29 S.E. 778 | N.C. | 1898
The summons in this action was returnable to (945) August Term, 1897, of the Superior Court of Rowan, at which term, by the laws of this State (The Code, secs. 206 and 207) the complaint and answer were required to be filed. At that term neither was filed, but an entry was made on the minutes which on its face does not purport to be by order of the court, and, indeed, which is admitted to have been by consent, "plaintiff has thirty days to file complaint and the defendant sixty days thereafter to file answer." The complaint was filed 7 September, 1897, and the answer on 11 October. On 6 October the defendant filed in the office of the clerk of said Superior Court (no term being then held) a petition for removal of said cause to the U.S. Circuit Court on the ground of diverse citizenship. It does not appear when the bond was filed but it was subsequently, for it was not *593 justified by the surety thereto till 8 October, in Raleigh. The next term of the U.S. Circuit Court to which the cause was removable was held at Statesville, 18 October. The transcript of the record was not filed at said term. At the November term of said Superior Court the cause was continued without objection. Subsequent to said term, application was made to the clerk of the Superior Court to send the transcript to the U.S. Circuit Court, which was declined because no order of removal had been made by the judge of the Superior Court. At the February Term, 1898, the defendant moved the Superior Court to sign the order of removal. This being refused, the defendant excepted and appealed to this Court.
It was held by the United States Circuit Court for the Western District of North Carolina, Dick, J., presiding, that the Federal Court could acquire no jurisdiction if the petition and bond are filed in the office of the clerk of the Superior Court in vacation instead of (946) presenting them to the judge thereof. Fox v. R. R., 80 Fed., 945 (1897). That decision is on "all fours" with this. In delivering the opinion in that case, his Honor, Judge Dick, says: "A sufficient petition and bond to have the legal force and effect of removal must be actually or impliedly presented to a State Court in session, with power to hear and consider the application. The removal statute imposes a duty on the State Court to accept a sufficient petition and bond, and proceed no further in the cause against the petitioner. It is certainly courteous, reasonable, just, and lawful that such court should have opportunity of performing its duty by considering and acting upon the application before it surrenders its original and concurrent jurisdiction, or before it is deprived of jurisdiction by the operation of paramount laws of the United States. A wise and just public policy requires Federal Courts in the exercise of their rightful jurisdiction to accord to State Courts the most liberal and cordial comity that is consistent with their legal duty in the enforcement of paramount national laws." To the same tenorShedd v. Fuller, 36 Fed., 609; Roberts v. Chicago, 45 Fed., 433; Williamsv. Massachusetts, 47 Fed., 533; LaPage v. Day, 74 Fed., 977; Black's Dil. on Rem., sec. 189.
If such filing is not sufficient it is clear that the defendant is not entitled to remove, for he has not made his application in time, even if the extension of time to file pleadings extended the time to ask for removal. The leave to "file complaint in thirty days and answer in sixty days thereafter" has been construed in this Court. Mitchell v. Haggard,
But if it were held that filing the petition 6 October in the clerk's office was not before the judge (the bond being filed at some time not shown, but thereafter) was a sufficient compliance with the act of Congress, still it was too late and ineffective. The delay in filing the bond is also held a material defect. Austin v. Gagan, 39 Fed., 626. In Vielev. Accident Co., 40 Fed., 545, Judge Jenkins, in the U.S. Circuit Court for Wisconsin, summed up his reasoning as to the time when the petition is required to be filed by the act of Congress of 1888, thus: "It is a cardinal principle of construction that statutes should be intended to suppress the mischief and advance the remedy. Looking, then, to the clear design of Congress to abate the abuses that had arisen under the Acts of 1866 and 1867, and to further restrict the time allowed by the act of 1875, it is apparent that Congress intended that the right should be exercised at the earliest period possible. That period was designated to be at or before the time prescribed by law for answering, not the time (948) when the cause, by reason of dilatory proceedings, might be ripe for answer; not the time enlarged by stipulation of parties or by the order of the court, but the determinate time specified in the statute or in the rule of Court. The statute or the general rule of Court speaks that time, not the order or stipulation in the particular case. If this is the law, it settles this controversy as to the right of removal, for by the statute the time for answering was during the August Term of the Court which expired 4 September, and the leave to file pleadings thereafter was simply "an order or stipulation in the particular case" and could not change the time fixed by the act of Congress within which the petition must be filed to be available. Judge Jenkins cities the fact that under the act of 1875, when the petition was required to be filed "before or at the term at which the cause could be first tried," it was held in Car Co. v. Speck,
In Kaitel v. Wylic, 38 Fed., 865, Judge Blodgett expressly declares the statute to be imperative that the petition for removal must be made when the plea is due, and that it comes too late when after the time to plead designated by law.
In Spangler v. R. R., 42 Fed., 305, Phillips, J., in the U.S. Circuit Court for Missouri, says: "If the time for removal can be made to depend upon action, capricious or otherwise, of the State judge in extending it (time for pleading) for a month or six months, there would be no uniformity, no certainty in the law of removal. . . . The evident policy of Congress was to make certain, fixed, and definite the time of such removal and to hasten trials, and not permit hurtful delays by removals," and he remanded the case to the State Court. This is cited with approval by Knowles, J., in U.S. Circuit Court for Montana in McDonald v. Hope Min. Co., 48 Fed., 593 (1891), (950) and by same judge in Martin v. Carter, id., 596.
In Bank v. Keator, 52 Fed., 897 (1892), in the Circuit Court of United States, for Illinois, Judge Blodgett held "a petition for removal filed after the statutory period has expired comes too late, even though filed within the time allowed for answering by order of the Court, where such order is based on the stipulation of the parties." The cases cited in opposition, Wilcox v. Ins. Co., 60 Fed., 929, and Schipper v. Cordage Co., 72 Fed., 803, both expressly state that if the extension of time is by stipulation of the parties and not by order of the Court, the right to remove is *596 lost. In the present case the entry on the records of the Court does not state that it was made by order of the Court, and it was either the express agreement of the parties or was assented to by them, for there is no exception entered on record. Fox v. R. R., 80 Fed., 945 (1897), is the latest case. There Judge Dick, in the U.S. Circuit Court for the Western District of North Carolina, held "That the petition and bond for removal shall be filed at or before the time the defendant is required by the State law or rules of Court to plead, is an imperative limitation which cannot be extended by the stipulation of the parties or by the discretionary action of the judge in extending the time to file pleadings in that particular case." The same construction was put upon the act by this Court, also, inWilliams v. Telephone Co., 116 N.C. 558, so that the State and Federal courts have here concurred in their construction.
The decisions of the highest Federal Court are in the same line. InMartin v. R. R.,
Upon the authorities we must hold that the defendant has not the right to remove the cause under the act of Congress for two reasons, each of which is fatal to his claim:
1. Because the defendant did not present his petition and bond to the judge of the Superior Court at some term thereof, but merely filed it in the office of the clerk of the court in vacation.
2. Because he did not file his petition at the August Term, which was "the time prescribed by law for him to answer." Its agreement (952) with the other party for an extension of time to file pleadings did *597 not change the time prescribed by law. If (as is extremely improbable) its counsel did not know the nature of the plaintiff's action, it is his own fault that he agreed to an extension of time beyond the date at which he could file a petition to remove. The defendant could have dismissed the plaintiff's action if no complaint was filed. The extension of time was upon consent of parties, but if it had not been there was no motion to dismiss the plaintiff's action for failure to file a complaint, nor any exception to the extension of time allowed. If the defendant had excepted to an extension of time to file pleadings, then he would not have lost his right to remove, of course. He can lose it only when the extension of time is by his assent, either express, as in an agreement, or tacit, as in not excepting to an order of extension.
Even if the petition was valid when filed before the clerk, and was in apt time when filed (6 October), after the time prescribed by law, the defendant recognized that the case was in the State Court both by filing his answer in the State Court (11 October) and by assenting to the continuance at November Term; he also failed to comply with the statute in that he did not file his transcript of the record in the U.S. Circuit Court at Statesville "at the next succeeding term thereof," held 18 October. But these are possibly grounds merely remanding the case if it were in the Circuit Court. Steamship Co. v. Tugman,
When a petition to remove a cause to the Federal Court is filed in the State Court the latter does not ipso facto lose its jurisdiction. Stone v.South Carolina,
Thus the strange spectacle may be presented of the same cause between the same parties being tried at the same time in the State Court and in the Federal Court, and finally going up to the United States Supreme *598
Court by different routes. Upon the final decision of that tribunal the proceedings in the court which is held not to have had jurisdiction are simply a nullity. Such unseemly cases have occurred, but rarely (Carsonv. Hyatt,
In Stone v. South Carolina,
As we view the decisions and the acts of Congress, it is our duty to direct the court below to proceed regularly in the trial of the cause.Tucker v. Life Asso.,
Affirmed.
Cited: Presnell v. Garrison, ante, 597; Mecke v. Mineral Co., ante, 797;Debnam v. Telephone Co.,