43 F. 257 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Texas | 1890
On July 2<i, 1888, the plaintiif instituted this suit in the state district court for Dalias county, claiming damages in the sum of just $2,000. After ihe time al which defendants were required to answer this petition by the rules of praoiiee in said state court, and after defendants liad answered the same, the plaintiif hied his amended petition, claiming damages in the sum of $8,500; and thereupon the defendants presented their petition and bond for removal of the case to this court, on the ground that there was involved in the controversy a federal question, stated in the petition for-removal. On the 1st day of October, 1889, the state court accepted said bond, and ordered the removal of the cause to this court; and the transcript was filed in this court on ihe 21st day of October, 1889. The plaintiff now presents his motion to remand the cause on the following grounds, to-wit:
“First. It appears from the record herein that all the defendants did not join in the petition and bond for removal filed herein; the defendant S. C. Carroll not joining in the same. Second. The bond for removal herein is not payable to S. C. Carrol], the defendant not joining in the removal; and there is no removal bond herein payable to said S. C. Carroll. Third. The bond for removal is not conditioned as required by law, in that it fails to bind the petitioners for removal to appear and enter special bail in such suit, if special bail was originally requisite therein. Fourth. The petitioners for removal did not lile a copy of the record, and enter their appearance in this court, on the (irst day of its next session held next after filing the petition and bond for removal in the state court, nor within twenty days after filing said petition and bond for removal in the state court. Fifth. It appears that the transcript from tiie district court of Dallas county is an incomplete record of the proceedings had in said district court, in that it does not contain a copy of the answer of S. C. Carroll, which wa,s filed in said district court prior to the filing of the petition for removal therein. Sixth. As further cause for remanding, they show that on May 3, 1887, the plaintiff herein filed in the circuit court of the United States for the northern district of Texas, at Dalias, a suit against W. L. Cabell and others, the defendants, petitioners for re
The plaintiff asks no relief against the defendant Carroll; expressly so states that .the plaintiff asks no relief as against said Carroll. He is clearly a purely nominal defendant. He asks no relief against the plaintiff, except to be let alone. By thus joining a nominal 'defendant who will not unite with the real defendants in an application to remove, the plaintiff cannot defeat the real defendants’ right to remove. Allen v. Miller, 11 Ohio St. 374. This disposes of the first, second, third, and fifth grounds of the above motion.
As to the fourth ground, the facts are these: The first term of the circuit court for this district, after the order of removal was made, was held at Graham, in Young county. In this district there is only one clerk for the circuit court; hut h.e has three deputies, who in point of fact reside and usually remain at the several points where the terms are held. Charles H. Lednum, Esq., is one of these deputies, and resides at Dallas, and the one who received the transcript in this case at Dallas on the 21st day of October, 1889, and placed the file mark on it on that date. The defendants, while insisting that placing the transcript in the hands of the clerk, at any of his offices or places for the proper custody of such papers, within the 20 days from the day of the order of removal, was a compliance with their duty, yet present as a reason for placing it in the hands of the clerk’s deputy at Dallas, instead of at Graham, that
As to the sixth and seventh grounds of the motion, the plaintiff, having sued the defendants for the sum of §3,500 in the state court, will not bo heard in this court, on a motion to remand, to say that the amount involved is not sufficient to give this court jurisdiction. Whatever use the defendants may bo able to make of the matters presented in these grounds of the motion, it is clear to my mind that the plaintiff is estopped by his subsequent institution of this suit for §3,500 in the state court from presenting these grounds for his motion to remand. The motion is refused.