38 S.E. 156 | S.C. | 1901
March 21, 1901. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This action was for damages for defendant's alleged negligence in towing plaintiff's barge in Calebogia Sound, resulting in the sinking and loss of the barge and cargo, valued at $3,047.66. The suit was commenced *551 on November 22, 1898, by filing summons and complaint, and the issuance of a warrant of attachment against the defendant as a foreign corporation, under which attachment, on December 3, 1898, the sheriff of Beaufort County seized a steam towboat and other property of the defendant. On the 7th day of December, 1898, after an order for publication of the summons, the summons and complaint were personally served on the president of the defendant company. On the 17th December, 1898, the defendant filed petition and bond for removal of the cause to the United States Circuit Court for the District of South Carolina, on the ground of diverse citizenship, and on the same day an order by the State Circuit Court was made, removing said cause. The defendant filed no notice of appearance or other pleading in the United States Circuit Court, but gave notice by its counsel that it appeared in the United States Court only for the purpose of moving to vacate the attachment issued in said cause, and to set aside the summons and complaint herein; and thereupon gave notice of motion in the United States Circuit Court to vacate the attachment and set aside the summons and complaint, which motion was heard together with a motion on behalf of the plaintiff to remand the cause to the State Court. Thereupon, on the 22d day of May, 1899, by an order of the United States Circuit Court, the cause was "forthwith" remanded to the State Court. On the same day, a certified copy of the said order of remand was filed in the State Court, and on same day an affidavit was filed that the defendant had neither appeared, demurred or answered, and the cause was placed on Calendar No. 3 for the June term, 1899, of the Court of Common Pleas for Charleston County. Thereafter, on the 7th June, 1899, the defendant filed in this case in the State Court, a certified copy of an order of the United States Circuit Court, dated 7th June, 1899, vacating the said order of remand, and requiring the defendant to answer within five days, and that the cause be docketed in the United States Circuit Court. Subsequently and in compliance with this order, the defendant filed *552 its answer in the United States Court. This cause being on Calendar No. 3 at the March term, 1900, no demurrer, answer or notice of appearance having been filed or served by defendant, plaintiff's counsel in open Court, on 18th April, 1900, moved for judgment by default, and having put in testimony before the jury, a verdict was returned in favor of the plaintiff for $3,070.66, and an order indorsed on the complaint for judgment for that amount. On the next day, the defendant's counsel appeared in Court and moved to set aside the verdict and order for judgment on the ground that the cause had been removed to the United States Circuit Court, and the State Court was without jurisdiction. The motion was refused, and the appeal is now from the order refusing the motion to vacate the verdict and order for judgment.
The sole question presented is whether the proceedings in the State Court were void for want of jurisdiction, after the order of the United States Circuit Court vacating the order of remand. We are of the opinion that the order of the United States Circuit Court vacating the order of remand after it was executed, could not operate to divest the State Court of jurisdiction. The inherent powers of the United States Court to modify or vacate its order during the term in which it is made, is not doubted, provided the Court still has control of the proceedings, and the order has not been executed. Under this limitation of the general rule, the United States Supreme Court will not grant a rehearing in a case which has been remitted to the Court below — Browder v.McArthur, 7 Wheat., 58; Peck v. Sanderson, 18 How., 42; nor will this Court grant a rehearing after the remittitur to the Circuit Court. Ex parte Dial,
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed. *554