state court. Riddle having waived so much of his claim as was necessary to bring the case within the jurisdiction of the federal court, as he had the undoubted right to do, it seems to me that in the absence of any at
I am of the opinion that, in asking for a discontinuance of the removed case, Riddle is entirely within the right given him by the statute of this state, and it cannot rightfully be denied.
The contention, however, of the railroad companies, is that such right of Riddle has been lost by the bringing of the second suit in. the state court, as it evidences an intention on his part to wrongfully deprive them of the right to have the case tried in the federal court, and in support of this contention they cite the case of Palmer v. Delaware L. & W. Ry. Co. (D. C.) 222 Fed. 461. I have examined that case very carefully, and I think it can have no application to the question presented in this case. The United States District Court of the Northern District of New York in that case, in deciding that conditions could be imposed upon the right of the plaintiff therein to discontinue a case, based its decision upon the opinion of the-Court of Appeals of New York, in the Matter of Waverly Waterworks Co., 85 N. Y. 478, from which it clearly appears that the discontinuance of a case in that state is entirely within the discretion of the court. It is not a matter of right, as it is in the state of Texas. The rule in New York seems to be that the courts there may in their discretion grant discontinuances upon any condition they choose to impose, or deny them altogether, and, in refusing the discontinuance in the case of Palmer v. Delaware, L. & W. Co., supra, Judge Ray merely exercised the discretion which the law of New York gave him. Neither the state nor the federal courts in Texas have any such discretion.
The court directs the clerk to enter an order dismissing cause No. 765 Law, J. M. Riddle v. E. P. & S. W. Co., et al., and also an order dismissing this cause, and adjudging the costs of both proceedings against J. M. Riddle.